

Of all the military bugle calls, none is so easily recognized or more apt to render emotion
than the call Taps. The melody is both eloquent and haunting and the history of its origin
is interesting and somewhat clouded in controversy. In the British Army, a similar call
known as Last Post has been sounded over soldiers'graves since 1885, but the use of Taps is
unique with the United States military, since the call is sounded at funerals, wreath-laying
and memorial services.
Up to the Civil War, the infantry call for Lights Out was that set down in Silas Casey's
(1801-1882) Tactics, which had been borrowed from the French. The music for Taps was changed
by Union General Daniel Butterfield for his Brigade (Third Brigade, First Division, Fifth
Army Corps, Army of the Potomac) in July of 1862.
Daniel Adams Butterfield (31 October 1831-17 July 1901) was born in Utica, New York and
graduated from Union College at Schenectady. He was the eastern superintendent of the
American Express Company in New York when the Civil War broke out. Despite his lack of
military experience, he rose quickly in rank. A Colonel in the 12th Regiment of the New
York State Militia, he was promoted to Brigadier General and given command of a brigade
of the V Corps of the Army of the Potomac. The 12th served in the Shenandoah Valley during
the the Bull Run Campaign. During the Peninsular campaign Butterfield served prominently
when during the Battle of Gaines Mill, despite an injury, he seized the colors of the 3rd
Pennsylvania and rallied the regiment at a critical time in the battle. Years later, he was
awarded the Medal of Honor for that act of heroism.
As the story goes, General Butterfield was not pleased with the call for Lights Out, feeling
that the call was too formal to signal the days end. With the help of the brigade bugler,
Oliver Wilcox Norton, Butterfield wrote Taps to honor his men while in camp at Harrison's
Landing, Virginia, following the Seven Day's battle. These battles took place during the
Peninsular Campaign of 1862. The call, sounded that night in July, 1862, soon spread to
other units of the Union Army and was even used by the Confederates. Taps was made an
official bugle call after the war.
The highly romantic account of how Butterfield composed the call surfaced in 1898 following
a magazine article written that summer. The August, 1898 issue of Century Magazine contained
an article called The Trumpet in Camp and Battle, by Gustav Kobbe, a music historian and
critic. He was writing about the origin of bugle calls in the Civil War and in reference to
Taps, wrote:
"In speaking of our trumpet calls I purposely omitted one with which it seemed most appropriate to close this article, for it is the call which closes the soldier's day. . . . Lights Out. I have not been able to trace this call to any other service. If it seems probable, it was original with Major Seymour, he has given our army the most beautiful of all trumpet-calls."
Kobbe was using as an authority the Army drill manual on infantry tactics prepared by Major
General Emory Upton in 1867 (revised in 1874). The bugle calls in the manual were compiled
by Major (later General) Truman Seymour of the 5th U.S. Artillery. Taps was called Lights
Out in these manuals since it was to replace the Lights Out disliked by Butterfield. The
title of the call was not changed until later, although other manuals started calling it
Taps because most soldiers knew it by that name. Since Seymour was responsible for the music
in the Army manual, Kobbe assumed that he had written the call. Kobbe's inability to find
the origin of Lights Out (Taps) prompted a letter from Oliver W. Norton in Chicago who
claimed he knew how the call came about and that he was the first to perform it.
Norton wrote:
Chicago, August 8, 1898
I was much interested in reading the article by Mr. Gustav Kobbe, on the Trumpet and Bugle
Calls, in the August Century. Mr. Kobbe says that he has been unable to trace the origin
of the call now used for Taps, or the Go to sleep , as it is generally called by the soldiers.
