The Muster of the Vancouver expedition lists…
1791 CE
Most are naval officers or sailors, many of whom will distinguish themselves in future service, including Peter Puget, Joseph Baker, Joseph Whidbey, William Broughton, Zachary Mudge, Thomas Manby, and Robert Barrie.
There is a large detachment of Marines; whether these are to assist with exploration in hostile territory or to discourage mutiny is not recorded.
Two sixteen-year-old aristocrats, the Honorable Thomas Pitt (nephew of the Prime Minister) and the Honorable Charles Stuart (son of a Marquis), are brought aboard as able seamen; they prove troublesome.
Among the supernumeraries are Menzies (who will keep a meticulous journal of the expedition) and his servant John Ewin (or Ewing).
A Hawaiian man named Towereroo, whom Captain Charles Duncan had brought to England, is put on Discovery that he might return home.
Finally, the Muster includes a Widow's Man, a fictitious seaman kept on the books of Royal Navy ships during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries in order to make payment to the families of dead crew members.
This financial arrangement helps keep widows from being left destitute following the death of their seafaring husbands.
The number of widows' men on a ship is proportional to the ship's size.
A first-rate might have as many as eighteen, while a sixth-rate might have only three.
The ratio had been reduced by Admiralty order on October 25, 1790.
The existence of widows' men serves as an incentive for men to join the Royal Navy, rather than the Merchant Navy, as they know that their wives will be provided for if they die.