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Division
Catalogue reference: Division within ADM
Division within ADM
Records of Royal Greenwich Hospital, and the Chatham ChestThe hospital's minutes are in ADM 67; correspondence is in ADM 65, ADM 66 and ADM 169; law papers are in ADM 76; accounts are in ADM 68 and ADM 69; miscellaneous records are in ADM...
Records of Royal Greenwich Hospital, and the Chatham Chest
The hospital's minutes are in ADM 67; correspondence is in ADM 65, ADM 66 and ADM 169; law papers are in ADM 76; accounts are in ADM 68 and ADM 69; miscellaneous records are in ADM 80
Records relating to the hospital's estates are in ADM 70, ADM 71, ADM 74, ADM 75 and ADM 79
Records relating to pensioners are in ADM 73 and ADM 165. Records of widows' and orphans' pensions, etc are in ADM 73, ADM 162-164, ADM 166. Records relating to staff of the hospital are in ADM 73 and ADM 165. Records of Greenwich Hospital School are in ADM 72, ADM 73, ADM 80 and ADM 161
Late-seventeenth century newsletters, addressed mainly to the first Earl of Derwentwater, are in ADM 77, with entry books in ADM 78
Registers of burials are in ADM 73
The Royal Greenwich Hospital was founded by Queen Mary, who in 1694 gave the royal estate at Greenwich for a home for superannuated seamen and marines. The foundation stone was laid in 1696 and the first pensioners were admitted in 1705. In 1716 the forfeited estates of Lord Derwentwater were added to the hospital's endowments (the Northern Estates). In addition to the in-pensioners, the hospital also maintained out-pensioners and provided pensions and allowances for widows and orphans of seamen and marines. It also provided for a limited number of officers. A school for the sons of seamen was attached to the hospital. In 1829 this school absorbed the Royal Naval Asylum for the children of seamen, originally established by the Patriotic Fund of Lloyds, but managed by commissioners since 1805.
In 1803 the hospital took over the administration of the Chatham Chest. This was a naval charitable foundation established about 1590, from which men hurt or wounded on naval service were relieved. It was supported by a charge of 6d a month on the wages of every officer and rating in the Navy, and was administered by a corporation of officers stationed at Chatham under the oversight of the Navy Board. It paid compensation for wounds and injuries sustained in action or on duty, and pensions for permanent disablement, to warrant officers, ratings and dockyard workers. It also paid pensions to the widows of those killed in action. In 1803 the administration of the chest was transferred to the Royal Greenwich Hospital, and it became known thereafter as 'the Chest at Greenwich'.
After 1832 the hospital passed under the superintendence of the Board of Admiralty, the Civil Lord being the member with particular responsibility for its affairs. It ceased to house in-pensioners in 1869 and since 1873 the building has become the home of the Royal Naval College; but the hospital has continued to administer the school, which moved to Holbrook in 1933, and to provide out-pensions and allowances of various kinds.
Records of the Admiralty, Naval Forces, Royal Marines, Coastguard, and related bodies
Records of Royal Greenwich Hospital, and the Chatham Chest
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