All soldiers were expected to take their turn at guard duty, which
came about every fifth day. When a soldier was assigned to guard duty,
he was assigned for twenty four hours straight. He would generally patrol
for two hours than rest for four hours, patrol for two hours, than rest
for four hours and so on throughout the twenty four hour period.
When
on patrol or post, a guard paced two hours during the daytime, when
there was something to see. The patrol differed at night, when even
familiar objects seemed suspicious and threatening. Ordinarily a man
was relieved from patrol after two hours of duty, but during extreme
conditions, he could go off post after an hour.
Guard duty was never welcomed. In addition to having to walk a post, guards
had to stay awake for twenty four hours. During the four hour rest period,
if the guard wished to lay down and rest, he would have had to do so on
a hard platform bed. But he would've had the option of laying down on
the bed only during the day. At night, he could neither sleep nor lay
down under any circumstances.
When
men of the guard were not absent at sentry posts or on other assignment,
they were to remain in the guardroom, fully clothed (including shoes),
their weapons close at hand, ready to respond to any call. Sentry assignments
were rotated through the 24-hour period, and supervised by the corporal.
Men might also be detailed as messengers or for special assignments.
All took their meals in the guardroom.
A guardhouse, whether a separate building, a pair of buildings, or
part of some other structure, served two purposes; to house prisoners
and to house the guard of the day. Quarters for the guard usually adjoined
the prison section, because one of the duties of the guard detail was
to provide prison security. The chief furnishings in the guardoom would
have included benches, shelves, and a platform bed for the men resting
between assignments. Arm racks probably were common also, along with
tables and benches. Fireplaces or stoves would have provided heat, and
generally the guard claimed extra candles because of their need for
nighttime lighting. Since the guard was the first line of attack against
fire, leather buckets would have been readily at hand.
In a separate room was an office for the officer of the guard (usually
the officer of the day) and the corporal (sometimes sergeant)
of the guard, who had paperwork to do.
The prison section of a typical guardhouse was divided into a common
prison room and a few isolation cells for incorrigibles. For the most
part, prison facilities received no fixtures other than slop buckets
and, often, iron rings in floors or walls to which shackles were secured.
Prisoners
commonly slept on floors, although usually depending upon the sentiments
of the local commander or the circumstances of an individual sentence,
they took their blankets into jail with them. Prisoners had no sanitary
facilities except a bucket to relieve themselves. In the last half of
the 19th century, post surgeons endeavored to have prison facilities
washed, disinfected, and coated with whitewash, but for the most part,
guardhouse prison sections were dim, dirty, and dungeon-like. Only enlisted
men would have been locked in the guardhouse. An officer in trouble
would have been placed under house arrest in his own quarters.
The information on this page was taken from the Historic
Furnishing Report on The
Guardhouse by
Sally Johnson Ketcham.