Department of the Accountant-General of the Navy

  • Accountant Department
    Payment Department
Dissolved1932Superseding agency
  • Department of the Permanent Secretary
JurisdictionGovernment of the United KingdomHeadquartersAdmiralty Building
Whitehall
LondonParent DepartmentDepartment of the Secretary to the Admiralty

The Department of the Accountant-General of the Navy[1] also known as Accountant-General's Department[2] was the department charged by the British Government with reviewing all naval estimates, conducting naval audits and processing payments[3] from 1829 to 1932.

History

Prior to 1832 the navy did not have a specialist department for accounting purposes there existed only an office for administering naval widows pensions that was the domain of the Paymaster for Widows Pensions. The Accountant-General's Department was established when the Admiralty's civil departments were reorganized and the Navy Board was abolished in 1832, this new department took over the duties of the Navy Boards, Accountants Department and Navy Boards, Payments Department. The Accountant-General of the Navy was initially one of the new Principal Officers of the Board of Admiralty from 1832 until 1869.[4]

In 1866 the accountant and his department became the immediate deputising function to the Parliamentary and Financial Secretary to the Admiralty, it was then given a partial remit over control of naval estimating.[5] The accountants department, however, had no authority to monitor and track expenditure or estimates of other departments.

In January 1869 the department was restructured with new reporting lines – that which made the Parliamentary Secretary, with the Civil Lord of the Admiralty as his assistant, now had overall responsibility for Naval Finance. As a result of the re-structuring, the stores accounts functions, for both naval and victualling, overseen by the Storekeeper-General and the Controller of Victualling, were transferred as part of the new responsibilities of the department. The office of the Accountant-General was thus empowered to both review and critique these departments financially, further enlargement of the department took place in 1876 with traditional responsibilities added. The department continued in this role until 1932 when the office of Accountant-General and his staff were merged into the Department of the Secretary to the Admiralty.[5]

The department consisted of a number of specialist accounting divisions with sub-branches that were administered by the Assistant Accountants-General of the Navy, see each divisions responsibilities in the relevant section below.

Accountant-General's duties

Included:[4]

  • Ensure that all Naval accounts were examined and supported by the correct documents.
  • Ensure that all Naval stores supplied were in conforming within the terms of contract.
  • Examination of Naval accounts, the payment of bills, and the recording of expenditure.
  • Keeping all books and accounts connected with the receipt and expenditure of the Navy, and including both the Victualling and Marine Services.
  • Preparation of all invoices for the payment of claims by the Paymaster-General.
  • Review Navy's current expenditure, or the employment of labour and material, as distinguished from cash payments of the dockyards.
  • Review Naval proposals for the spending of money on new work or repairs of any kind for which estimates are currently proposed.

Accountants-General of the Navy

Included:

  • Sir John Deas Thomson (1829–1832) [6]
  • Sir John Thomas Briggs (1832–1854) [7]
  • Sir Richard Maddox Bromley KCB (1854–1863)
  • James Beebey (1863–1872)
  • H.W.R. Walker (1872–1878)
  • Sir Robert G. C. Hamilton, (1878–1882) [8]
  • Sir William Willis (1882–1885)
  • Sir Gerald FitzGerald (1885–1896) [citation needed]
  • Sir Richard Davis Awdry KCB (1896–1904) [9]
  • Sir Gordon W. Miller CB (1904–1906) [10]
  • Sir Alfred Eyles (1906–1918) [11]
  • Conrad James Naef (1923, 1931) [12]

Deputy Accountants-General

Incomplete list included:

  • B. Woolsey O'Brien, (1844) [13]
  • William Willis (1881),[14]
  • Follett Pennell (1891) [15]
  • Conrad James Naef, (1913, 1918)[16]
  • Thomas David James (1920 to 1931) [17]

Assistant Accountants-General

Incomplete list included:

  • Thomas David James (1914)[18]

Structure

Estimates division

Included:[4]

Branch Responsibility
Estimates and Liabilities Branch Generally estimates are prepared, after having been compiled and worked out under the immediate responsibility of the heads of the executive departments, who are responsible also for the administration of the several votes.
Ledger Branch charged with the great work of bringing all expenditure to book under the several votes and sub-heads of votes, and with preparing the all-important Navy Appropriation Account.
Salaries Branch Responsible for all Officer and Seamen wages, maintains records of all payments made.
Ships Establishment Branch Keeps and furnishes records of establishments for estimate and other purposes, and prepares certain of the estimates.

