The
Commissioners for the victualling of the Navy, often called
Victualling Commissioners, were the body responsible under the
Navy Board for
victualling ships of the British
Royal Navy.
Creation
Previous to this supplies had been provided by outside contractors, but they were of such poor quality that the government was forced to take control in order to effectively engage in the
wars against the Dutch. Though nominally under the direction of the
Navy Board, the
Victualling Board was effectively independent.
Course
From
1654 it had its headquarters at
Tower Hill, and laid down strict criteria on the quality of the provisions it required. In the
1660s Samuel Pepys reformed the system of having a
Purser assigned to each ship to oversee the distribution of supplies, and obliged each one to lodge a cash surety, and to keep complete accounts of every item issued, in an attempt to stamp out the fairly commonplace corruption that had been notorious. (In
1658 the crew of
HMS Maidstone had demolished the Victualling Office at
Rochester in protest at the foul quality of the food. Their captain Thomas Penrose refused to name any of the culprits.) Though by no means perfect the system generally improved, and if the food was of poor quality, at least there was plenty of it. The Victualling Board built breweries, slaughterhouses, and bakeries near to
Navy Yards to provide beer, salted meat and ship's biscuit, and modern research has shown that during the period of the
Napoleonic Wars only about 1% of supplies were actually condemned as unfit to eat.
Abolition
Eventually in
1832 the Victualling Board as a separate entity was abolished and its functions were assumed by the
Board of Admiralty.
See also
Sources
- N.A.M. Rodger, The Command of The Ocean - A Naval History of Britain : Volume II 1649-1815 (Penguin ISBN 0-713-99411-8)