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NAVY SOURCES All information at National Archives (PRO) unless otherwise notified.
Contract information, Cort & Jellicoe etc: ADM49/120,121 etc Some detail on earlier Attwick contracts: ADM106/912,939,943,1118,1126,1145 Additional contract information at Caird Library, National Maritime Museum: POR/A/26-35 warrant books POR/F/19 Navy Board letter book Naval service: pay, agents etc ADM25, ADM22 and ADM32-35 all include a column to record the name of an agent. Half-pay records: ADM25. Between or after spells of service, officers and some lower ranks go on "half pay" (not always half of full pay). Payment twice a year. You can trace how clients of Thomas Bell proceed via Thomas Batty (1761) to Henry Cort (1763). Note how the half-pay roll expands as crews are laid off following Seven Years War end in 1763. Widows' pension books: ADM22. Ship's records Most useful in following navy careers... John Becher: Jersey/Ambuscade 1758, St Albans 1776, Eagle (ADM51/293), Ariel 1778, Camilla (ADM52/1633), Nautilus 1778. Michael Becher: Centurion 1749, Torbay 1757, Goree (ADM51/4200). James Hackman (murderer's uncle): Hazard 1755, Mermaid 1758, Launceston 1762. William Hackman (murderer's father): Devonshire 1747, Fougeux 1749. George Hamilton: Porcupine 1758, Squirrel/Richmond 1759. Thomas Morgan: Launceston 1766, Russell 1777, Alfred 1781, Ville de Paris 1782. Valentine Neville: Orford 1755, Namur 1760, Yarmouth 1764. Coningsby Norbury: Furnace 1742, Gibraltar 1744, Looe 1745, Hampshire 1755. Ship's pay: ADM33(32,34,35) Shows agent. Each volume covers several ships. Pages dilapidated. Ship's company musters: ADM36-37 Covers shorter period than ADM33. Ship's logs: ADM51 (captain), ADM52 (master) Plenty of information on location and action.
Extracts from Stores Reports: ADM30/44 Useful information about the activities of ship's pursers. Page 173 reveals an early link between Cort and the Becher family.
Particularly useful for following the careers of Navy Office employees like Adam Jellicoe. Other archives of interest For accounts of naval battles, intelligence, etc, admiralty records ADM1-3 may hold useful information. The early careers of some navy officers can be traced through the details of their lieutenant's examination (a relic of Samuel Pepys), ADM107. Reference books Most of these can be found both in the PRO library and in the Caird Library at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, UK. The Commissioned Sea Officers of the Royal Navy 1660-1815 (3 volumes, authorship not acknowledged) is a list which probably succeeds in covering all officers over the period. Each entry quotes name, date of commissioning, and dates for advancement in rank. Date of death is included if known. More detailed information on the careers of some naval officers can sometimes be obtained from Charnock, Biographia Navalis (1798) and Marshall, Royal Naval Biography (1823). Much of the information about the Navy's part in the American War has been obtained from James, The British Navy in Adversity: A Study of the War of American Independence (1926) and Syrett's two books The Royal Navy in American Waters (1989) and The Royal Navy in European Waters (1998). Coverage of the war in James's book is greater in breadth, but less in depth, than in the two by Syrett. Written so much earlier, it is both less accurate and less helpful in quoting its sources. N.A.M. Rodger, The Wooden World, gives useful insights into the way the Navy was run in the eighteenth century.
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The pages on this site are copied from the original site of Eric Alexander (henrycort.net) with his allowance. |