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III.
- The Attack, how made.
1. The
speed of a column of attack must never be checked for a moment, to
enable it to reply to the enemy's fire. The fire of the column will
be ineffective, for it will be the fire of excited men, and very
limited in extent, as it can proceed from the leading division only;
and the fire once begun, it will be hard to stop it. If, in order to
fire, we halt the column, reforming it under the excitement of the
fire will be very difficult; and the enemy's least forward movement
may then cause a rout. At Maida, in Calabria, in 1806, the French
columns attacked the English under General Stuart. When within
thirty paces, the English gave them a volley. The French, stunned,
as it were, began, at once, to deploy. The English fired again, and
the French retreated. At Waterloo, in the last grand attack by the
French, the advance column of the Imperial Guard was decisively
repulsed by the British Guards. These had been lying on the ground
behind the crest of the slope until the French appeared, when they
suddenly rose up and poured in a murderous volley at short range.
Instead of instantly charging with the bayonet, the French
hesitated, then began to deploy. The British charged at once, and
drove them down the hill.
2. This dangerous halt and deployment is apt also to occur when the
column finds sheltering objects by the way. Therefore, hurry by
these, and hasten the step.
3. It will also tend to prevent such an untoward accident, if we
furnish the columns of attack, where several are employed, with
skirmishers in their intervals, as well as on their outer flanks, to
draw the enemy's fire. Otherwise, the column fired into will be apt,
in order to return the fire, to halt instinctively and deploy into
line, which breaks up the attack.
4. From this it appears that the limited fire of a column of attack
is, in fact, no defect, the highest offensive power of infantry
being in the bayonet. Fire, in the attack, is generally in
effective, and sometimes injurious. It should rarely be used till
the enemy has turned his back.
5. As to attacking cavalry: Infantry may advance in line and attack
cavalry safely, provided its flanks are protected. Before a long
line of infantry, cavalry must retreat, or be destroyed by its fire.
In the Austrian service it is said to be a received maxim, that
horses will not stand before the steady approach of a mass of
infantry, with bayonets at the charge, but will always retire before
the infantry closes on them.
6. So, infantry in column, either closed in mass, or at half
distance, may attack cavalry successfully; taking care to be ready
to form square, or "column against cavalry," at the first
symptom of their preparing to charge.
7. As to attacking artillery: Before charging, the infantry
sometimes first seeks the shelter of ground, using its sharpshooters
to annoy it, and, if possible, to silence its fire. Or, when
circumstances are favorable, as when it can get a position near its
flank, it attacks it vigorously, at once, with fire and bayonet. But
when infantry has to advance to the attack of a battery in front, it
should never be in any compact formation, but always deployed as
skirmishers. Otherwise, it would usually meet with a bloody repulse;
especially where any considerable space of ground is to be cleared.
At the battle of Malvern Hill, the rebel General Magruder's division
was sent, either in column or in line, to charge a powerful Union
battery just beyond an open field a mile and three quarters in
length. The rebels rushed into the field at a full run, but
encountered a murderous fire from the guns they were sent to attack,
which mowed them down by hundreds. By the time they had cleared
two-thirds of the ground, the carnage was so dreadful as to drive
them back to the woods from which they had started. Twice more they
were sent forward in the same manner, but with the same result; when
the undertaking was abandoned.
8. In attacking a battery, we may often secure its capture by a
volley aimed at the horses; the effect of which may prevent the
enemy from carrying it off. But this should be avoided when there is
a good prospect of capturing the battery without disabling the
horses; since then, if we succeed, we shall be able to immediately
use the battery against the enemy ourselves.
9. In the French Revolution, the Chouans of La Vendee attacked the
Republican batteries in several single files, of one or two hundred
men each, at intervals of fifty paces. Such a formation protects the
attacking columns, to a great extent, from the enemy's fire, but
exposes them to destruction by a charge from the battery supports.
