Sounding the Call
Sounding the Call
While the fife and drum regulated the routine of camp life, the bugle was ideal for long-distance tactical communication on the open battlefield. Unlike the complex brass instruments of regimental bands, the military bugle was a simple "natural" horn without valves, capable of playing only a limited range of notes. However, its powerful blast could pierce through the deafening roar of artillery more effectively than any other instrument.
By 1861, the War Department had standardized dozens of specific bugle calls, requiring skirmishers and cavalrymen to memorize distinct melodic phrases for "commence firing," "cease firing," and various directional maneuvers. Because buglers were required to be at the immediate side of their commanders to relay orders, they were often exposed to the heaviest fire. A skilled bugler was the connection between a commander’s intent and a thousand men in motion.
The bugle also became the literal clock by which every soldier lived. From the wakeup call "Reveille" to the somber strains of "Taps" or the signal for mail call or meal times, the bugler sounded every transition of the day.
Unless otherwise noted, all objects are from the Fort Ward Museum Collection.
Exhibit introduction:
Buglers & Brass Bands: Soldier Musicians in the Civil War