Air Force Reserve officer rifles through historical past Published March 15, 2007 By Senior Master Sgt. Sandi Michon 439th airlift Wing Public Affairs WESTOVER AIR RESERVE BASE, Mass. -- Maj. Warren Smith loves shooting at the firing range but he usually can't see how he did until the smoke clears. That's typical when the weapon-of-choice is a live-fire, Civil War musket, and other people are competing on a Civil War shooting team. Major Smith is chief of mobility and disaster preparedness with Air Force Reserve Command's 439th Aeromedical Evacuation Squadron here but a "private" with the 34th Battalion Virginia Cavalry. He has spent 22 years in the Navy and Air Force "making" history and five years with the 34th "reliving" history. The Air Force reservist admits to being a "history nut." He has a history degree from Northeastern University and has been shooting since he was a kid. He saw a Civil War ad while visiting his brother outside Richmond, Va. The major later found the 34th unit near his home in Glastonbury, Conn., and discovered that most of the others in his unit had Civil War ancestors as he does. "Our unit has the highest number of direct descendants than all the other units," he said. The original 34th Battalion suffered massive casualties during the Gettysburg battle. The Confederate 34th, led by Lt. Col. Vincent Witcher, lost 75 percent of its men when they fought the Union's 5th Michigan Regiment, led by General George A. Custer. Major Smith's history enthusiasm is contagious as he cites detail after detail. His unit is one of about 100 historical Civil War units that are limited to shooting competitions and not reenactments. He is quick to point out that his unit strives to be historically authentic. His uniforms are hand-sown, using woven cloth colored with the old-fashioned vegetable dies, and he makes his own ammunition. He competes with the Whitney Militia rifle which shoots .58-caliber soft lead minie balls. He uses an outdoor turkey fryer to melt down the lead and uses special molds to create the right size balls. "Mr. Whitney" (as he calls his rifle) has a range of 600 yards and is considered deadly at 200 yards. The single-shot, muzzle-loader stands in stark contrast to the clip-capacity of the M-16 and M-9 the major uses in his modern day military position. "The 42-inch rifle has sites mounted on the barrel (which changes with the temperature of the metal) and it has a decent kickback," he said. "All shooting is done in a standing position, and each single shot has to be right on target." Major Smith has competed in a dozen competitions with paper targets for the individuals and clay targets for the teams, shooting from the 50- to 100-yard range. "All the competitions are timed, so it's critical to reload quickly and make each shot count to clear the targets," he said. "It's challenging as all get-out." Mr. Whitney and the major have won a second-place individual award at the national competition level and a couple of team firsts at regionals. "There's a lot to it, but it's a lot of fun," he said adding that the camaraderie is similar to what he enjoys in the Air Force Reserve. "When 4,000 shooters fire at once to open the national matches, it's as close as you can get to the historically-accurate, smoky opening of a real Civil War battle." (Air Force Reserve Command News Service)