Supply and repair of technical equipment, principally artillery and small arms, was the responsibility of the
Master General of the Ordnance and the
Board of Ordnance from the Middle Ages until they lost their independence in 1855. Thereafter followed thirty years of fluctuating allocation of responsibilities and a great variety of titles of both corps and individuals. This complex, convoluted and largely unsatisfactory period insofar as Army logistics was concerned was summarised in 1889 as follows:
Before Crimea in the
Imperial fortress colony of
Bermuda, seen from
Barrack Hill, in 1857, with
Ordnance Island at left, used by the Ordnance Stores Department and its successors since the
American War of 1812 The Board of Ordnance had its own military establishment consisting of the
Royal Artillery and the
Royal Engineers (who were not at that time part of the British Army). The Storekeeper's department, on the other hand, was part of the
civil establishment, though (as with much of the Board's activity) troops were involved in various aspects of its operation when not
deployed elsewhere.
Field Train Department of the Board of Ordnance By the mid-eighteenth century, Woolwich Warren (the future
Royal Arsenal) had outgrown the
Tower of London as the main ordnance storage depot in the realm. In times of war, the Board of Ordnance Storekeepers found themselves responsible for conveying guns, ammunition and certain other items to the troops
in the field (whereas provision of food, supplies and other equipment was largely dependent on the
Commissariat, a department of
HM Treasury). Until 1792, the transport and issue of weapons and ammunition to troops in the
theatre of war was achieved by the formation of
artillery trains, as and where required. In that year, with Britain about to engage in the
French Revolutionary Wars, the Board sought to place this
ad hoc arrangement on a permanent footing by establishing a
Field Train Department. A Lieutenant-General of the Royal Artillery served as its Commandant and a Major-General as his Deputy, but otherwise its personnel were uniformed civilians: under a Senior
Commissary based at Woolwich were Commissaries, Assistant Commissaries, Clerks of Stores and Conductors of Stores (equivalent to
Majors,
Captains,
subalterns and
NCOs respectively). With regard to the Royal Artillery and the Royal Engineers, the Field Train Department had additional responsibilities: it provided them with pay, clothing, medical supplies and camp equipment when deployed (while the Commissariat provided their food and
forage). The Field Train Department provided the Royal Engineers with their
pontoon bridges and other specialist equipment, and (until the formation of a separate Corps of Artillery Drivers) provided for the movement of
artillery pieces in the field (other than those pertaining to the
Royal Horse Artillery). For the duration of conflict the Department's personnel accompanied the Artillery and Engineer units in the field providing them with logistic support (including repair facilities). initially 200-strong, it had more than doubled in size by 1869, with units in Portsmouth, Devonport, Aldershot, Dublin and Chatham as well as at Woolwich and the Tower. The Control Department was disbanded in 1876. The Ordnance/Military Store officers joined a newly created
Ordnance Stores Department (OSD). Five years later, in 1881, the soldiers also left the ASC and became the
Ordnance Store Corps (OSC). In 1894 there were further changes. The OSD was retitled the
Army Ordnance Department (AOD) and absorbed the Inspectors of Machinery from the
Royal Artillery (RA). In parallel the OSC was retitled the
Army Ordnance Corps (AOC) and at the same time absorbed the Corps of Armourers and the RA's Armament Artificers. In 1918 the AOD was amalgamated into the Royal Army Ordnance Corps, and for the first time officers and soldiers served in the same organisation; the Corps received the "Royal" prefix in 1922 in recognition of its service during the
First World War. ==Ordnance Services Organisation before 1914==