As I am unable to give the origin of this call, I think the following statement may be of
interest to Mr. Kobbe and your readers.. .. During the early part of the Civil War I was
bugler at the Headquarters of Butterfield s Brigade, Meroll s Division, Fitz-John Porter's
Corp, Army of the Potomac. Up to July, 1862, the Infantry call for Taps was that set down in
Casey s Tactics, which Mr. Kobbe says was borrowed from the French. One day, soon after the
seven days battles on the Peninsular, when the Army of the Potomac was lying in camp at
Harrison's Landing, General Daniel Butterfield, then commanding our Brigade, sent for me,
and 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. I have been told that it was carried to the Western Armies by the 11th and 12th
Corps, when they went to Chattanooga in the fall of 1863, and rapidly made it s way through
those armies. I did not presume to question General Butterfield at the time, but from the
manner in which the call was given to me, I have no doubt he composed it in his tent at
Harrison s Landing. I think General Butterfield is living at Cold Spring, New York. If you
think the matter of sufficient interest, and care to write him on the subject, I have no
doubt he will confirm my statement. -Oliver W. Norton
The editor did write to Butterfield as suggested by Norton. In answer to the inquiry from
the editor of the Century , General Butterfield writing from Gragside, Cold Spring, under
the date of August 31, 1898 wrote:
I recall, in my dim memory, the substantial truth of the statement made by Norton, of
the 83rd Pa., about bugle calls. His letter gives the impression that I personally wrote the
notes for the call. The facts are, that at the time I could sound calls on the bugle as a
necessary part of military knowledge and instruction for an officer commanding a regiment
or brigade. I had acquired this as a regimental commander. I had composed a call for my
brigade, to precede any calls, indicating that such were calls, or orders, for my brigade
alone. This was of very great use and effect on the march and in battle. It enabled me to
cause my whole command, at times, in march, covering over a mile on the road, all to halt
instantly, and lie down, and all arise and start at the same moment; to forward in line of
battle, simultaneously, in action and charge etc. It saves fatigue. The men rather liked
their call, and began to sing my name to it. It was three notes and a catch. I can not write
a note of music, but have gotten my wife to write it from my whistling it to her, and enclose
it. The men would sing , "Dan, Dan, Dan, Butterfield, Butterfield" to the notes when a call
came. Later, in battle, or in some trying circumstances or an advance of difficulties, they
sometimes sang, "Damn, Damn, Damn, Butterfield, Butterfield". The call of Taps did not seem
to be as smooth, melodious and musical as it should be, and I called in someone who could
write music, and practiced a change in the call of Taps until I had it suit my ear, and
then, as Norton writes, got it to my taste without being able to write music or knowing the
technical name of any note, but, simply by ear, arranged it as Norton describes. I did not
recall him in connection with it, but his story is substantially correct. Will you do me the
favor to send Norton a copy of this letter by your typewriter? I have none. - Daniel
Butterfield."
On the surface, this seems to be the true history of the origin of Taps. Indeed, the many
articles written about Taps cite this story as the beginning of Butterfield's association
with the call. Certainly, Butterfield never went out of his way to claim credit for its
composition and it wasn't until the Century article that the origin came to light. There
are however, significant differences in Butterfield's and Norton's stories. Norton says
that the music given to him by Butterfield that night was written down on an envelope while
Butterfield wrote that he could not read or write music! Also Butterfield's words seem to
suggest that he was not composing a melody in Norton s presence, but actually arranging or
revising an existing one. As a commander of a brigade, he knew of the bugle calls needed to
relay troop commands. All officers of the time were required to know the calls and were
expected to be able to play the bugle. Butterfield was no different - he could play the bugle
but could not read music. As a colonel of the 12th N.Y. Regiment, before the war, he had
ordered his men to be thoroughly familiar with calls and drills.
What could account for the variation in stories? My research shows that Butterfield did
not compose Taps but actually revised an earlier bugle call. This sounds blasphemous to many,
but the fact is that Taps existed in an early version of the call Tattoo. As a signal for
end of the day, armies have used Tattoo to signal troops to prepare them for bedtime roll call.
The call was used to notify the soldiers to cease the evening's drinking and return to their
garrisons. It was sounded an hour before the final call of the day to extinguish all fires
and lights. This early version is found in three manuals the Winfield Scott (1786 -1866)
manual of 1835, the Samuel Cooper (1798-1876) manual of 1836 and the William Gilham
(1819?-1872) manual of 1861. This call, referred to as the Scott Tattoo, was in use from
1835-1860. A second version of Tattoo came into use just before the Civil War and was in
use throughout the war replacing the Scott Tattoo.
The fact that Norton says that Butterfield composed Taps cannot be questioned. He was
relaying the facts as he remembered them. His conclusion that Butterfield wrote Taps can
be explained by the presence of the second Tattoo. It was most likely that the second Tattoo,
followed by Extinguish Lights (the first eight measures of today's Tattoo), was sounded by
Norton during the course of the war. It seems possible that these two calls were sounded to
end the soldier's day on both sides during the war. It must therefore be evident that Norton
did not know the early Tattoo or he would have immediately recognized it that evening in
Butterfield's tent. If you review the events of that evening, Norton came into Butterfield's
tent and played notes that were already written down on an envelope. Then Butterfield
changed it somewhat, lengthening some notes and shortening others, but retaining the melody
as he first gave it to me. If you compare that statement while looking at the present day
Taps, you will see that this is exactly what happened to turn the early (Scott) Tattoo into
Taps. Butterfield as stated above, was a Colonel before the War and in General Order No. 1
issued by him on December 7, 1859 had the order: The Officers and non-commissioned Officers
are expected to be thoroughly familiar with the first thirty pages, Vol. 1, Scott's Tactics,
and ready to answer any questions in regard to the same previous to the drill above ordered.
Scott's Tactics include the bugle calls that Butterfield must have known and used.
If Butterfield was using Scott's Tactics for drills, then it is feasible that he would have
used the calls as set in the manual. Lastly, it is hard to believe that Butterfield could
have composed anything that July in the aftermath of the Seven Days battles which saw the
Union Army of the Potomac mangled by Lee's Army of Northern Virginia. Over twenty six
thousand casualties were suffered on both sides. Butterfield had lost over 600 of his men
on June 27th at the battle of Gaines Mill and had himself been wounded. In the midst of the
heat, humidity, mud, mosquitoes, dysentery, typhoid and general wretchedness of camp life
in that early July, it is hard to imagine being able to write anything.
