View text source at Wikipedia


Admiralty Record Office

Admiralty Record Office
United Kingdom
Agency overview
Formed1809
Dissolved1964
JurisdictionGovernment of the United Kingdom
HeadquartersAdmiralty Building
Whitehall
London
Parent departmentDepartment of the Permanent Secretary

The Admiralty Record Office[1] was a former office of the British Admiralty responsible for the collection, filing and management of all official Admiralty documents from 1809 until 1964.

History

[edit]

The record office was established in the Admiralty in 1809 to only manage the collections and to devise a central system of digesting and indexing.[2] It existed until 1964 when the Admiralty Department was abolished and merged within a new Ministry of Defence.

Responsibilities

[edit]

Before the First World War the Admiralty was usually divided up for administrative reasons into branches, departments, divisions and sections, they were all individually responsible for the managing and maintaining their own records, each function were supposed to send all their finished documents to the record office for filing and preservation, this however did not happen due to constant organisational changes that were common place at the Admiralty. Those branches that were outside the remit of the Admiralty Secretariat did not always adhere correctly to internal procedures resulting in a loss of crucial documents.

Example of the types of records kept

[edit]

Now held at The National Archives included:[3]

ADM records go up to ADM 363 plus one additional filed ADM 900.

Historical researchers criticisms

[edit]

The Record Office within the Admiralty consisted of very limited space, and as a result of those decisions, 98% of all routine, original and official papers were destroyed.[4]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Archives, The National. "Admiralty: Record Office: Cases". discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. National Archives, 1852-1965, ADM 116. Retrieved 26 February 2017.
  2. ^ Hamilton, C. I. (Feb 3, 2011). The Making of the Modern Admiralty: British Naval Policy-Making, 1805–1927. Cambridge University Press. p. 46. ISBN 9781139496544.
  3. ^ Archives, The National. "Naval correspondence using the ADM 12 indexes and digests - The National Archives". The National Archives. National Archives, 1660-1965. Retrieved 2 March 2017.
  4. ^ Seligmann, Matthew S.; Nägler, Frank (Mar 3, 2016). The Naval Route to the Abyss: The Anglo-German Naval Race 1895-1914. Routledge. p. Introduction XVII. ISBN 9781317023265.

Sources

[edit]