Origin
of Taps
From emails dating back to October
2008:
It all began in 1862 during the
Civil War, when Union Army Captain Robert Ellicombe was with his men near
Harrison's Landing in Virginia. The Confederate Army was on the other side of
the narrow strip of land.
During the night, Captain Ellicombe heard the moan of a soldier who lay
mortally wounded on the field. Not knowing if it was a Union or Confederate
soldier, the captain decided to risk his life and bring the stricken man back
for medical attention.
Crawling on his stomach through the gunfire, the captain reached the stricken
soldier and began pulling him toward his encampment. When the captain finally
reached his own lines, he discovered it was actually a Confederate soldier, but
the soldier was dead.
The captain lit a lantern.
Suddenly, he caught his breath and went numb with shock. In the dim light, he
saw the face of the soldier. It was his own son. The boy had been studying
music in the South when the war broke out. Without telling his father, he had
enlisted in the Confederate Army.
The following morning, heartbroken, the father asked permission of his
superiors to give his son a full military burial despite his enemy status.
His request was partially granted. The captain had asked if he could have a
group of Army band members play a funeral dirge for the son at the funeral.
That request was turned down since the soldier was a Confederate. Out of
respect for the father, they did say they could give him only one musician.
The captain chose a bugler. He asked the bugler to play a series of musical
notes he had found on a piece of paper in the pocket of his dead son's uniform.
This wish was granted. This music was the haunting melody we now know as
"Taps" that is used at all military funerals.
Snopes says this story is false.
Read more at
Origins: ? It's hard to feel surprised when a melody as
hauntingly beautiful as 'Taps' picks up a legend about how it came to be
written — it's too mournfully direct a piece for the mere truth to suffice.
Taps was composed in July 1862 at Harrison's Landing in Virginia, but aside
from that basic fact the fanciful e-mail quoted above, which dates
at least to the 1930s, in no way reflects the reality of its origins. There was
no dead son, Confederate or otherwise; no lone bugler sounding out the dead
boy's last composition. How the call came into being was never anything more
than one influential soldier deciding his unit could use a bugle call for
particular occasions and setting about to come up with one.
If anyone can be said to have composed 'Taps,' it was Brig. Gen. Daniel
Butterfield, Commander of the 3rd Brigade, 1st Division,
V Army Corps, Army of the Potomac, during the American Civil War.
Dissatisfied with the customary firing of three rifle volleys at the conclusion
of burials during battle and also wanting a less harsh bugle call for
ceremonially signaling the end of a soldier's day, he likely altered an older
piece known as "Tattoo," a French bugle call used to signal
"lights out," into the call we now know as 'Taps.'
Summoning his brigade's bugler, Private Oliver Willcox Norton, to his tent one
evening in July 1862, Butterfield (whether he wrote 'Taps'
straight from the cuff or improvised something new by rearranging an older
work) worked with the bugler to transform the melody into its present form. As
Private Norton later wrote of that occasion:
General Daniel Butterfield ...
showing me some notes on a staff written in pencil on the back of an envelope,
asked me to sound them on my bugle. I did this several times, playing the music
as written. He changed it somewhat, lengthening some notes and shortening
others, but retaining the melody as he first gave it to me. After getting it to
his satisfaction, he directed me to sound that call for 'Taps' thereafter in
place of the regulation call. The music was beautiful on that still summer
night, and was heard far beyond the limits of our brigade. The next day I was
visited by several buglers from neighboring brigades, asking for copies of the
music, which I gladly furnished. I think no general order was issued from army
headquarters authorizing the substitution of this for the regulation call, but
as each brigade commander exercised his own discretion in such minor matters,
the call was gradually taken up through the Army of the Potomac.
'Taps' was quickly taken up by both sides of the
conflict, and within months was being sounded by buglers in both Union and
Confederate forces.
Then as now, 'Taps' serves as a vital component in ceremonies honoring military
dead. It is also understood by American servicemen as an end-of-day 'lights
out' signal.
When "Taps" is played at a military funeral, it is customary to
salute if in uniform, or place your hand over your heart if not.