The Marine Society, the world’s oldest public…
July 1756 CE
Recruitment begins immediately.
Sponsors are sought and advertisements for volunteers appear in newspapers and on the street:
"Notice is hereby given, that all stout lads and boys, who incline to go on board His Majesty’s Ships, with a view to learn the duty of a seaman, and are, upon examination, approved by The Marine Society, shall be handsomely clothed and provided with bedding, and their charges born down to the ports where His Majesty’s Ships lye, with all other proper encouragement."
Ten men are duly clothed and delivered to ships of the King’s navy.
In this small way begins the work of The Marine Society.
The main object of the charity when founded is sending unemployed or orphaned teenagers to sea as officers' servants.
The Royal Navy is estimated to need about forty-five hundred boys as servants during wartime.
Approximately a thousand will be 'young gentlemen' intending to be officers, and many of the remainder will be supplied by the Society.
As the boys are for the most part from non-seafaring families, the Society probably provides a real increase of several thousand to the pool of naval recruitment.
The Society will by 1763 also provide over ten thousand naval recruits with free clothing, which will help reduce the typhus problem.