A picket (archaically, picquet [variant form piquet]) is a soldier, or small unit of soldiers, placed on a defensive line forward of a friendly position to provide timely warning and screening against an enemy advance. It can also refer to any unit (e.g. a scout vehicle, surveillance aircraft or patrol ship) performing a similar function. A picket guarding a fixed position may be known as a sentry or guard.

The Picket GuardN. C. Wyeth, illustration for poem of the same name[1]

Origins

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Picket (Fr. piquet, a pointed stake or peg, from piquer, 'to point or pierce'), is thought to have originated in the French Army around 1690, from the circumstance that an infantry company on outpost duty dispersed its musketeers to watch, with a small group of pikemen called piquet remaining in reserve.[2] It was in use in the British Army before 1735 and probably much earlier.[3]

Usage

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Picket now refers to a unit (either naval or army) maintaining a watch. This may mean a watch for the enemy,[4] or other types of watch e.g. fire picket. This can be likened to the art of sentry keeping.[5]

A staggered picket consists of, for example, two soldiers where one soldier is relieved at a time. This is so that on any given picket one soldier is fresh, having just started the picket, while the other is ready to be relieved. Although each soldier is required to maintain watch for the full duration of a shift, halfway through each shift a new soldier is put on watch.

See also

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The Army of the Potomac—A Sharpshooter on Picket Duty, by Winslow Homer, 1862

Notes

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  1. ^ Matthews 1922, p. 90.
  2. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Chisholm 1911, p. 584
  3. ^ "The Picket Guard is a Body of Men always to be ready, lying with their Arms in their Hands, to turn out in case of an Alarm; but are not commanded by the next Officer on Detail, but such as are appointed by the Picket; but must march either faster or slower, to sustain Out-posts, Foraging, Escourts, or any other Service; and it shall be allowed them in their Tour of Duty" (Gittins 1735, p. 165).
  4. ^ "Picket, noun", Compact Oxford English Dictionary, archived from the original on 2008-05-26, retrieved 2008-05-07
  5. ^ "Sentry".

References

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  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911), "Picket" , Encyclopædia Britannica, vol. 21 (11th ed.), Cambridge University Press, p. 584
  • Gittins, John (1735), A Compleat System of Military Discipline, As it is now Used in the British Foot, London: J. Humfreys
  • Matthews, Bander, ed. (1922), Poems of American Patriotism, New York: Charles Scribner's Sons