Strange.....you say my history is off by 55 years.....yet I said AMERICAN INFANTRY......had nothing to do with Napoleon.I think your history is off by at least 55 years. Napoleon was utilzing attack columns to increase mobility and add weight to a charge at the decisive point back at the turn of the century. This was a practical tactic at the time due to the decreased range of infantry weapons at the time and the shorter effective engagement ranges and less destructive artillery. Rifled guns significantly increased the accuracy from the smoothball muskets of the Napoleonic era thereby making attack columns less useful. Additionally, improvements in both the range and killing power of Civil War artillery made attack columns very susceptible to destructive battery fire.The use of Battle Columns is not as ridiculous as you would put it. American Infantry Battle Columns were first implemented during the ACW......most notably by Longstreet during both Chickamauga and The Wilderness due to maneuvering troops through the heavy/dense forests. Though both battles came after Gettysburg, it would not have been a surprise they could possibly have been in use even before hand.
Also, your perception that a unit(s) in column formation would have taken more casualties is about 30% accurate.....only if that unit(s)were being flanked would they POSSIBLY receive 2x more casualties.
Units in a forward attacking Battle Column would suffer even less..........because, as Longstreet and other commanders discovered, a unit in column formation moves quicker and more concise than one in line formation......thus, covering more ground and distance at a much faster pace.
One of the purposes of SOWGB, and it's predecessors TCCWBR and TC2M, is to CHANGE HISTORY.....the "what if's".
There are plenty of them......just enjoy yourself.![]()
kindest regards
The Mad One

Sarge