I found it after searching in the 1940 Bluejackets Manual in my maritime collection. It’s not something that I refer to very often. However, I have it on hand when I need to look up obscurities, which was one of those times. I had made some stupid comments that upset my wife. I mentioned that, in punishment, I should do the 99-count manual of arms 99 times. She had no idea what I was talking about, but appreciated that I was apologizing.
The Manual
Later on, I thought about my comment. The Manual of Arms was something we trained on in Navy Boot Camp. It was also the favorite punishment assignment if you goofed up. Report to the gymnasium and join the other jerks in a rather grueling 99 times repetition of the manual of arms. Just do it.
You did this punishment drill with your trusty 1903 Springfield rifle. You had its serial number blazoned into memory because if a petty officer asked you for it and you gave the wrong number, you’d do the entire thing over 99 more times. If you dropped it, you slept with it in your bunk. Ugh. I don’t know if modern boot camp is up to these standards, but if it is, anyone who’s gone through it can relate.
So, why did this come to mind as a punishment for an intemperate comment? Because I was assigned to this duty so often. Yes, it is true. I was less than an adept sailor. All my superiors agreed that Carreras was a real “drifty shit” screw-up. He didn’t mean it. He couldn’t keep his mouth from spouting out some unwelcome opinion about why the Navy sucked. It mattered not the least that his assessment could be confirmed as accurate about the chow, how poorly the uniforms fit, or other things. But you weren’t allowed to say that with the hearing of “those that matter.”
Preoccupation
After a while, I could do the manual of arms and think placidly about other things. If they had the music on, it was almost pleasant.

Anyway, I’m standing in the kitchen feeling penitent about my comments; I grab a broom and start the Manual of Arms, “Come to ready first countโฆcome to ready second countโฆcome to the ready third count, and so on. I did about ten reps when I realized I wasn’t in the shape I was in my teens.
Doing Well While Doing Good!
But I can see some definite advantages to this as an aerobic exercise. So why don’t you try it – “down and forwardโฆforward and upโฆup and shouldersโฆside pushes”, and on through side twists. It’s a perfect complete physical workout. If you need to intensify your daily punishment…errr…I mean, workout, this is it!
I think I’ll start an exercise class; the uniform is bell-bottom dungarees, a chambray work shirt, a sailor’s gob hat, and an old broom handle (1903 Springfield is optional, except for the Second Amendment enthusiasts).
OK, let’s all try it in order now. If you can’t remember the serial number on your broom, you’ll start over! On the first count!
Let’s see. A Tik Tok video. A longer follow-up YouTube video on how to do it. And, of course, a follow-up Amazon book. I might make something of my Navy experiences after all. What a surprise that’d be to my Recruit Commanding Officers!
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That was an interesting proposition, Lou. I am now wondering if left handed sailors would do a mirror-image count, and if they do, why we never see that in videos (maybe I have just watched movies about the Navy, not actual Navy exercises, lol). As a civilian with a broom (serial number $5 Made in China, sir!) I might try half the count as right handed and half as left handed, for balance (the count being like 10, because, as you said …)
You’d be labeled a troublemaker, and told to do it 100 times.
Yikes!
Great idea Lou!! You’ll become a sensation. But seriously, this is kind of cool to remember. There was nothing like this in Air Force. If we got in trouble, it was running or marching or pushups.
Interesting, never heard about any of this from my sailor son.
They were doing this in 1966, but when I Googled it, I couldn’t find a recent reference to it. I think they eliminated it. Hurrah!