What is the purpose of a Forced March, and when should it be used?
When should it not be used?
Note: Been playing for months, and I never use forced march. Never understood it, so I (stupidly) ignored the issue.
FP
put413 wrote:What is the purpose of a Forced March, and when should it be used?
When should it not be used?
Note: Been playing for months, and I never use forced march. Never understood it, so I (stupidly) ignored the issue.
FP
barkhorn45 wrote:a "forced march"during the acw was at the point of the bayonet which was used to "force"the men to march beyond their usual endurance level not a good way to win the respect and admiration of the rank and file.Jackson used this tactic quite often and so was not universally admired by his men as has been potrayed in the movies some of his men dispiesed him actually.
barkhorn45 wrote:The following is taken from the chapter entitled “Forced Marches” from Captain William DeForest’s fine narrative. DeForest, a line officer in Company D, 12th Connecticut Infantry, penned these memories from his time in Louisiana during the spring and summer of 1863. Though a year before the Red River Campaign was fought, DeForest’s observations are universal in nature and give great insight into the suffering of the men. Though painted from the vantage of the Union ranks, DeForest’s experiences mirrored those of his Confederate foemen to a great extent. They serve as an excellent primer to attain the right frame of mind, as well as to set one’s own expectations of what the event might deliver.
“Oh, the horrors of marching on blistered feet! It is an incessant bastinado applied by one’s own self, from morning to night. I do not mean a single blister, as big as a pea, but a series of blisters, each as large as a dollar, or, to judge by one’s sensations, as large as a cartwheel. I have had them one under the other, on the heel, behind the heel, on the ball of the foot, on every toe, a network, a labyrinth, an archipelago of agony. Heat, hunger, thirst, and fatigue are nothing compared with this torment. When you stand, you seem to be on red-hot iron plates; when you walk, you make grimaces at every step. In the morning the whole regiment starts limping, and by noon the best soldiers become nearly mutinous with suffering. They snarl and swear at each other; they curse the general for ordering such marching; they curse the enemy for running away instead of fighting; they fling themselves down in the dust, refusing to move a step further. Fevered with fatigue and pain, they are actually not themselves. Meantime, the company officers, as sore-footed as anyone, must run about from straggler to straggler, coaxing, arguing, ordering, and perhaps, using the flat of the sabre. Instead of marching in front of my company, I followed immediately in the rear, so that I could see and at once pounce upon everyone who fell out"
I'm on the road right now so can't reference the book i got the point of the bayonet remark but believe it was in reference to reynolds march towards gettysburg
Gray_Lensman wrote:Also, Jackson's men grew accustomed to his eccentricities and fast marches. After awhile, they also took great pride in being referred to as "foot cavalry".
Sgt_of_the_24th_MI wrote:I would love to get into a discussion of the merits of "Stonewall".![]()
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