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Exhibition drill


Exhibition drill is a variant of drill that involves complex marching sequences which usually deviate from drill used in the course of ordinary parades. Teams performing exhibition drill are often affiliated with military units, but the scope of exhibition drill is not limited to military drill teams.

Exhibition drill is often performed by Armed Forces Drill Teams, the drill teams at service academies and ROTC and JROTC units, and civilian drill teams that perform at parades, drill meets, and half-time shows and other public venues.

The first documented performance of exhibition drill was performed by Hadji Cheriff and filmed at what is believed to be the Midway Plaisance of the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois. The film was later copyrighted by Thomas Edison in 1899, entitled The Arabian Gun Twirler.

The performance demonstrates aerial (two 1½s over-hand thrown from the firing hammer) and over-the-shoulder techniques, over-the-head drill, and under-the-leg inverted spin.

It is believed that the weapon was a .577 caliber, triple band 1853 Enfield Musket, which is 56" long and weighs about 9.5 pounds and thus is 13" longer and heavier than most drill weapons used today.

Exhibition drill is one of many different drill phases that are a part of a Drill Meet. Other phases include Inspection, Color Guard and Regulation Drill.

Exhibition military drill has grown drastically in popularity over the past two decades. This growth can be attributed to several primary factors. These include:

1) The expansion of Junior ROTC programs through the four primary service branches that occurred in the early and mid 1980's took the total number of units from roughly 1,600 to well over 2,500 nationally. This provided more and more cadets the opportunity to be a part of these exhibition drill teams.

2) The work of Sports Network International through producing military drill & ceremony competitions on a scale that had never been seen previously.

3) From these numerous competitions, SNI produced magazines and websites to feature this activity. SNI also produced training/entertainment videos devoted exclusively to featuring many of the military exhibition drill teams in the country. These videos allowed the talent and creativity involved in exhibition drill at the highest levels to travel and expand at a greater rate, helping to promote the sport.


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