Originally posted by DougCooper
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Guard mount was a ceremonial formation similar in nature to dress parade, at which the details for the Guard from the various companies are assembled, paraded, and inspected. Guard duty is the act of the Guard (i.e., the guard detail) doing its duty, often for 24 hours at a time; guard duty takes several forms, including camp (police) guard, and pickets in the face of the enemy, and other permutations.
Someday the majority of reenactors will keep these things straight. For now, all too often I see folks--even on this forum where they really should know better--writing after an event, "We did guard mount" when no such thing happened at that event; rather, he usually really means, "I was assigned to the Guard for a time and had to stand as a sentinel for a while."
Regarding what reenacting needs more of, as I view it, it's very simple:
We need more history injected into the events portrayed in reenacting.
Meaning, more research, more dissemination of the historical documentation (and analysis of it before it's disseminated), more discussion of it, and to have things that happen during reenactor events be based more closely on actual, documented, historical events. After all, that's why it's called REenacting.
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