In the absence of these, it would often be very advantageous; since,
by proper drilling, these columns in one rank could be made, on
arriving near the enemy, to rapidly double in two or four ranks,
without halting, and then, by filing to a flank and facing, to
advance by the front in a compact line. The same formation would be
useful for troops advancing to assault an intrenchment; but, as in
the case of a battery, subject to the risk of being destroyed by a
sudden sortie from the work. 10. Artillery is never without
supports. One part of the infantry, therefore, deployed as
skirmishers, should attack the guns, circling round them, and
opening fire on the men and horses; while the other part attacks the
support in flank. On getting sufficiently near, the assailants
should try to draw the fire of the guns, and then rush on them
before they have time to reload. If a battery gets into confusion,
or there is any delay in unlimbering or limbering up, then is the
most favorable time to capture it by a vigorous charge with the
bayonet.
IV.
-- Bayonet Charges.
1. When
made resolutely, and without slackening the gait, bayonet charges
have succeeded in nine cases out of ten.
2. The bayonet is usually more effective than grape, canister, or
bullets. At the battle of Leipsig, in 1813, Kleist's Prussian
division was sent to carry the position of Probstheyda. For this
purpose it was necessary to advance up a long slope, the crest of
which was occupied by Drouot' s artillery. The French allowed the
Prussians to approach to within a short distance, and then poured
into them a most destructive shower of grape, which drove them back
for a moment in confusion. But they immediately rallied, and rushed
desperately on again. Marshal Victor then charged them with the
bayonet, and completely repulsed them. Afterwards, having been
re-enforced by Wittgenstein's Russian division, they again advanced,
under a constant shower of grape from Drouot. They, nevertheless,
kept advancing; and, in spite of the great loss they suffered, were
about carrying the position, when the French again charged with the
bayonet, forcing them down to the very foot of the declivity; where,
being once more covered with grape, their repulse was complete and
final. So, at the battle of Mill Springs, in January, 1862, after
the combatants had been exchanging musketry fires for several hours
without any decisive result, the rebels' left was vigorously charged
by the Ninth Ohio with the bayonet. This charge broke the enemy's
flank. His whole line gave way in confusion, and the battle was won.
So, at Malvern Hill, in 1862, in several instances, columns of
rebels whom a storm of canister and shell had failed to repulse,
were driven back and routed by a dash with the bayonet, after a
volley poured in at a few yards from the muzzles of the guns. So, at
the battle of Seven Pines, according to General Heintzelman's
report, whenever our troops used the bayonet, their loss was
comparatively light, and the enemy was driven back, suffering
heavily.
3. The bayonet charge, when made from any considerable distance,
should be in column; the only formation in which order can be
combined with sufficient speed. But, at a short distance, a bayonet
charge by a line, instantly after firing a volley to repel an
attack, will be very effective, and usually successful.
4. In ordinary cases, the charge should be prepared by first
shattering the hostile masses, or, at least, wearying and
demoralizing them by artillery, or by skirmishers' fire.
5. The more vigorous and resolute the charge, the greater the chance
of success. The enemy never retires before a moderate advance.
6. Where the enemy is forced into a defile, a charge with the
bayonet, preceded by a few rounds of grape, will complete his
destruction.
7. When the enemy is behind cover, the best way to drive him from it
is with the bayonet. This will cause less loss of life than to
attempt to return his fire. But, in such case, the charge should be
prepared, when possible, by a few shells, or rounds of canister.
8. Shots up or down a declivity usually miss. A height should,
therefore, be carried with the bayonet, without firing. The moral
effect, moreover, of a steady charge of infantry up a hill, without
stopping to fire, is very great; and such a charge is usually
successful. Prince Czartoryski, Alexander's most experienced general
at Austerlitz, admitted that he lost all confidence in the result on
seeing the French infantry ascending the plateau of Pratzen, the key
to the Allies' position, with a firm and decided step, without once
stopping to fire. So, at Chattanooga, in November, 1863, Thomas's
troops carried the height of Missionary Ridge by a similar steady
and determined ascent, in spite of the volleys of grape and canister
from nearly thirty pieces of artillery, and of musketry from the
rebels' rifle-pits at the summit. General Grant attributed the small
number of casualties our troops sustained in the attack to the
rebels' surprise at its audacity, causing "confusion and
purposeless aiming of their pieces."
V.
- Defence against Infantry.
