Quota System (Royal Navy)
This article includes a list of references, related reading or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (February 2013) |
The Quota System (also known as The Quod), introduced by Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger in 1795, required each British county to provide a quota of men for the Royal Navy, based on its population and the number of its seaports: London, for example, had to provide 5,704 quotamen while Yorkshire had to provide 1,081.
The counties found it difficult to meet the quotas. Some offered high cash bounties to inexperienced volunteers (mostly inexperienced landsmen), creating resentment among the regular seamen who, despite their experience, had received only a small fraction of that bounty on their own volunteering (and none if they were pressed). Sometimes, the counties resorted to sending convicted criminals in lieu of punishment, further creating ill feeling among ships' companies and sometimes introducing typhus (otherwise known as gaol fever).
Britain ended the quota system, along with impressment, in 1815 at the close of the Napoleonic Wars, when much of the fleet was decommissioned and the supply of unemployed seamen was more than adequate to man the remaining ships.
References[]
External links[]
- 18th-century history of the Royal Navy
- 19th-century history of the Royal Navy
- Conscription in the United Kingdom
- 1795 establishments in Great Britain
- 1815 disestablishments in the United Kingdom
- 1795 in military history
- Quotas
- United Kingdom history stubs
- United Kingdom navy stubs