First, thanks for the compliments on the figures. They don't compare to the work I did when younger, and it had been some years since I last painted any, but I went for a job that I hoped would be both attractive and serviceable.
To answer the basics. All figures are 54mm (about 2 1/2") plastics. The enlisted men come from a set manufactured by the British company "A Call to Arms," called "Civil War Union Coloured Infantry," available commercially from several sources, e.g.:
http://www.battlefieldlegendstoysol...n_coloured_infantry_16_plastic_figures#images
The NCOs and Officers were grabbed from another set. I painted them all using hobbyist's acrylics and put on a heavy clear varnish so they would stand some use.
For background on the inspiration, I volunteer at the AACWM on occasion and work with Marquett (who is the full time permanent historical interpreter) on drill, equipment, and other aspects of a USCT soldier's life. It's fairly easy to cover the School of the Soldier with what we have, but as we never have enough people for School of the Company, it seemed something else was necessary for that. Thus the toy soldiers.
Altogether the set contains 32 rifles, a Captain, a Lieutenant, 1st Sergeant, and 2nd Sergeant, roughly representing the "present for duty" strength of a late war company. Each figure is mounted on a base about 1 1/2" square with a little square tag showing NCO or officer ID or, for the men, a designation of rank and number -- F1, F2, R1, R2. With these we can go through the USCT Infantry Tactics (a separate manual superseding Casey's though for all practical purposes virtually identical) to demonstrate company drill.
The maneuvers we go through range from fairly basic (moving from a line of battle to a column marching by the flank) to somewhat complex (forming a line of skirmishers forward "on the ___ file"). We open the book, read the relevant passage, I demonstrate with the models, then I invite Marquett to do it.
It's a simple but effective process and I recommend it to any group of reenactors or living historians. Officers and NCOs can see how formation changes are supposed to work and soldiers can more easily get an idea of how some things like "company into line" are meant to unfold. In some ways for a ranker it's superior to actual drill because you can work through the big picture.
The toy soldiers aren't particularly expensive and you don't need to paint them. You can even use coins, but I thought this would better enable people to envision the motions in real life. It also works well for showing visitors, though we haven't yet done much of that.
Interestingly, a variation of this approach was used during the civil war itself. An officer developed and marketed boxed sets of markers with instructions for different arms and called them "The Automaton Company," "The Automaton Battery", etc. You often see the ads in the back of other publications like the Tactics or Kautz's "Customs of Service." Unfortunately I haven't found them reproduced anywhere.
Thanks Alan, for posting this, and giving the little heroes their moment of fame...
