766…All
free white male persons, above the age of 18, and under 35 years, being
at least 5 feet 3 inches high, who are effective, able-boded, sober,
free from disease, and who have a competent knowledge of the English
language, may be enlisted. This regulation, so far as it respects the
height and age of the recruit, will not extend to musicians, or to soldiers
who may "re-enlist" into the service, or have served honestly and faithfully
a previous enlistment in the army.
768…No person under the age of 21 years is to be enlisted
without the written consent of his parent, guardian, or master, if any he
have.
769…Before a minor, as such, can be enlisted, the written
consent of his parent, guardian, or master, must be first obtained, and
appended to the enlistment. If the minor assert that he has no parent, guardian,
or master, the recruiting officer, in order to prevent imposition on the
public, as well as to guard himself against the penalty of the law, shall
procure the best authentication of the fact, and will append to the enlistment
a certificate in the following form: "I certify that the within named recruit,_______,
being a minor, has been carefully questioned by me, relative to his history,
parentage, and age, and that he affirms he has neither parent, guardian,
or master, and that his age as recorded in his enlistment is truly given.
"I further certify, that I have also made diligent enquiry in the neighborhood
respecting the said minor, and that, in accepting him as a good recruit,
lawfully enlisted, I have no reason to suppose that his statement is not
true," ______ _______ _________ Recruiting Officer.
770…No man having a wife or children shall be enlisted
in time of peace, without special authority obtained from General Head-Quarters,
through the superintendent. This rule is not to apply to soldiers who "re-enlist."
771…It is the duty of the recruiting officer to be always
present at the examination of the recruits, and to see that it be conducted
in strict conformity with the regulations. None but men of good character,
sound in body and mind, of good appearance, well formed, and fit, in
every particular, to perform the duties of a soldier, will be received.
The idle dependents of respectable connections will be refused, as they
become troublesome by applications for discharge, and are generally
the least efficient soldiers.
800…Surgeons will attend at the rendezvous at least twice
a day, at such hours as the recruits, and suffer no man to pass who has
not, at his examination, been stripped of all his clothes, in order to ascertain,
as far as possible, that he has the perfect use of all his limbs; that he
has no tumors, ulcerated legs, ruptures, nor chronic contagious affection,
nor other infirmity, which may render him unfit for the active duties of
the field, or be the means of introducing disease into the army: And it
shall be their duty to ascertain, as far as practicable, whether the recruit
is an habitual drunkard, or subject to convulsions of any kind, or has received
any contusions or wounds in the head which might produce occasional insanity.
With any of these defects, the man must be refused, as being unfit for service.
