Mobilisation Division (Royal Navy)

The Mobilisation Division [1] was the former Directorate of the British Admiralty Naval Staff responsible for mobilisation requirements, manning and war preparation planning from 1912-1918.

Mobilisation Division
Division overview
Formed1912
Preceding Division
Dissolved1918
Superseding agency
JurisdictionGovernment of the United Kingdom
HeadquartersAdmiralty Building
Whitehall
London
Parent departmentAdmiralty Naval Staff

History

The Mobilisation Division was established on 8 January 1912 [2] it evolved out of the Naval Mobilisation Department of the Admiralty and was part of both the Admiralty War Staff and Admiralty Naval Staff departments. Mobilisation ceased to be a Naval Staff division on 12 January 1918 [3] when it was re-designated an admiralty department that would now report to the Office of the Second Sea Lord until 1932.

Responsibilities

The division was responsible for the mobilisation of active personnel, in addition to securing crews for all commissioned vessels including those in reserve. It also had to plan for and arrange the requisition of merchant vessels for the purpose of auxiliary purposes. It was also responsible for liaising with various mobilisation (naval employment offices) present all ports to process drafted conscripts. Other duties included the planning and projecting all manning requirements and securing available resources to meet those plans. During world war one in addition to its other duties, the Mobilisation Division was also charged with the responsibility for the supplying the fleet with fuel, from the Naval War Staff point of view.

Directors duties

As of 1917:

  • All points connected with mobilisation which are dealt with by members of the Board, are in the first instance to be referred to them for their consideration.
  • To prepare and keep correct to date, a complete all plans for mobilising the Naval forces of the Empire with the utmost possible rapidity, and with the least strain on the Admiralty.
  • To keep Commanders-in-Chief and Commanding Officers supplied, as may be directed, with all such important information as shall be considered by the Board likely to be of use in war.

Directors

Included:[4]

Assistant directors

Included:[8]

  • Captain John W. L. McClintock, January 1912 - April 1914.
  • Captain Geoffrey Hopwood, May 1914 - April 1916.

Subordinate staff sections

A more detailed breakdown of the distribution of work allocated within the division to the various staff sections can be seen below.

As of 1917:[9]

Mobilisation

Manning

gollark: It depends how you define "best".
gollark: "We responded really slowly to a terrorist attack, what shall we do?! The public will be angry at us!""Arrest people who have the video of us failing to respond and do something big which sounds like it'll kind of help to distract everyone.""We could try actually improving...""No."
gollark: Since you appear, er, not dead.
gollark: Which is also a bad thing to base government policy on.
gollark: Regardless of whether having guns is a good idea or not, it's still a bit stupid to set government policy based on the latest terror attack.

References

  1. Lambert, Nicholas A. (2002). Sir John Fisher's Naval Revolution:Abbreviations. Univ of South Carolina Press. p. XV. ISBN 9781570034923.
  2. Kennedy, Paul (24 April 2014). The War Plans of the Great Powers (RLE The First World War): 1880-1914. Routledge. p. 128. ISBN 9781317702528.
  3. Black, Nicholas (2009). The British naval staff in the First World War (1. publ., transferred to digital pr. ed.). Woodbridge: Boydell Press. p. 155. ISBN 9781843834427.
  4. Mackie, Colin. "Senior Royal Navy Appointments from 1865" (PDF). gulabin.com. Gulabin, p.49, January 2017. Retrieved 18 February 2017.
  5. Archives, The National. "Duff Service Record". discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. National Archives, ADM 196/43, f80. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  6. Archives, The National. "Sinclair Service Record". discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. National Archives, ADM 196/43, f368. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  7. Archives, The National. "Culme-Seymour Service Record". discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. National Archives, ADM 196/43, f477. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  8. "British Military lists : Navy lists,1913 to 1921, 1944-1945". National Library of Scotland. p. 582. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  9. Marder, Arthur J. (31 March 2014). From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow: Volume IV 1917, Year of Crisis. Seaforth Publishing. p. 222. ISBN 9781848322011.

Attribution

Primary source for this article is by Harley Simon, Lovell Tony, (2016), Mobilisation Department (Royal Navy), dreadnoughtproject.org, http://www.dreadnoughtproject.org.

Sources

  • CB1515(50) [later OU 6171/31] The Technical History and Index (Part 50): Mobilisation of the Fleet. Demobilisation Records, 1918–19, written by the Mobilisation Department of the Admiralty, January 1921.
  • Archives, The National. "Records of Naval Staff Departments", discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. National Archives, 1912-1964.
  • Black, Nicholas (2009). The British Naval Staff in the First World War. Woodbridge: The Boydell Press. ISBN 9781843834427.
  • Hamilton C. I. (2011) The Making of the Modern Admiralty: British Naval Policy-Making, 1805–1927, Cambridge Military Histories, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-1139496544.
  • Mackie, Colin, (2010-2014), British Armed Services between 1860 and the present day — Royal Navy - Senior Appointments, http://www.gulabin.com/.
  • Rodger. N.A.M., (1979) The Admiralty (offices of state), T. Dalton, Lavenham, ISBN 978-0900963940.
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