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US Navy recruits marching in a drill hall
A Polish soldier in the slope arms position

Drill commands are generally used with a group that is marching, most often in military foot drills or in a marching band.[1][2][3] Drill commands are usually heard in major events involving service personnel, reservists and veterans of a country's armed forces, and by extension, public security services and youth uniformed organizations.

Common drill commands

Without weapons

Rest positions

Dressing

With weapons

Rifles

[6][7]

Sabres

A British soldier in the port arms position

Forming the parade for the march past/pass in review

Saluting on the march

In the Commonwealth countries, the following saluting on the march commands are ordered with a preparatory command of Saluting on the march.... For example, Saluting on the march, to the front salute and always called on the left foot.

In British corps, the drill movement for saluting to the front is the following. Two, three, up. Two, three, down.

This is done while looking to the right, except the right marker, who must stay looking to the front, to keep the flight, squad, platoon, etc. staying straight.
This is done while looking to the left, except the left marker (as they are the front most of the saluting flank), who must stay looking to the front, to keep the flight, squad, platoon, etc. staying straight.

In the United States, the command for saluting on the march is "Eyes, right/eyes left". The parade formation commander and other officers execute the hand salute or execute sabre salute if available (especially if full dress uniform is worn) (and if present on parade the company guidon bearers dip them in salute about 90 degrees above the ground), while everyone but the right file or left file in either case turns their heads to the right. The command for recovery is "Ready, front." If the command does not have rifles, they will salute if given the command Present arms. The arms will be lowered back to their normal position on the commands Order arms. They can also salute if given the command Hand salute. The salute is raised when the parade leader finishes saying "salute", and is lowered in after being held for the same amount of time elapsed between the words "hand" and "salute."

Compliments on the march

This is done while looking to the right, except the right marker, who must stay looking to the front, to keep the flight, squad, platoon, etc. staying straight.
This is done while looking to the left, except the left marker, who must stay looking to the front, to keep the flight, squad, platoon, etc. staying straight.

Saluting at the halt (static)

In the United States, salutes at a halt are given on the command "hand salute". They are lowered in the same amount of time elapsed between the two words. The command "present arms" will cause the command to salute if the command is not given rifles for the ceremony, but the salute will be held until they are ordered to lower it with the command "order arms".

Colour commands

Marching with colours

Colour commands at the halt (static)

Turning motions

Turning motions at the march

Turning motions at the halt (static)

United States Armed Forces:

Commonwealth of Nations

Marching motions

Main article: Military step

  • This is a U.S. march pace. It is at the same tempo as quick time, but instead of 30 inches, the step is 15 inches.
  • There is also a Canadian and Commonwealth version of this, used for when the front file/rank is getting too far ahead of the rest of the flight, squad, or platoon, it means that front file/rank should make their steps smaller, to allow for the rest of the flight, squad, or platoon, to get back into a proper dressing.

Historical drill commands for parade

Musket drill

The 18th-century musket, as typified by the brown Bess, was loaded and fired in the following way:

  1. Upon the command prime and load the soldier would bring the musket to the priming position, with the pan opened.
  2. Upon the command handle cartridge the soldier would draw a cartridge. Cartridges consisted of a spherical lead bullet wrapped in a paper cartridge which also held the gunpowder propellant. The bullet was separated from the powder charge by a twist in the paper.
  3. The soldier would then bite off the top of the cartridge (the end without the bullet) and hold it closed with the thumb and index finger.
  4. Upon the command prime. The soldier would pour a small pinch of the powder from the cartridge into the priming pan. He would then close the frizzen so that the priming powder was trapped.
  5. Upon the command bout (about) the butt of the musket was then dropped to the ground by the left foot with the trigger guard facing to the rear and the soldier having just poured the rest of the powder into the barrel. Once all of the powder was poured into the barrel, the soldier would have stuffed the paper and the ball into the barrel, the paper acted as wadding to keep the gunpowder in the barrel and also packed it down.
  6. Upon the command draw ramrods the soldier would draw his ramrod from below the barrel. First forcing it half out before seizing it backhanded in the middle, followed by drawing it entirely out, while simultaneously turning it to the front and placing it one inch into the barrel.
  7. Upon the command ram down the cartridge he would then use the ramrod to firmly ram the bullet, wadding, and powder down to the bottom followed by tamping it down with two quick strokes.
  8. Upon the command return ramrods the ramrod was then returned to its hoops under the barrel. Then the musket was returned to the shoulder arms position.
  9. Upon the command make ready the musket was brought to the recover position (held vertically in front of the body with the trigger guard facing forward) and the cock (hammer) was drawn back to the full-cock position.
  10. Upon the command "P'sent" (present) the musket was brought up to the firing position in anticipation of the command fire.

Cavalry drill

Cavalry drill had the purpose of training cavalrymen and their horses to work together during a battle. It survives to this day, albeit in a much-diminished form, in the modern sporting discipline of dressage. The movements sideways or at angles, the pirouettes, etc., were the movements needed for massed cavalrymen to form and reform and deploy. Of the proponents of classical dressage from which modern dressage evolved, probably the best known[original research?] are the Lipizzaner Stallions of the Spanish Riding School in Vienna. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police's Musical Ride gives an inkling of what massed cavalry drill at speed would have looked like.

Other drills

Other tasks may be broken down into drills; for example, weapons maintenance in the British army used the rhythmic "naming of parts" as a memory aid in the teaching and learning of how to strip, clean, and reassemble the service rifle.

See also

References

  1. ^ Bailey, Wayne; Caneva, Thomas (30 June 2003). The Complete Marching Band Resource Manual: Techniques and Materials for Teaching, Drill Design, and Music Arranging. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0812218566 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ Burke, Carol (20 July 2018). Camp All-American, Hanoi Jane, and the High-and-tight: Gender, Folklore, and Changing Military Culture. Beacon Press. ISBN 9780807046609 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ Manning, Roger B. (26 July 2007). "Styles of Command in Seventeenth-Century English Armies". The Journal of Military History. 71 (3): 671–699. doi:10.1353/jmh.2007.0219. S2CID 159632156 – via Project MUSE.
  4. ^ See also: Australian Army manual of land warfare. Pt. 3,, Drill and ceremonial drill vol.3, pamphlet no. 1. Drill,1979
  5. ^ "Reversed Arms". Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 11 October 2019.
  6. ^ "Order arms Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster".
  7. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-01-01. Retrieved 2019-01-01.((cite web)): CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. ^ "Air Force ROTC Detachment 225, Pass in Review". University of Notre Dame. 2019-06-18. Retrieved 2019-08-10.
  9. ^ "Pass in Rview". TheFreeDictionary.com.
  10. ^ Royal Canadian Army Cadets: Cadet Reference Book (PDF). Canada: National Defence. 2001. OCLC 289058362. A-CR-CCP-121/PT-001.
  11. ^ "Historical Need for Drill". www.napoleon-series.org.