Navy Pay division

Branch Responsibility
Allotment Branch Charged with
Full and Half Pay Branch Charged with all matters relating to the pay of officers, and has its share in the preparation of estimates and returns.
Navy Pension Branch Charged with administering all Navy Pensions.
Registry Section Charged with all matters relating to the pay of officers, and has its share in the preparation of estimates and returns. Superintendence of the Central Registry, which records the services, characters, ages, etc., of petty officers and seamen, and conducts other like business; and Superintendence of the Inquiry Office
Seamen's Pay Branch Exercises all Wages Audit's on ships' ledgers of wages, and deals with the whole business of seamen's wages. There are also a Victualling Audit of payments or allowances in lieu of victualling, subsistence allowances while travelling, and field allowances; and examination of ships' ledgers, with related business.

Invoice and Claims division

Branch Responsibility
Banking Branch Management of the Naval Savings Banks.
Prize Branch All questions relating to prizes and bounties.
Travel and Subsistence Branch Charged with processing travelling, and subsistence expenses, and other like matters, with the audit of naval accountants in that regard.
Wills Branch Deals with the claims and settlement of wills of seamen and marines.[19]

References

  1. ^ Bruce, C. M. (3 August 1924). "The Department of the Accountant-General of the Navy". SNR. The Society for Nautical Research: The Mariner's Mirror. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  2. ^ "Accountant-General's Department (Royal Navy)". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). Hansard, vol 22 cc1186-7, 8 March 1911. 8 March 1911. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  3. ^ "Reports from Committees, Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons". H.M. Government. p.67. 1 January 1876. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  4. ^ a b c Hamilton, Sir Richard Vesey (1896). Naval Administration: The Constitution, Character, and Functions of the Board of Admiralty, and of the Civil Departments it Directs. G. Bell and sons. pp. 34 to 36. Naval Administration, by Sir Vesey Hamilton, G.C.B. (1896).
  5. ^ a b Archives, The National. "Records of Accounting and Pay Departments". discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. National Archives, 1615-1953, ADM Division 14. Retrieved 24 February 2017.
  6. ^ Collinge, J. M. "Principal officers and commissioners, Navy Board, British History Online". www.british-history.ac.uk. University of London, 1978. Retrieved 6 June 2017.
  7. ^ Archives, The National. "Briggs, Sir John Thomas (1781-1865) Knight Accountant General of the Navy". discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. National Archives. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  8. ^ Moodie Heddle, J. G. F. (1946). Orkney and Shetland. CUP Archive. p. 160.
  9. ^ "714 THE EDINBURGH GAZETTE, JULY 15, 1902" (PDF). thegazette.co.uk. The Edinburgh Gazette, 1902. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  10. ^ Archives, The National. "Miller, Sir Gordon William (1844-1906), Knight, Accountant General of the Navy". discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. National Archives. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  11. ^ "Navy lists: 1913-1914, 1918-1920, 1939-1940". National Library of Scotland. p. 535. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  12. ^ "No. 33675". The London Gazette (Supplement). 1 January 1831. p. 2.
  13. ^ K.H, CHARLES HAULTAIN (1 January 1844). "THE NEW NAVY LIST". H.M. Stationery Office, p.262. Retrieved 24 February 2017.
  14. ^ "ADMIRALTY—OFFICE OF THE ACCOUNTANT GENERAL OF THE NAVY. (Hansard, 23 April 1885)". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 23 April 1885. Retrieved 24 February 2017.
  15. ^ Whitaker, Joseph. An Almanack for the Year of Our Lord 1891. p. 221.
  16. ^ "British Military lists : Navy lists, March 1913". National Library of Scotland. p. 582. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  17. ^ "No. 31840". The London Gazette (Supplement). 30 March 1920. p. 3767.
  18. ^ Sellers, Leonard (Sep 14, 1993). The Hood Battalion. Pen and Sword. p. 205. ISBN 9780850523867.
  19. ^ Archives, The National. "Navy Board, Navy Pay Office, and Admiralty, Accountant General's Department: Seamen's Wills". discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. National Archives, 1786-1882, ADM 48. Retrieved 24 February 2017.

Attribution

Primary source for this article is by * Lovell, Tony; Harley, Simon. "Accountant-General of the Navy". dreadnoughtproject.org. Dreadnought Project.