1. The defence
of infantry is by its fire, and therefore its proper defensive
formation is in deployed lines.
2. Avoid a premature commencement of the fire. Long firing exhausts
the men's energy, expends the ammunition, fouls the pieces, destroys
the soldier's confidence in his weapon, and emboldens the enemy.
3. So, a fire upon an enemy while under cover, as in a wood, would
be virtually thrown away. If his fire from such a position causes us
any loss, he had better be shelled, or driven away by skirmishers,
according to circumstances.
4. The practice of hostile regiments exchanging for a considerable
time a musketry fire at a distance, is highly objectionable, as it
causes a great sacrifice of life without corresponding results.
Instead of standing in line for ten minutes, receiving and returning
fire at a distance of three hundred yards, it would be much better
to clear this space at double quick in two or three minutes, and
close with the enemy; for, in returning his fire, we can do him no
more harm than we receive, while nothing decisive is accomplished.
The case is, of course, different where our own troops are behind
cover, while the enemy's are exposed.
5. But in special cases, as where we have to cover a flank movement
of our second line, or of the reserve, or to await a force coming to
our support, it may be necessary to keep up an incessant fusillade,
without regard to losses received.
6. Fire in action is of two kinds: the fire at will, and the fire by
volleys; the former kind being the rule, the latter the exception.
Although the fire at will is the one principally used, there are
very strong objections to it. (1.) The men load and fire as
individuals, and generally with great rapidity, and under more or
less excitement, rarely stopping to take a deliberate aim. The
consequence is, that very few shots take effect, and the fire is,
for the greater part, wasted, as is shown by the well established
fact that, in every engagement, for every man killed or disabled,
there have been from three to ten thousand musket or rifle bullets
fired. (2.) Except on windy days, a cloud of smoke soon collects in
front of a line firing at will, hiding, more or less completely, the
enemy from view. The fire being then at random, it is, of course,
unreliable. (3.) The fire at will leads to a rapid and enormous
consumption of ammunition. To show how serious is this objection
also, it is only necessary to consider in how many instances victory
has been turned into defeat by the premature exhaustion, by one or
more regiments, of their ammunition. (4.) As a necessary consequence
of this rapid consumption of ammunition, the pieces soon become
fouled, and thus, to a great extent, useless. (5.) Troops under a
musketry fire at will, soon become accustomed to it, and its
incessant din produces on them a stunning effect, which deadens, in
no small degree, their sensibility to danger.
7. On the other hand, volley firing has often been attended with
decisive results, especially when it has been reserved to the proper
moment, and delivered at short range. Instances of this have
occurred in almost every great battle we read of in history, as also
in the late War of the Rebellion. For example: at the battle of
South Mountain, Doubleday's brigade was engaged with a heavy force
of rebels at some thirty or forty paces in its front. Our men were
behind a fence, firing at will; but their fire made little or no
impression on the enemy, who attempted to charge at the least
cessation of the fire. Our troops were then made to cease firing, to
lie down behind the fence, and, on the enemy's approach to within
fifteen paces, to spring up and pour in a volley. This was so
deadly, that the rebels fled in disorder, leaving their dead and
wounded, and could not be rallied again. At Chickamauga, in 1863,
the regiments of Hazen's brigade fired only by volleys; every one of
which, it is officially reported, was powerfully effective in
checking the enemy's attacks.
8. Nevertheless, it has been a common military saying, and supported
even by high authority, that the fire at will is the only one
possible in action. This assertion implies that the rank and file
are not sufficiently cool to reserve their fire, and that they must
be kept constantly occupied by the excitement, noise, and smoke of
their own fire, in order to make them remain steady in their ranks
under that of the enemy. As applied to raw, undisciplined, or
demoralized troops, the proposition may be, to a great extent, true.
But in reference to disciplined or veteran troops, whose morale has
not been impaired, it will be found disproved on almost every page
of military history; from which a few examples will be cited
hereafter. For the present, one instance will suffice; that of
Colonel Willich's regiment of Thirty-second Indiana Volunteers, at
the battle of Shiloh, in April, 1862. While under fire, their
commander, perceiving their own fire to have become "a little
wild," caused them to cease firing, and then drilled them in
the manual. of arms, which they went through as if on parade; after
which, they again opened on the enemy a fire, which is reported to
have been "deliberate, steady, and effective." It may be
here observed that, whenever troops lose their presence of mind,
there is no surer way of restoring it than by the repetition, by
their officers, in their usual -tone, of- any words of command they
have learned instinctively to obey on the drill-ground.
