I am fairly new to reenacting. I have only been reenacting about one year but in this time I have really studied the loading procedures of muzzle loading artillery pieces. (Please note I do not claim to be an expert). I have carefully compared the original methods in the manual and the modern methods at artillery schools and on the field. There appears to be about 1000 variations from gun crew to gun crew. That in itself poses problems and safety issues but I just want to make note of the one that I personally find the most irksome. I absolutely hate to look at an article about a reenactment in the local paper or in a magazine about our hobby and see a picture of the No. 1 and No. 2 men hunkering with their ears covered and backs turned from the muzzle like there is a giant about to pummel them with a stick. The first problem there is they are not doing the job appointed to them, scanning their safety zones in front of the muzzle. Also from an authenticity standpoint, I have never seen a period photo of drill showing this cowardly, un-soldierly posture. All implements in hand are held at a 45 degree angle or horizontally with the men facing forward and upright in every period photo I have ever seen. No. 2 never has a worm in the photos either, but I’ll save that for someone else to rant about. There are accounts also of soldiers laying flat on the ground to escape incoming fire but that is a different matter. The folks that bother me are afraid of the noise created by their own guns. I am aware that cannons are loud , and the exploding charge causes a jarring in your bowels and a deafening ring in the unprotected ear but that is what flesh colored earplugs are for. They sell them in the pharmacy section of every Wal-Mart in the county. The men working the front of the gun also have to take extra care to listen and feel for remnants of foil and to make sure the vent is properly stopped, but the alternative to not wearing earplugs is to be totally deaf and to look like you’re scared of your own piece discharging. I am certain that the grizzled old vets whose job it was to feed canister into oncoming ranks of the enemy would not have cringed and hunkered in fear of their own gun. Their job was to spew death and violence at the oncoming waves of enemies. We do them and ourselves a disservice when we portray them in this wimpy fashion. If we could all make an effort at the next round of artillery schools to make a note of this ugly incorrect habit and the safety problems it causes maybe we can make an improvement in the soldierly posture of No. 1 and No. 2.
CJ Reisenbeck
Waters’ Battery
Byrnes Battery
CJ Reisenbeck
Waters’ Battery
Byrnes Battery
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