Infantry Drill Regulations, 
United States
by United States 
War Department 
 
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Army, 1911, by United States War Department 
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Title: Infantry Drill Regulations, United States Army, 1911 Corrected 
to April 15, 1917 (Changes Nos. 1 to 19) 
Author: United States War Department 
 
Release Date: March 20, 2007 [eBook #20866] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK INFANTRY 
DRILL REGULATIONS, UNITED STATES ARMY, 1911***
E-text prepared by Bethanne M. Simms, Linda Cantoni, and the Project 
Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team 
(http://www.pgdp.net). Special thanks to Daniel Emerson Griffith for 
creating the Lilypond sound and image files for the bugle calls. 
 
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Transcriber's note: 
Nearly all of the italicized text in the original book is also in bold 
typeface. For ease of reading, bold typeface is not indicated in this 
e-book. Both bold and italics are indicated by underscores. 
 
Infantry Drill Regulations 
UNITED STATES ARMY 
1911 
CORRECTED TO APRIL 15, 1917 (Changes Nos. 1 to 19) 
MILITARY PUBLISHING CO. 42 BROADWAY NEW YORK 
WAR DEPARTMENT Document No. 394 OFFICE OF THE CHIEF 
OF STAFF 
 
WAR DEPARTMENT, OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF STAFF, 
Washington, August 19, 1911. 
The following System of Drill Regulations for Infantry, prepared by a
board of officers consisting of Lieut. Col. John F. Morrison, Infantry; 
Capt. Merch B. Stewart, Eighth Infantry; and Capt. Alfred W. 
Bjornstad, Twenty-eighth Infantry, is approved and is published for the 
information and government of the Regular Army and the Organized 
Militia of the United States. With a view to insure uniformity 
throughout the Army, all infantry drill formations not embraced in this 
system are prohibited, and those herein prescribed will be strictly 
observed. 
By order of the Secretary of War: 
LEONARD WOOD, Major General, Chief of Staff. 
 
TABLE OF CONTENTS. 
 
PART I--Drill. Paragraph. 
1. Introduction 1-30 2. Orders, commands and signals 31-47 3. School 
of the soldier 48-100 4. School of the squad 101-158 5. School of the 
company 159-257 (a) Close order 167-198 (b) Extended order 199-231 
(c) Fire 232-257 6. The battalion 258-326 (a) Close order 263-289 (b) 
Combat principles 290-326 7. The regiment 327-346 (a) Close order 
333-341 (b) Combat principles 342-346 8. The brigade 347-349 
 
PART II--Combat. 
1. Introduction 350-357 2. Leadership 358-388 (a) General 
considerations 358-370 (b) Teamwork 371-377 (c) Orders 378-383 (d) 
Communication 384-388 3. Combat reconnaissance 389-399 4. Fire 
superiority 400-424 (a) Purpose and nature 400-401 (b) Fire direction 
and control 402-424 5. Deployment 425-441 6. Attack 442-488 (a) 
Deployment for attack 449-452 (b) Advancing the attack 453-457 (c)
The fire attack 458-463 (d) The charge 464-475 (e) Pursuit 476-480 (f) 
Attack of fortifications 481-484 (g) Holding attack 485-488 7. Defense 
489-519 (a) Positions and intrenchments 489-494 (b) Deployment for 
defense 495-510 (c) Counterattack 511-516 (d) Delaying action 
517-519 8. Meeting engagements 520-530 9. Withdrawal from action 
531-535 10. Miscellaneous 537-622 (a) Machine guns 537-546 (b) 
Ammunition supply 547-553 (c) Mounted scouts 554-557 (d) Night 
operations 558-568 (e) Infantry against Cavalry 569-574 (f) Infantry 
against Artillery 575-578 (g) Artillery supports 579-583 (h) 
Intrenchments 584-595 (i) Minor warfare 596-603 (j) Patrols 604-622 
 
PART III--Marches and camps. 
1. Marches 623-660 (a) Training and discipline 623-635 (b) Protection 
of the march 636-660 2. Camps 661-707 (a) Sanitation 661-677 (b) 
Protection of camp or bivouac 678-707 
 
PART IV--Ceremonies and inspections. 
1. Ceremonies 708-765 (a) Reviews 711-731 (b) Parades 732-735 (c) 
Escorts 736-744 2. Inspections 745-754 3. Muster 755-757 4. Honors 
and salutes 758-765 
 
PART V.--Manuals. 
1. The color 766-778 2. The band 779-781 3. Manual of the saber 
782-791 4. Manual of tent pitching 792-803 5. Manual of the bugle 
804-807 (a) Bugle calls. (b) Bugle signals.
INFANTRY DRILL REGULATIONS. 
UNITED STATES ARMY, 1911. 
 
DEFINITIONS. 
Alignment: A straight line upon which several elements are formed, or 
are to be formed; or the dressing of several elements upon a straight 
line. 
Base: The element on which a movement is regulated. 
Battle sight: The position of the rear sight when the leaf is laid down. 
Center: The middle point or element of a command. 
Column: A formation in which the elements are placed one behind 
another. 
Deploy: To extend the front. In general to change from column to line, 
or from close order to extended order. 
Depth: The space from head to rear of any formation, including the 
leading and    
    
		
	
	
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