'', barracks for marines An
accommodation hulk is a hulk used as housing, generally when there is a lack of quarters available ashore. An operational ship may be used for accommodation, but a hulk can accommodate more personnel than the same hull would accommodate as a functional ship. For this role, the hulk is often extensively modified to improve living conditions. Receiving hulks and prison hulks are specialized types of accommodation hulks. During World War II, purpose-built
barracks ships were used in this role.
Receiving hulk A
receiving ship is a
ship used in harbour to house newly recruited
sailors before they are assigned to a ship's crew. and had to rely on some form of forced recruitment. The receiving ship partly solved the problem of unwilling recruits escaping; it was difficult to get off the ship without being detected, and most seamen of the era did not know how to swim. Receiving ships were typically older vessels that could still be kept afloat, but were obsolete or no longer seaworthy. The practice was especially common in the age of wooden ships, since the old hulls would remain afloat for many years in relatively still waters after they had become too weak to withstand the rigors of the open ocean. Receiving ships often served as floating hospitals as many were assigned in locations without shore-based station hospitals. Often the afloat surgeon would take up station on the receiving ship.
Prison hulk ,
receiving ship,
victualling depot, and finally a
guard ship before being
paid off and sold to the
breakers. (Painting by
J. M. W. Turner) A
prison hulk was a hulk used as a
floating prison. They were used extensively in
Great Britain, the
Royal Navy producing a steady supply of ships too worn-out to use in combat, but still afloat. Their widespread use was a result of the large number of French sailors captured during the
Seven Years' War, and continued throughout the
French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars a half-century later. By 1814, there were eighteen prison hulks operating at Portsmouth, sixteen at Plymouth and ten at Chatham. Prison hulks were also convenient for holding civilian prisoners, commencing in Britain in 1776 when the
American Revolution prevented the sending of convicts to North America. Instead, increasingly large numbers of British convicts were held aboard hulks in the major seaports and landed ashore in daylight hours for manual labour such as harbor dredging. From 1786, prison hulks were also used as temporary
gaols (jails) for convicts being
transported to
Australia. at Ireland Island,
Bermuda, showing several prison hulks. == Hulks used for storage ==