Hap's Corner August 2015

Published 08/09/2015

Hap's Corner August 2015

A LEGION OF TARGETS…

 

An appreciation of good marksmanship is prehistoric and can be traced back, via archeological finds, to all corners of the earth. For example, the oldest archery artifacts in Europe date from the late Paleolithic Era, about 9000-8000 BC.

In Biblical times Genesis 21-20 speaks of Abraham’s son Hagar living in the desert and becoming an archer and the Book of Samuel tells of us David and slingshot.

As man developed better tools to throw projectiles he also needed a method of quantifying the skill of the operator and the accuracy and precision of the device. Enter the target.

The earliest targets must have been no more than an object to be struck with an arrow, spear, or rock. Perhaps the earliest were outlines of animals, foreshadowing the silhouette game of today.

The first rifle targets in the United States were little more than a black circle drawn on a blazed tree trunk with a piece of charcoal pulled from a campfire.  Frontiersmen would shoot three or five shots at the mark, insert pegs into the holes, and stretch a string around them. The rifleman with the shortest string was the winner.

When long range target shooting became popular in the mid 1860s 12 feet by 6 feet metal plates with a black square marking the center were set up at 800, 900, and 1,000 yards.  Marksmen would launch a huge 475 grain soft lead bullet in front of 50 grains of black powder at the metal plate; the clang of its strike could be heard at the firing line. Target boys, crouching in a pit in front of the target, would then mark the shot location with a paddle and dab a little paint over the mark with a brush on a long stick.

Later window sash target frames became popular, and more practical, with the advent of printed paper targets. Some of the earliest paper targets were not circular but rather elliptical. The ammunition issued for the .45-70 Trapdoor Springfield was not well manufactured and shot groups were usually roughly twice as high as wide. It was easier for the military to redesign the target than to address the real problem: poor quality control at the ammunition plant.  As a result the earliest Distinguished Marksman Badges display an elliptical target, common at the time.

With the advent of the 1903 Springfield the ammunition issues were ironed out and the targets were printed with round circles.  The “C” target had a black center, 12 inches in diameter worth five points, a 24 inch four ring, and a 36 inch three ring.  After a while shooters were racking up perfect scores and a six inch “V” ring was added to break ties. After several 250X250s had been fired at the National Matches the “5V” target’s days were numbered. The “10X” target with its six scoring rings, three inch X through 37 inch five ring, made its first appearance in competition in 1967.

The “5V” and “10X” targets are military in nature, as a matter of fact the 200 yard “10X” target’s nomenclature is “Military Target, Rifle, Competition, Short Range.” That got me to thinking about how military marksmanship training units in the ancient days dealt with teaching armies of unlettered peasants how to employ their weapons effectively.

There was no greater ancient organized army than that of Rome. Infantry Legionnaires were armed with a short thrusting sword, the gladius, a half dozen or so lead weighted throwing darts called plumbatae, from the Latin for lead plumbum, and a short javelin, the pilum. They must have had to practice throwing the plumbatae and pilum to develop both skill and accuracy in their employment. Its importance was so great that Publius Flavius Vegetius Renatus wrote in his treatise De Re Militari (Concerning Military Matters) that, “The centurion in the infantry is chosen for his size, strength and dexterity in throwing his missile weapons…” 

The Baleares, Balearic Islands mercenaries who used the sling as their primary weapon, as well as the Sagittarius, archers, also mercenaries, who used the arcus which shot a wooden shaft and iron pointed sagitta also needed to train regularly. After all, marksmanship is a most perishable skill.

My mind’s eye conjures up a Roman equivalent of Camp Perry, a military camp located on Lake Como or Lake Maggiore, where the Legions camped each summer and competed with plumbatae, pilum, and arcus for a place in the coveted “Emperors C.”

Under the command of the likes of General, or Legatus,Marcus Licinius Crassus the Legionnaires practiced that most fundamental all military skills, marksmanship. Just imagine firing lines of Legionnaires throwing their missile weapons and calling their shots, “Centurion, my first shot for record was an IX and IV o’clock!”  

But, like most troops they groused and complained about the Sisyphean task of pulling targets and the nuisance of looking for missed shots.  It was there that they took to cursing under their breath, both the poor marksmanship of their peers and the general who consigned them to the drudgery of the pits, by derisively calling a request to pull and check a target as a “Marcus,” which has come down to us as marking targets.

But the real question is just how did Roman marksmen break ties? Their targets already had either a “V” or an “X” ring.  Just what did they call the smaller circle within highest scoring ring of their targets?