Commission
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- | An [[officer]]'s '''commission''' is the document issued to him by the [[Admiralty]] each time he is promoted or assigned to a new ship or station. In | + | An [[Royal Navy ranks|officer]]'s '''commission''' is the document issued to him by the [[Admiralty]] each time he is promoted or assigned to a new ship or station. In the early 1800's, a commission was printed on parchment from an engraved plate, with the recipient's name, that of his ship, and the date filled in by hand; it was signed on behalf of the Admiralty by the First Secretary and three members of the [[Admiralty Board|Board]], and it usually bore a note of the date of his promotion to his current rank to serve as a reminder of his [[seniority]]. A new commission had to be drawn up each time an officer was moved from one ship or posting to another, even where there was no change in rank; this procedure was a relic of the early seventeenth century, when there was no professional officer class within the [[Royal Navy]] and its officers were simply gentlemen of a martial turn whose field of action happened to lie at sea. Thus an active sea-officer would accumulate a considerable number of commissions during his career. |
- | Only [[lieutenant]]s, [[commander]]s, [[Post Captain (rank)|post captain]]s and [[admiral]]s were appointed by commission. | + | Only [[lieutenant]]s, [[Master and Commander (rank)|commander]]s, [[Post Captain (rank)|post captain]]s and [[admiral]]s were appointed by commission. |
[[Category:Naval life]] | [[Category:Naval life]] |
Current revision as of 14:02, 21 August 2007
An officer's commission is the document issued to him by the Admiralty each time he is promoted or assigned to a new ship or station. In the early 1800's, a commission was printed on parchment from an engraved plate, with the recipient's name, that of his ship, and the date filled in by hand; it was signed on behalf of the Admiralty by the First Secretary and three members of the Board, and it usually bore a note of the date of his promotion to his current rank to serve as a reminder of his seniority. A new commission had to be drawn up each time an officer was moved from one ship or posting to another, even where there was no change in rank; this procedure was a relic of the early seventeenth century, when there was no professional officer class within the Royal Navy and its officers were simply gentlemen of a martial turn whose field of action happened to lie at sea. Thus an active sea-officer would accumulate a considerable number of commissions during his career.
Only lieutenants, commanders, post captains and admirals were appointed by commission.