· This manual was Hardee’s with his name expunged, as he had defected to the Confederacy. However, it also included a second manual of arms, the “Manual of Arms for the Musket.” This manual is Scott’s manual of arms, slightly updated to use the new version of right-shoulder www.doorway.ruted Reading Time: 8 mins. Hardee's Infantry Tactics () This manual was first written by Lieutenant-Colonel William Hardee in as an update of Scott's Infantry Tactics above. It was the standard drill manual of the U.S. Army. It was written primarily written for the two band Mississippi Rifle and sword bayonet. Hardee's Tactics was finished in ; it was tested, approved, then published in June This new manual thoroughly modernised the U.S. infantry into a faster, lighter force, capable of taking advantage of the new rifle, where quick time ( steps per minute) was the norm, and double quick time ( steps per minute) was common.
Page - No. 25, conforming also to what is prescribed No. Intervals may be extended on the centre of the line, according to the same principles. If, in extending intervals, it be intended that one company or platoon should occupy a line which had been previously occupied by two, the men of the company or platoon which is to retire, will fall successively to the rear as they are. So impressed with the overall change in Officer development, Secretary of War (and later President of The Confederate States of America), Jefferson Davis asked Hardee to formally put down his observations and applied theories in Manual "form" in This would become " Hardee's Light Infantry Tactics ". hardee's rifle a and (i1
In , Hardee's Rifle and Light Infantry Tactics became the standard instructional manual for the U.S. Army. Hardee's work assumed that troops would be armed with the model "Mississippi" rifle, a two band weapon that had achieved popularity during the war with Mexico. Hardee's rifle and light infantry tactics by Hardee, William Joseph, Publication date Topics Confederate States of America. Army Publisher. (See note 19) Adopting Hardee's revised manual of arms would have been a simple procedure for those already familiar with his manual. In conclusion, it appears that the infantry drill manual of choice in the Confederate army was Hardee’s "Tactics.".
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