Re: Lane's Brigade sharpshooter badges
Ryan: Try "Lee's Sharpshooters, Or The Forefront Of Battle. A Story Of Southern Valor That Has Never Been Told" by William S. Dunlop. And...
"Brief Sketches Of The North Carolina State Troops In The War Between The States" by James Cook Birdsong. This has a section about Lane's Brigade Corps Of Sharpshooters.
The CS Army by early 1864 had learned that a detail of men from a brigade, detatched on a semi-permanent basis, could form a very effective skirmishing force. These men were exempt from fatigue duties, specially trained, and allowed to build unit cohesion. The old system of forming a force of skirmishers from a brigade entailed levying a few men from every company, most of whom didn't know each other, and throwing them together for a short while under officers they didn't know.
I've read that some of these Sharpshooter Corps had badges, so they wouldn't be meddled with by pesky officers. I also read (perhaps in Dunlop's book) that at least one of these Corps was issued "two-banded" Enfields, with bayonets, and that four or six men were given Whitworths.
Hope this helps. Neal
Ryan: Try "Lee's Sharpshooters, Or The Forefront Of Battle. A Story Of Southern Valor That Has Never Been Told" by William S. Dunlop. And...
"Brief Sketches Of The North Carolina State Troops In The War Between The States" by James Cook Birdsong. This has a section about Lane's Brigade Corps Of Sharpshooters.
The CS Army by early 1864 had learned that a detail of men from a brigade, detatched on a semi-permanent basis, could form a very effective skirmishing force. These men were exempt from fatigue duties, specially trained, and allowed to build unit cohesion. The old system of forming a force of skirmishers from a brigade entailed levying a few men from every company, most of whom didn't know each other, and throwing them together for a short while under officers they didn't know.
I've read that some of these Sharpshooter Corps had badges, so they wouldn't be meddled with by pesky officers. I also read (perhaps in Dunlop's book) that at least one of these Corps was issued "two-banded" Enfields, with bayonets, and that four or six men were given Whitworths.
Hope this helps. Neal
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