Morning Report

Morning Report Form
The Civil War was also fought with pen and paper. The completing the morning report was an important part of the daily routine.
CompanyMorningRptForm.pdf
Adobe Acrobat document [84.0 KB]

Every morning each Civil War company was formed on its company street for Reveille roll call. The roll call was conducted by the company Orderly Sergeant or 1st Sergeant under the supervision of a company officer. Because the report was the basis for issuing rations and equipment, it was important to have a correct report to prevent embezzlement. Thus an officer was required for ensuring correct reports.

The 1st sergeant would prepare a "morning report" enumerating the men in the company. This report was signed by the 1st sergeant and company commander and turned in to the regimental adjutant at "First Sergeant's Call" (at 8 o'clock) before the morning drill.

From the company morning reports the adjutant and sergeant major would prepare a regimental report. This report, in turn, was sent to the brigade assistant adjutant general.

To call the company roll, the 1st sergeant relied on his orderly book which contained the names of all soldiers on the company roll. It was said by a Civil War veteran that any 1st sergeant who couldn't call his company roll in the dark from memory after a week of practice wasn't smart enough to wear the stripes and diamond. Remember, roll was called three times a day in a Civil War company. The orderly book listed sergeants, then corporals, then privates, each group in alphabetical order.

In the reenacting world, morning reports are submitted to enable battalion, brigade, division and army commanders to know the size of their organizations. Many re-acting 1st sergeants use morning reports to report only the men in camp or expected to arrive in camp that day. This is an abbreviated report and doesn't accomplish all the morning report was intended to accomplish.

When completing the Morning Report remember the phrase used by 1st sergeants at dress parade: "All Present or Accounted For."

The Morning Report is intended to show not only the number of men present, but those men present but not available for battle; and those men not present in camp. Thus each and every man on the company roll is either "present" or he is "accounted for" in the morning report.

The company is broken down into four major groups. The definition of these groups will help explain how to complete the morning report. The first group is the commissioned officers (wearing shoulder boards, these are the captain, 1st lieutenant and 2nd lieutenant). The second group is the noncommissioned officers (wearing chevrons) to include the corporals and sergeants. The third group is the musicians (fifers and drummers). The last group is the privates.

Starting from the top of the Morning Report:

  1. Complete the company designation and the regiment number and designation.
  2. Present/Absent - To distinguish between "Present" and "Absent"; remember that you will draw rations only for those men listed as "Present". The "Absent" men will get their rations somewhere else. It is interesting that there are fields to record the number of officers. Officers were usually counted and accounted for by the regimental adjutant. Their attendance or non-attendance was the subject and responsibility of the adjutant.

4. Present & Absent - the sum of Present and Absent fields.
This number should equal the total number of men on the company roll.

5. Alterations since last report

7. Copies: In the 3rd US Regular Infantry we follow the Army Regulations. However, in order to accomplish our organization duties as well as our military
duties, we make some adjustments to the regulations.