Sources

  • Hamilton, Admiral Sir. Richard. Vesey, G.C.B. (1896). Naval Administration: The Constitution, Character, and Functions of the Board of Admiralty, and of the Civil Departments it Directs. London: George Bell and Sons.
  • Lovell, Tony; Harley, Simon. "Accountant-General of the Navy". dreadnoughtproject.org. Dreadnought Project, 14 October, 2104. Retrieved 6 November 2016.
  • Haydn, Joseph; Ockerby, Horace (1890). The Book of Dignities; containing Lists of the Official Personages of the British Empire, Civil, Diplomatic,
  • Logan, Karen Dale (1976). The Admiralty: Reforms and Re-organization, 1868-1892. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation. University of Oxford.
  • Rodger. N.A.M., (1979) The Admiralty (offices of state), T. Dalton, Lavenham, ISBN 978-0900963940.
  • Smith, Gordon (2014), British Admiralty, Part 2 - Changes in Admiralty Departments 1913-1920, Naval-History.Net.

External links

  • v
  • t
  • e
United Kingdom Navy Board
Principal officers
Subsidiary boardsResident Commissioners
of the navy
home yardsResident Commissioners
of the navy
overseas yards
Offices
under the
principal officers
  • v
  • t
  • e
Ministerial Lords
Naval Lords
Staff Naval Lords
  • Deputy Chief of the Naval Staff (1917–1964)
  • Deputy First Sea Lord (1917–1919)
  • Assistant Chief of the Naval Staff (1917–1964)
  • Vice Chief of the Naval Staff (1941–1964)
  • Deputy First Sea Lord (1942–1946)
Civil Lords
Civil Secretaries
  • v
  • t
  • e
Department of Admiralty
Direction and control
of Admiralty and Naval affairs
Boards and offices under
the First Lord
Direction of
Admirals
Naval/Sea Lords
War and Naval Staff
Secretariat and staff under
the First Sea Lord
Operational planning, policy
strategy, tactical doctrine
requirements
Divisions and sections
under the War and
Naval Staff
  • Administrative Planning Department
  • Administrative Planning Division
  • Air Division
  • Anti-Submarine Division
  • Anti-Submarine and Warfare Division
  • Anti-U-boat Division
  • Air Warfare Division
  • Air Warfare and Fly Training Division
  • Air Warfare and Training Division
  • Combined Operations Division
  • Communications Division
  • Convoy Section
  • Directorate of Defence Plans (Navy)
  • Economic Warfare Division
  • Gunnery and Anti-Aircraft Warfare Division
  • Gunnery Division
  • Gunnery and Torpedo Division
  • Historical Section
  • Local Defence Division Division
  • Mercantile Movements Division
  • Naval Air Division
  • Naval Air Organisation and Training Division
  • Naval Artillery and Torpedoes Division
  • Navigation and Direction Division
  • Navigation Division
  • Minesweeping Division
  • Mobilisation Division
  • Naval Intelligence Division
  • Operations Division
  • Operations Division (Home)
  • Operations Division (Foreign)
  • Operations Division (Mining)
  • Plans Division
  • Plans Division (Q)
  • Press Division
  • Signal Division
  • Signal Section
  • Standardisation Division
  • Tactical Division
  • Tactical and Weapons Policy Division
  • Torpedo Division
  • Torpedo, Anti-Submarine and Minewarfare Division
  • Trade Division
  • Trade and Operations Division
  • Training and Staff Duties Division
  • Tactical and Staff Duties Division
  • Undersurface Warfare Division
Offices of the Sea Lords
Admiralty civil departments
and organisations
under the Sea Lords
Direction/Command of the Fleet
Naval formations after 1707
Naval formations before 1707
Direction of Naval Finance
Departments under the
Parliamentary and Financial Secretary
Direction of Naval Administration
and the Admiralty Secretariat
  • Department of the Permanent Secretary
Branches and offices under the
Permanent Secretary
  • Admiralty Central Copying Branch
  • Admiralty Central Registry Branch
  • Admiralty Record Office
  • Admiralty Library
  • Admiralty Secretariat
  • Air Branch
  • Civil Branch
  • Legal Branch
  • Military Branch
  • Naval Branch
  • Ship Branch
Civil Administration
Departments under the
Civil Lords
  • Accountant-General's Department
  • Contract and Purchase Department
  • Department of the Director of Contract Labour
  • Department of the Surveyor of Buildings
  • Department of the Director of Works
  • Greenwich Hospital Department
  • Works Loan Department
Legal