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Royal Navy: Operational Records 1660-1914Military Records Information 351. IntroductionThe most important source of information on all the activities of the Navy is the correspondence of the Admiralty Board, in ADM 1 , ADM 2 , ADM 12 and ADM 13 . This can be difficult to use, but fruitful. Access is by original means of reference, available at The National Archives. Admiralty BoardIn LettersThe Admiralty Board In-letters (ADM 1 ), surviving from approximately 1698, include reports of proceedings and other letters from flag officers and from commanding officers of HM ships, vessels and establishments. Letters from lieutenants before 1791 and from Promiscuous (i.e. miscellaneous) Correspondents before 1801 were lost by enemy action. The correspondence is arranged by the different correspondents, in annual sequences. From 1793 there are annual Indexes and Digests to this correspondence in ADM 12 , which provide references to names and subjects, and a précis of the contents of each paper. Out Letters
CasesIn the 1820's the practice of binding up 'cases' (i.e. subject files) was begun in a small way. By 1900 it had become a common method of treating papers on important subjects. Early cases will be found in ADM 7 , later ones in ADM 116 . A joint index is filed with the list of ADM 116 . References to case numbers need to be found in ADM 12 and cross referred using the joint index mentioned above. MinutesThe minutes of Admiralty Boards and Lord Admirals' Councils from 1689-1802, and the 'rough minutes' (working papers) from 1793-1839, are in ADM 3 . Board minutes from 1869 are in ADM 167 . In both cases these are records of decisions taken at the Board, and not of the discussions which preceded or the motives which directed them. 3. Secretaries of State and Navy BoardFrom 1689 to 1782, especially in wartime, the control of strategy and general naval policy, and at some periods of naval operations in considerable detail, rested with the Secretaries of State. Their correspondence is in the State Papers Naval, SP 42 .The correspondence of the Navy Board, ADM 106 , though chiefly concerned with the administration of the Navy, contains much material bearing on operations, especially in the seventeenth century. A miscellaneous variety of correspondence, letter and order books; lists of convoys, passes, protections, letters of marque and prizes; Admiralty and other Instructions; and papers concerning signals, the Arctic and the Slave Trade, can be found in ADM 7 . 4. Station RecordsStation records vary greatly in character and completeness:
5. Stations and Movements of HM ShipsYou should be able to discover the station, movements and sometimes employment of HM ships from:
6. Logs and JournalsADM 50 contains Admirals' Journals of varying forms and completeness from 1702. Journals of brief periods of command are occasionally bound up with reports in ADM 1 . The main series of ships' logs is the Masters' Logs in ADM 52 and ADM 54 . These logs were a record of the ship's movements and of the weather, kept for navigational purposes by the masters. From these the Captain's Logs, ADM 51 , were copied with the addition of whatever general information the captain might think appropriate, or might be obliged by regulation to give - which was usually little beyond shipboard routine and the loss or damage of stores. The lieutenants' logs, now in the National Maritime Museum, were similarly derived. Captains' and Masters' Logs, together with some private journals, of voyages of exploration will be found in ADM 55 . All these series were by the mid-nineteenth century superseded by the Ships' Logs, ADM 53 . A small collection of miscellaneous logs, 1648-1707, is in ADM 7/777 , ADM 7/778 , ADM 7/779 , ADM 7/780 . For more detail, see research guide M32: Royal Navy: Log Books and Reports of Proceedings. 7. Shipbuilding and RepairFor abstracts of the date, cost and nature of building, repair and refitting work undertaken on HM ships, look in the Progress Books in ADM 180 (1620-1912) . For the nineteenth century, look in the Ships' Books (ADM 135 ): a small selection only of later Ships' Books has been preserved in ADM 136 . Also in ADM 180 are lists of the dimensions of HM ships, and in ADM 95/23-82 are reports of their sailing qualities, draught and other particulars, 1743-1847. Ships' Draughts, Ships' Covers (ADM 138 ) and Contract Specifications (ADM 168 and ADM 170 ) are now held in the National Maritime Museum. Details of ships' armaments may sometimes be found in the Ordnance Board Miscellanea, WO 55 . | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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