Every time I shoot my Black powder guns it brings my mind back into a time warp, on how in the world did they function under the intense pressure of battle? The civil war battles must have been complete hell and anarchy, but when I shoot my flintlocks I think about the nightmares of the Revolutionary War battles and I just can't imagine the carnage on both sides! .69 cal WHAT
Ah but there wasn't, nothing like the ACW or modern warfare, and it wasn't until the armies started giving privates "rifled muskets".
With smoothbore flintlocks, the inaccuracy really reduced battle casualties. Take for example
Brandywine. 30,000 soldiers clashed with musket, cavalry, artillery. Total killed and wounded, about 1300.
The
Battle(s) of Saratoga, total combined combatants, for both sides, = 21,000 soldiers, but total casualties for both sides killed and wounded, = 1465
In contrast, the single day of
Antietam the killed and wounded from both sides, added up, was more soldiers that were on the field for the
Saratoga battles. Casualty rates for the two B
attles of Saratoga amounted to a total loss of just under 7% of the overall combatants, while the single day of
Antietam there was a 17% casualty rate for total combatants...more than 2X the dead and wounded, while using the same tactics but at greater distances... and there was actually a crude field wound-care system in place during the ACW, while no "surgeons" for the private men during the AWI. Regimental physicians and surgeons during the AWI tended officers and monitored camp hygiene... or tried to.
In days of the Brown Bess as state-of-the-art infantry arm, after a couple volleys, the privates couldn't even hear the bullets buzzing past them, and didn't really see too many fellows hit by ball. The bayonet charge, now THAT was another matter, but retreating often solved that problem.
LD