Re: Firing on the move: Infantry in line
The cites were specifically for a regiment in battle line. This isn't street fighting, skirmishers, or a column of companies or any tactical evolution that you've seen in a period manual. The cites were specifically about Confederate infantry regiments in line of battle.....and were something like the "always awe inspiring sight of infantry units firing while on the move. A sign of a truly veteran infantry regiment."
Rather than halting, you fire at will (fire by file always was fire on your own crook) while on the move. Basically you are trying to 'beat down' or suppress your opponents fire while closing the interval and moving through the beaten zone as fast as possible. Marching Fire....Fire while Advancing. Something that would be a lot easier to do with repeaters (Wilder was going to form a Brigade square at Chickamauga and literally blast his way over to Snodgrass Ridge and rescue Thomas).
The opposite of this would be to load and not cap your weapon and try to close with the bayonet. Which seems to be the predominant Federal tactic, even with Upton's experiments.
There would have to be some slowing down of the individual to 'aim' the rifle....and there was a natural movement from rear to front rank of the loaded weapons. Think of ranks of soldiers at a stone wall or field fortification....you fire from the front, and load from the rear.
Early's sharpshooter regiment's most certainly fought like this in 1864 at Monocacy Junction and Ft. Stephens (north side of Washington City). Am sure other units employed it, including Federal.
And I've never seen it 'reenacted'
The cites were specifically for a regiment in battle line. This isn't street fighting, skirmishers, or a column of companies or any tactical evolution that you've seen in a period manual. The cites were specifically about Confederate infantry regiments in line of battle.....and were something like the "always awe inspiring sight of infantry units firing while on the move. A sign of a truly veteran infantry regiment."
Rather than halting, you fire at will (fire by file always was fire on your own crook) while on the move. Basically you are trying to 'beat down' or suppress your opponents fire while closing the interval and moving through the beaten zone as fast as possible. Marching Fire....Fire while Advancing. Something that would be a lot easier to do with repeaters (Wilder was going to form a Brigade square at Chickamauga and literally blast his way over to Snodgrass Ridge and rescue Thomas).
The opposite of this would be to load and not cap your weapon and try to close with the bayonet. Which seems to be the predominant Federal tactic, even with Upton's experiments.
There would have to be some slowing down of the individual to 'aim' the rifle....and there was a natural movement from rear to front rank of the loaded weapons. Think of ranks of soldiers at a stone wall or field fortification....you fire from the front, and load from the rear.
Early's sharpshooter regiment's most certainly fought like this in 1864 at Monocacy Junction and Ft. Stephens (north side of Washington City). Am sure other units employed it, including Federal.
And I've never seen it 'reenacted'
Comment