| Army - 1795 - 526 pages
...companies give their words of execution to the fub-divifions or fe&ions to double behind, or move up quick to the regulating ones which preferve their original...that the others are performing. When the column of companies is to be reduced to that of fub-divifions or feftions, it will always be done by the others... | |
| Army - 1795 - 530 pages
...fe&ions to double behind, or move up quick to the regulating ones which preferve their original distances from each other, and never alter the pace at which...that the others are performing. When the column of companies is to be reduced to that of fub-di?ifions or feftions, it will always be done by the others... | |
| Great Britain. War Office, Great Britain. Adjutant-General's Office - 1798 - 470 pages
...companies give their words of execution to the iub-divifions or fections to double behind, or move up quick to the regulating ones, which preferve their original...diftances from each other, and never alter the pace at the column was marching, but proceed as if they were totally unconnected with the operation that the... | |
| Army - 1803 - 180 pages
...of divifions give their words of execution to the fub-divifions to double behind, or move up britkly to the regulating ones, which preferve their original...were totally unconnected with the operation that the other* are performing. CLOSE COLUMN. The great objcft of a confiderable clofe column is, to form the... | |
| War office - 1854 - 80 pages
...obstacle, to the pivot sub-divisions or sections to double in rear of the reverse sub-divisions, which never alter the pace at •which the column was marching,...with the operation that the others are performing. 24. Should the march of a column, whether in a straight alignment or otherwise, be at any time interrupted... | |
| 1860 - 936 pages
...the leaders the necessary commands, taking care that the regulating divisions, subdivisions, etc., never alter the pace at which the column was marching,...but proceed as if they were totally unconnected with what the others were performing ; the proper pivot is, however, always to be preserved, unless circumstances... | |
| |