History
On 14 April 1882, George W. Rendel, a renowned civil engineer working for both the Elswick Ordnance Company and theResponsibilities
As of April 1882, the holder's responsibilities included (duties shared with Controller of the Navy): # Dockyards. # Steam Reserves.—as regard Ships. # Shipbuilding. # Constructor's Department. # Store Department. # Dock-yard Craft. # Inventions and Experiments in Ships and Steam. # Gunnery as relates to Materiel. # Promotions and transfers of Professional Officers and Workmen in the Dockyards. Additional as of September 1912. # Contracts for Matériel for the Fleet (including Ships and their Machinery, Armour, Naval Ordnance and Gun Mountings, Aeroplanes and Airships), Works, Yard Machinery, and Stores of all descriptions. Contract arrangements in connection with the disposal, salvage, or loan of vessels or stores. # Superintendence of the Contract and Purchase Department. ''NOTE.—Tenders for Ship's Hulls and Propelling Machinery, Armour, and important Gun and Air-craft Orders, will also be marked to the Third Sea Lord.'' ''General organisation of Dockyards, including provision of Labour and Plant, and all business questions in connection with the building and repair of ships and their machinery, whether in the Dockyards or in Private Yards.'' Additional as of August 1916. # Contracts for Matériel for the Fleet (including Ships and their Machinery, Armour, Naval Ordnance and Gun Mountings, Aeroplanes and Airships), Works, Yard Machinery, and Stores of all descriptions. Contract arrangements in connection with the disposal, salvage, or loan of vessels or stores. Superintendence of the Contract and Purchase Department. # General organisation of Dockyards, including provision of Labour and Plant, and all business questions in connection with the building and repair of ships and their machinery, whether in the Dockyards or in Private Yards. ''NOTE.—Important questions relating to repair of ships and questions of general administration which may affect progress on ships building or under repair will be marked also to the Third Sea Lord.'' ''NOTE.—Tenders for Ship's Hulls and Propelling Machinery, Armour, and important Gun and Aircraft Orders, will also be marked to the Third Sea Lord.''Additional Civil Lords of the Admiralty
Included: * Mr.Second Civil Lord
* Sir. Arthur Francis Pease, January 1918 - 1919.Third Civil Lord
* Sir. Robert S. Horne, 1918 - 1919Fourth Civil Lord
* Victor Bulwer-Lytton, Earl of Lytton, 1918-1919.Departments under the additional civil lord
* Constructors Department *References
Citations Sources * Archives, National (1882), ''Distribution of Business in docket Distribution of Business: Board of Admiralty''. ADM 1/6330. UK. * Blakeley, Fred M. Walker ; foreword by Trevor (2010). ''Ships & shipbuilders : pioneers of design and construction''. Barnsley: Seaforth, published in association with the Royal Institution of Naval Architects. . * Greene, Sir William Graham (Secretary of the Admiralty), (1917) "The Board of Admiralty. Distribution of Business". Copy in Greene Papers. National Maritime Museum, GEE/2. UK. * Government, H.M. (January 1919). ''Admiralty: Board of Admiralty''. The Navy List: corrected to 18 December 1918. London. H.M. Stationery Office. England. * Jellicoe, Earl John Rushworth Jellicoe (1921). ''The Crisis of the Naval War''. Library of Alexandria. . * Marder, Arthur J. (2014). ''From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow: Volume IV 1917, Year of Crisis''. Seaforth Publishing. . * Laviers, Eleanor; Mckillop-Mash, Charlotte. ''Papers of Francis John Stephens Hopwood, Baron Southborough''. Bodleian Library, University of Oxford, 2007Attribution
Primary source for this article is by Harley Simon, Lovell Tony, (2016), Additional Civil Lord of the Admiralty (Royal Navy), dreadnoughtproject.org, http://www.dreadnoughtproject.org.External links
{{Admiralty Department, state=collapsed Royal Navy Royal Navy appointments 1882 establishments in the United Kingdom 1885 disestablishments in the United Kingdom 1912 establishments in the United Kingdom 1919 disestablishments in the United Kingdom