Tudor and Stuart period List of Principal Officers and Commissioners 1546-1660 included. • the
Lieutenant of the Admiralty, (He presided over the Navy Board from 1546 to 1564 until he was superseded by the Treasurer. • the
Treasurer of the Navy originally called
Treasurer of Marine Causes he was Senior Commissioner of the board from 1564 to 1660 • the
Surveyor of the Navy, originally called
Surveyor and Rigger of the Navy (1546-1660) • the
Clerk of the Navy, originally called
Clerk of the Kings Ships (1546-1660) • the
Surveyor of Marine Victuals (1550-1679) (against protocol he was added under monarchs, Elizabeth I, James I and Charles I). • the
Comptroller of the Navy, originally called the
Clerk Comptroller of the Navy was in charge of Naval spending he also acted as Chairman of the Board from 1660. • the
Keeper of the Storehouses, also called
Clerk of the Storehouses he was briefly a member in (1546–1560) his duties were later merged with the treasurers. • the
Master of Naval Ordnance, specifically assigned officer from the Ordnance Board was briefly a member from (1546–1589). Four to seven "Principal Officers" had an important role in the early administration of the Navy Office; however some were styled differently prior to 1660. Between 1625 and 1640,
Charles I added a fifth. The Navy Board was given autonomy by
Edward VI's Ordinances, but remained subordinate to the
Lord High Admiral until 1628. This – at times ambiguous – relationship with
the Admiralty was an enduring characteristic of the board and was one of the reasons behind its eventual demise in 1832.
Commonwealth and Restoration period During the
Commonwealth, the business of both the Navy Board and the Admiralty was carried out by a committee of Parliament. Following the
Restoration,
James, Duke of York (as Lord High Admiral), oversaw the reconstitution of the Navy Board. Alongside the aforementioned "Principal Officers" further officials were appointed to serve as "Commissioners" of the Navy, and together these constituted the board. By tradition, commissioners were always Navy officers of the rank of
post-captain or captain who had retired from active service at sea.
List of Principal Officers and Commissioners 1660-1796 included. •
Comptroller of the Navy (chaired meetings of the board and liaised with the
First Lord of the Admiralty) •
Surveyor of the Navy •
Treasurer of the Navy •
Clerk of the Acts of the Navy Additional Commissioners added after 1666, who were soon given specific duties (so as to lessen the administrative burden placed on the Controller. •
Controller of Treasurer Accounts, (1667–1796) •
Controller of Victualling Accounts, (1667–1796) •
Controller of Storekeepers Accounts, (1671–1796) •
Commissioners for Old Accounts, (1686–1688) •
Commissioners for Current Business, (1686–1688) •
Commissioners for Examining Accounts (Incurred), (1688–1689) •
Deputy Comptroller of the Navy, (1793–1813)
Hanoverian period In 1796 the board was reconstituted: the post of Clerk of the Acts was abolished, as were the three controllers of accounts. Henceforward, the board would consist of the controller and a deputy controller (both of whom were normally commissioned officers), the surveyor (usually a master
shipwright from one of the dockyards), and around seven other commissioners (a mixture of officers and civilians) to whom no specific duties were attached. The treasurer, though still technically a member of the board, was (like the dockyard commissioners) seldom in attendance. •
Deputy Comptroller of the Navy, (1829–1832) •
Superintendent of Transport, (1829–1831)
Commissioners of the Navy To all of these lists must be added the
Commissioners of the Navy with oversight of the
Royal Navy Dockyards. Normally resident at their respective dockyards and thus known as
resident commissioners, these commissioners did not normally attend the board's meetings in London; nevertheless, they were considered full members of the Navy Board and carried the full authority of the board when implementing or making decisions within their respective yards both at home and overseas. Not every Dockyard had a resident commissioner in charge, but the larger Yards, both at home and overseas, generally did (with the exception of the nearby Thames-side yards of
Deptford and
Woolwich, which were for the most part overseen directly by the board in London, although Woolwich did have a Resident Commissioner for some years).
Chatham Dockyard,
Devonport Dockyard,
Portsmouth Dockyard,
Sheerness Dockyard,
Trincomalee Dockyard, and
Bermuda Dockyard all had Resident Commissioners. After the abolition of the board in 1832, the duties of these commissioners were taken over by commissioned officers: usually an
admiral-superintendent at the largest yards or a captain-superintendent at smaller yards. ==Headquarters==