I still don't understand what you are trying to accomplish because you're using terms incorrectly. Take a look at one of the manuals online, think a little, and try again. Here's a place where you can look :
http://www.zipcon.net/~silas/links.htm#N_5_I This guy has links to many scanned original manuals and many downloadable booklets. I've been to the ASU site to review that manual, but this guy both volumes of Hardee's Revised Tactics, not just volume one.
Also bear in mind that there isn't one way to do things. In Dom DalBello's "Parade, Inspection and Evolutions of the Line" aka PIE, he says that the manuals are like a big tool box. Many tools will work for a situation, but some are better than others. For example, a cresent wrench can be adjusted to fit and tighten a nut, but a sized wrench may be better.
Using what was done at a reenactment doesn't help. Many battalion commanders are good at looking the part or bringing people to events, but can be lousy at drill. So they make things up. Joe Private doesn't realize that Colonel Gold Braid is clueless until Joe starts comparing what was done at a reenactment to what is stated in the manuals.
Regarding the manuals, the very generalized common thread on the blue side is Scott (post War of 1812) ---> Hardee's Rifle Tactics (1855) --- > US 1861 Tactics (Hardee's by another name) --> Casey (1862).
On the gray side it's Scott (post War of 1812) ---> Hardee's Rifle Tactics (1855) and Gilham (VA - post John Brown) --- > Hardee's Revised Tactics (1861) and Gilham.
There are many other lesser manuals which can be helpful when something is not clear in the other manuals. Baxter, Ellsworth and Upton are some examples.
With so many manuals, which one is best? Use the one which fits your impression ; meaning, of your usual company, with the people you've joined for a weekend, at an anniversary weekend or pick your variance. Keep in mind, they aren't all that different.
If you perform a line by line comparison of the instructions for skirmishers, schools of the company and schools of the battalion found in Gilham, Casey and the two Hardee's, you'll find they are pretty much the same. There are some differences, but they are few and far between. There is far more alike than not. The real differences in these manuals can be found in the manuals of arms.
There's only one way to learn drill : on your own. It takes reading, time and reevaluation of what you've read and seen. Forums can be helpful, but ultimately you'll have to figure it out on your own.
- S.S. Mucket