coat of arms, initials and broad arrow ownership The broad arrow was used in England (and later Britain), apparently from the early 14th century, and more widely from the 16th century, to mark objects purchased from the monarch's money, or to indicate government property. It became particularly associated with the
Office or Board of Ordnance, the principal duty of which was to supply guns, ammunition, stores and equipment to the
King's Navy.
Origins The origins of the broad arrow device used by the Board of Ordnance are debated. The symbol is widely supposed to have been derived from the pheon in the arms of the Sidney family, through the influence either of
Sir Philip Sidney, who served as Joint
Master-General of the Ordnance in 1585–6; or that of his great-nephew,
Henry Sydney, 1st Earl of Romney, who served as Master-General from 1693 to 1702. However, as noted by the
Oxford English Dictionary, "this is not supported by the evidence", as the use of the device predates the association of either Sidney with the Board. The earliest known use of the symbol in what seems to be an official capacity is in 1330, on the
seal used by Richard de la Pole as
butler to
King Edward III. In 1383, it is recorded that a member of the butlery staff, having selected a
pipe of wine for the King's use, "
signo regio capiti sagitte consimili signavit" ("marked it with the royal sign like an arrowhead"). The device was also used in the 15th and 16th centuries as an
assay mark for
pewter and
tin. Thus, a set of "Instructions for marking of Timber for His Majesty's Navy" issued in 1609 commands:
Later use A letter sent by
Thomas Gresham to the
Privy Council in 1554, relating to the shipment of 50 cases of
Spanish reals (coins) from
Seville to England, explained that each case was "marked with the broad arrow and numbered from 1 to 50". A proclamation of
Charles I issued in 1627 ordered that tobacco imported to England from non-English plantations should be
sealed with "a seale engraven with a broad Arrow and a Portcullice". A proclamation issued by
Charles II in 1661 ran: An
Order in Council of 1664, relating to the requisitioning of
merchant ships for naval use, similarly authorised the
Commissioners of the Navy "to put the broad arrow on any ship in the River they had a mind to hire, and fit them out for sea"; The broad arrow was routinely used on British
prison uniforms from about the 1830s onwards. An instance of the Admiralty using the mark in a salvage case occurred at
Wisbech,
Isle of Ely in 1860: "The barque
Angelo C, laden with barley, from
Sulina, lying at Mr Morton's granary, has been marked with the 'broad arrow', a writ at Admiralty having been issued at the instance of Peter Pilkington, one of the pilots of this port, who claims £400 for salvage services alleged to have been rendered to the vessel during the great gale of the 28th ult."
Ordnance Survey marker, Bermuda Topped with a horizontal line, the broad arrow was widely used on
Ordnance Survey benchmarks. Broad arrow marks were also used by
Commonwealth countries on their ordnance. The Board of Ordnance was absorbed into the
War Department in 1855, but the broad arrow continued to be used by its successor bodies: the War Department 1855–57, the
War Office 1857–1964, and by the
Ministry of Defence from 1964 onwards, before being phased out in the 1980s.
Legality It is currently a criminal offence in the United Kingdom to reproduce the broad arrow without authority (in the same way as it is an offence to reproduce
hallmarks). Section 4 of the
Public Stores Act 1875 makes it illegal to use the "broad arrow" on any goods without permission.
Newspaper A newspaper,
The Broad Arrow, including the broad arrow symbol in its
masthead, and described as "A Paper for the Services", was published from 1833. Its title was later extended to include
The Naval and Military Gazette. During the
First World War it was printed by
W. H. Smith & Son. It later became
The Army, Navy and Air Force Gazette: incorporating "The Broad Arrow" and "Naval and Military Gazette". In 1936, it merged with the
Naval and Military Record to form the
United Services Review.
Surplus material Items deemed no longer serviceable, but still of market value, were stamped again with a second broad arrow, nose-to-nose with the first, to mark them as legally "sold out of service". ==In the American colonies==