9. Infantry, when charged in position, should reserve its fire till
it can be made with deadly effect, as at the distance of fifty
paces; and the volleys should be instantly followed up by a
countercharge with the bayonet on the charging enemy. For, if our
fire has staggered him, a vigorous charge will complete his repulse;
and if it has not, our only chance of success is in suddenly taking
the offensive ourselves. Whilst awaiting his charge, we shall incur
but little, if any, loss from the enemy's fire; for the fire of
troops advancing to attack is usually of very little account. The
only disadvantage attending a volley just before we charge is, that,
as the smoke veils us from the enemy's view, it will rob us, to some
extent, of the moral effect of our swift advance. But, in many
cases, if the enemy see us awaiting his bayonet attack, and
reserving our fire to the very last, he loses resolution, relaxes
his speed, and then stops short, or retires. At Cowpens, Colonel
Howard broke and routed the British line which was advancing to
attack him, by reserving his fire to within thirty yards, and then
charging with the bayonet. At the battle of Friedland, the Russian
Imperial Guard charged on Dupont's division with the bayonet. The
French did not wait for them to close, but rushed on with the
bayonet themselves, and completely routed them.
10. A volley concentrated upon the enemy's regimental colors will
usually disable the colorguard and the men near it; and, if promptly
followed up by a charge, may enable us to capture the colors. This
is always an important advantage; for, by the loss of its colors, a
regiment is not only dispirited, but in danger of disorganization;
these being its proper rallying point.
11. When infantry is acting as a support to artillery which is
attacked, it should throw out sharpshooters to reply to the enemy's
skirmishers that are firing at the gunners and horses, whilst it
engages the compact mass by which it is itself attacked. If the
enemy should commit the blunder of attacking the battery with his
entire force, without detaching to engage the support, we should
profit by it by instantly charging him in flank; but taking care not
to be led away to any distance from the battery we are protecting.
12. Infantry, surrounded by the enemy, will often be able to cut its
way through and escape. For this purpose, as the highest degree of
concentration is required, its formation should be in close column.
VI.-Defence
against Artillery.
1. The
best defence of infantry against artillery is by the fire of
sharpshooters deployed as skirmishers, to pick off the gunners and
the horses; the main body, meanwhile, occupying the most sheltered
locality it can find.
2. Where no shelter is afforded by any natural obstacles, or by
irregularities of ground, it may be sometimes necessary to make the
men lie down. But this expedient should be used as rarely as
possible, on account of its demoralizing tendency. Troops that have
become accustomed to it cannot be expected to bravely face the
enemy; and the habit is very rapidly formed. At Bull Run, in July,
1861, a whole company was seen to grovel in the dust at the mere
snapping of a percussion-cap of one of their own muskets. This
demoralizing tendency does not exist, however, where troops lie down
only to enable their own artillery to fire over them. This was shown
at the battle of Pea Ridge, where several of our regiments lay on
the ground for two hours or more, while thirty of our guns were
firing over them. When, at last, this fire had silenced the enemy's
guns, our infantry then rose, charged him in a compact line, and
drove him from the field.
3. A line of infantry may avoid cannon-shot by advancing or retiring
fifty paces. A column or a square would have to move this distance,
or more, according to its depth. Ricochet shots may be avoided by
moving fifty paces to the right or left. This shifting of position
is but a temporary expedient, it is true, for the enemy's guns will
soon obtain the exact range again. But for this, several trial-shots
will be requisite, thus making the enemy lose time; and, in battle,
a few minutes lost or gained have often decided between victory and
defeat.
4. When the enemy opens an artillery fire on a square, preparatory
to a cavalry charge, his fire must cease when his cavalry approaches
the square; say, on its arriving within one hundred and fifty yards.
