In the
British Army's
Royal Artillery master gunners are experts in the technical aspects of
gunnery. They fill advisory rather than command posts. The appointment is split into two classes: Master gunners 2nd and 1st class, both holding the rank of
warrant officer class 1. Formerly there was also an appointment of master gunner 3rd class, who held the rank of
warrant officer class 2. The appointment of master gunner is unrelated to that of
Master Gunner, St James's Park, the ceremonial head of the
Royal Regiment of Artillery.
Historical usage . The title of master gunner was in use from at least the fourteenth century for the person commanding a team of gunners and directing the use and upkeep of one or more guns. The term gradually fell out of use on board ship (where the term 'gunner' took its place), and in the field (where the command structure of
artillery trains took precedence). It remained in use, however, in coastal fortifications, from the time of
Henry VIII through to 1956 when Britain's
coastal artillery network was disbanded. Initially, master gunners had executive command of their guns in times of battle, but this responsibility ceased when commissioned artillery officers began to be appointed to coastal forts and garrisons. Thereafter, the artillerymen took charge of aiming and firing the guns; but within each fortification, the master gunner retained responsibility for gun maintenance and preparation, and for the safe storage and supply of ammunition. They were also responsible for firing
gun salutes, and other routine tasks. To carry out these duties, each master gunner had to recruit a team of 'district gunners' to serve under them: in the 18th and 19th centuries, detachments of '
invalids' (usually war-wounded artillerymen) often fulfilled this task; otherwise, the master gunner would have to try to recruit regular artillery from a nearby garrison (or else local militiamen, volunteers or even civilians might be seconded). A list of 1824 records 59 master gunners at separate stations around the coast of the British Isles, and 90 'invalids' assisting them. (The number of invalid artillery was set to increase, to 450 by 1859.) It is noted that every master gunner listed had served a minimum of sixteen years in the Royal Artillery prior to being appointed to that position. Until its dissolution in 1855, the Board (or Office) of Ordnance provided and operated all artillery pieces used in the field of battle and in defensive garrisons. The Master Gunner of England served as the principal technical expert to the Crown in all aspects of artillery. He maintained a register of all certified gunners in the realm and oversaw their training, he maintained a list of all guns in forts, on board ships and elsewhere and monitored their state of readiness, and also had responsibilities for
proving guns and gunpowder. Proof testing initially took place in an area known as the 'Artillery Garden' just north of the Tower of London (the Board's headquarters), and the Master Gunner of England was provided with an official residence nearby. As weapons were growing more powerful, however, it became desirable for them to be proved in less populated areas, and this (among other things) led to the Crown in the 1670s purchasing an area of open land known as the Warren, at
Woolwich in Kent, on the south bank of the Thames, an area that soon developed into a centre for arms manufacture, later renamed the
Royal Arsenal. In 1685, the Artillery Garden was sold, and the master gunner and the local ordnance storekeeper were housed in the Warren in a Tudor mansion known as Tower Place. (Proof testing of guns and artillery continued at the Woolwich site until the mid-19th century, when it was moved to a larger and less populated area,
Shoeburyness on the Essex coast.) The last master gunner to reside at Woolwich, Colonel George Brown, died in 1702; his successor Captain Thomas Silver already held the office of
Master Gunner of Whitehall & St James's Park, and as such he continued to reside in the Gun House by the Park. The office of Master Gunner of Great Britain became obsolescent after the Board of Ordnance established its
Regiment of Artillery at Woolwich in 1716; in that year, the
Master-General recommended its abolition as part of a series of economies, and it disappeared with the death of the last incumbent, Colonel James Pendlebury RA, in 1731.
Ireland So long as
Ireland was under British rule, there was an office of Master Gunner for Ireland. We have the name of at least two holders of the office, Thomas Elliott (died 1595) and Samuel Molyneux (died 1693). In Molyneux's case at least it seems to have been a
sinecure. ==United States==