In the interest of historical accuracy, it should be noted that it is not General Butterfield
who composed Taps, rather that he revised an earlier call into the present day bugle call we
know as Taps. This is not meant to take credit away from him. It is only to put things in a
correct historic manner. Following the Peninsular Campaign, Butterfield served at 2nd Bull
Run, Antietam and at Marye's Heights in the Battle of Fredericksburg. Through political
connections and his ability for administration, he became a Major General and served as
chief of staff of the Union Army of the Potomac under Generals Joseph Hooker and George
Meade. He was wounded at Gettysburg and then reassigned to the Western Theater. By war's end,
he was breveted a brigadier general and stayed in the army after the Civil War, serving as
superintendent of the army's recruiting service in New York City and colonel of the 5th
Infantry. In 1870, after resigning from the military, Butterfield went back to work with
the American Express Company. He was in charge of a number of special public ceremonies,
including General William Tecumseh Sherman's funeral in 1889. Besides his association with
Taps, Butterfield also designed the system of Corps Badges which were distinctive shapes of
color cloth sewn onto uniforms to distinguish units.
Butterfield died in 1901. His tomb is the most ornate in the cemetery at West Point despite
the fact that he never attended. There is also a monument to Butterfield in New York City
near Grant's Tomb. There is nothing on either monument that mentions Taps or Butterfield's
association with the call. Taps was sounded at his funeral.
How did it become associated with funerals? The earliest official reference to the mandatory
use of Taps at military funeral ceremonies is found in the U.S. Army Infantry Drill
Regulations for 1891, although it had doubtless been used unofficially long before that
time, under its former designation Extinguish Lights. The first use of Taps at a funeral was
during the Peninsular Campaign. Captain John C. Tidball of Battery A, 2nd Artillery, ordered
it played for the burial of a cannoneer killed in action. Since the enemy was close, he
worried that the traditional 3 volleys would renew fighting. During the Peninsular Campaign
in 1862, a soldier of Tidball's Battery A of the 2nd Artillery was buried at a time when the
battery occupied an advanced position, concealed in the woods. It was unsafe to fire the
customary three volleys over the grave on account of the proximity of the enemy, and it
occurred to Captain Tidball that the sounding of Taps would be the most ceremony that would
be substituted. The custom, thus originated, was taken up throughout the Army of the Potomac,
and finally confirmed by orders.
This first sounding of Taps at a military funeral is commemorated in a stained glass window
at The Chapel of the Centurion (The Old Post Chapel) at Fort Monroe, Virginia. The window,
made by R. Geissler of New York and based on a painting by Sidney King, was dedicated in
1958 and shows a bugler and a flag at half staff. In that picture a drummer boy stands
beside the bugler. The grandson of that drummer boy purchased Berkeley Plantation where
Harrisons Landing is located. The site where Taps was born is also commemorated. In this
case, by a monument located on the grounds of Berkeley Plantation. This monument to Taps
was erected by the Virginia American Legion and dedicated on July 4, 1969. The site is also
rich in history, for the Harrisons of Berkeley Plantation included Benjamin Harrison and
William Henry Harrison - both presidents of the United States and one a signer of the
Declaration of Independence.
It must be pointed out that other stories of the origin of Taps exist. A popular one is
that of a Northern boy who was killed fighting for the south. His father, Robert Ellison, a
Captain in the Union Army, came upon his son's body on the battlefield and found the notes
to Taps in a pocket of the dead boy's Confederate uniform. When Union General Daniel
Sickles heard the story, he had the notes sounded at the boy's funeral. There is no evidence
to back up the story or the existence of Captain Ellison. As with many other customs, this
solemn tradition continues today. Although Butterfield merely revised an earlier bugle call,
his role in producing those 24 notes gives him a place in the history of music as well as
the history of war.
As soon as Taps was sounded that night in July 1862, words were put with the music. The
first were, "Go To Sleep, Go to Sleep." As the years went on many more versions were created.
There are no official words to the music but here are some of the more popular verses:
Go to sleep, peaceful sleep,
May the soldier or sailor,
God keep.
On the land or the deep,
Safe in sleep.
Love, good night, Must thou go,
When the day, And the night
Need thee so?
All is well. Speedeth all
To their rest.
Fades the light; And afar
Goeth day, And the stars
Shineth bright,
Fare thee well; Day has gone,
Night is on.
Thanks and praise, For our days,
'Neath the sun, Neath the stars,
'Neath the sky,
As we go, This we know,
God is nigh.
[ Home ] [Joke O' The Day ]
[
Patriotic Corner ] [ Poetic Pieces ] [ Politics ]
[ Miscellaneous ] [ Archives ]