To avoid the artillery fire, the square may safely remain lying down
until the hostile cavalry has reached this point. For, as they will
require about half a minute to clear the intervening ground, the
square will still have time enough left to rise, align its ranks,
and deliver a volley before the cavalry reaches it.
VII.-Defence
against Cavalry.
1. The
discipline of infantry is never put to a severer test than when it
is required to resist a charge of cavalry, properly made. The moral
effect of a charge of a body of horse at full speed, on the troops
waiting to receive it, is like that caused by the swift approach of
a locomotive under full steam, seeming quite as irresistible. It
would be so in reality, but for the counter effect produced both on
the horses and their riders by the sight of the infantry standing
firm and reserving its fire. I have been told by an old cuirassier
officer, who served through the campaigns of Napoleon with
distinguished bravery, that there was no operation that his regiment
so much dreaded as a charge upon well-disciplined infantry.
2. This counter moral effect on the charging cavalry is the greater,
the longer the infantry reserve their fire; since, the less the
distance at which it is delivered, the more fatal will be its
effects. A volley at long range is not destructive enough to check
the cavalry's advance; while this effect has often been produced by
the infantry merely withholding its fire till the cavalry has
approached very near; and a volley delivered at the very last moment
has, in by far the greater number of instances, effectually repulsed
the charge. Infantry should, therefore, let cavalry approach to
within forty paces, or nearer still, and then give them a general
volley. At the battle of Neerwinden, in 1793, the Austrian cavalry
was repulsed by the French infantry under Dumouriez, by a volley
poured in at the very muzzles of the pieces. At Austerlitz, a
Russian cavalry charge on French infantry in line was repulsed by a
volley delivered so near, that it stretched four hundred troopers on
the ground. The rest dispersed in disorder to the right and left.
3. The armor of cuirassiers is bullet-proof. To repel a charge of
these troops, therefore, it will be necessary to aim at the horses.
Their armor is so heavy, that the mere fall of the riders on the
ground is usually sufficient to disable them, as was the case with
the French cuirassiers at Waterloo.
4. Infantry in line, in two ranks even, may withstand cavalry, if in
compact order, and attacked in front. But the slightest cavalry
charge on the flank of a line will rout it. At Quatre Bras, a French
infantry line, advancing, repulsed a charge of the Brunswicker
Lancers under the Duke of Brunswick, by receiving it in steadiness
and good order, and then pouring in a destructive fire. But, in the
same battle, the Sixty-ninth British Regiment was instantly rolled
up and destroyed by a charge of French cuirassiers on its flank.
5. Where infantry is well disciplined, and its commander is cool and
prompt, it may sometimes avoid the effect of a cavalry charge by
other means than its fire, or formation in square. At Talavera, a
French infantry division, drawn up in close column, seeing an
English cavalry regiment charging down upon them, avoided the shock
by simply stepping aside, thus allowing the cavalry to pass by them.
A portion of the charging troops wheeled round to follow them; but,
by the cross-fire of another division, and the charge of other
cavalry, which fell upon it in its confusion, it was completely
annihilated.
6. A line of infantry charged by cavalry in flank, and so suddenly
as to allow no time to form square, could hardly escape destruction.
It would seem that the best course to be adopted in such a case
would be to open the ranks by a rapid and simultaneous movement of
both of them, thus compelling the charging cavalry to ride between
them. If the front rank should then face about, this would bring the
cavalry between two fires, which might be poured in, with most
destructive effect. But where the cavalry charges with a very wide
front, or in line, this maneuver might be difficult, or impossible.
7. Whenever an infantry line is charged by cavalry in front, and it
is doubtful whether it will stand the shock, the wisest course would
seem to be to make the men lie down, and let the charging cavalry
leap over them. This the horses will instinctively do, with but
little risk of injury to the men, provided they lie in a position
parallel to the line of battle, thus presenting the least possible
depth. It is said that the British infantry has sometimes done this,
and risen up again immediately after the cavalry had passed. The
cavalry could thus be promptly taken in rear.
8. In retreating, when threatened by cavalry, if there be a long
plain in our rear, we must retire slowly. But if cover, or ground
unfavorable to cavalry, be near, we must reach it as soon as
possible.
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