Difference between revisions of "Royal United Service Institution"

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Membership in 1877 amounted to 4,320 men and the number of essays submitted to compete for medals was generally around 15-18.{{ToL|Royal United Service Institution|5 Mar. 1877, p. 10}}
 
Membership in 1877 amounted to 4,320 men and the number of essays submitted to compete for medals was generally around 15-18.{{ToL|Royal United Service Institution|5 Mar. 1877, p. 10}}
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The membership in 1886 was 4,584.{{ToL|Royal United Service Institution|8 Mar. 1886, p. 8}}
  
 
The Institution still exists, operating since 2004 as the Royal United Services Institute.
 
The Institution still exists, operating since 2004 as the Royal United Services Institute.

Revision as of 16:57, 12 February 2020

The Royal United Service Institution was founded in 1831. In modern parlance, it is a "think tank", located in Whitehall, proclaiming itself the "only Professional Institution Open Without Ballot to all Officers of the Navy, Army, and Auxiliary Forces."

By 1921, the Institution boasted that it possessed "the best Professional Library in the United Kingdom; an excellent collection of Maps and Charts ; a Reading Room provided with the leading papers, periodicals, and writing materials ; Museum in Banqueting House adjoining", etc. It was a venue in which members and guests could present talks and spark discussion.[1]

Membership in 1877 amounted to 4,320 men and the number of essays submitted to compete for medals was generally around 15-18.[2]

The membership in 1886 was 4,584.[3]

The Institution still exists, operating since 2004 as the Royal United Services Institute.

Prize Essay Gold Medallists

The institution now offers a variety of medals for notable professional publications. In the Dreadnought Era, there seemed to only be one "Gold Medal", awarded generally every two years though this appeared slightly irregular in practice. The essays were to address an assigned subject.[4]

Only those winners who were in the Navy or Marines are noted below.

Year Recipient Notes
1875 Commander Gerard Henry Uctred Noel
1877 No medal awarded
1879 Captain Edmund Robert Fremantle 7 competitors; subject: "Naval tactics on the open sea, with the existing types of vessels and weapons"
1881 Captain Lindesay Brine subject: "On the best method of providing an efficient force of officers and men for the Navy, including the Reserves"[5]
1883 Captain Charles Johnstone subject: "On an outbreak of war, what is the best organization for distributing the personnel of the Navy and of the Reserves among the available war vessels and among a proportion of merchant vessels, as an auxiliary of the Navy?"[6]
1885 Lieutenant Frederick Charles Doveton Sturdee
1887 No Medal awarded
1888 Captain, R.M.L.I. John Frederic Daniell
1889 Captain Henry Forster Cleveland
1891 Captain Robert William Craigie
1893 Commander Frederick Charles Doveton Sturdee second award
1895 Commander Joseph Honner
1897 Commander George Alexander Ballard
1899 Template:CommN George Alexander Ballard second award
1901 Lieutenant Lionel Herbert Hordern
1903 Lieutenant Alfred Charles Dewar
1906 Lieutenant Barry Edward Domvile
1912 Commander Kenneth Gilbert Balmain Dewar

See Also

Footnotes

  1. The Navy List Advertiser included with The Navy List of January, 1921. p. 14.
  2. "Royal United Service Institution." The Times (London, England), 5 Mar. 1877, p. 10.
  3. "Royal United Service Institution." The Times (London, England), 8 Mar. 1886, p. 8.
  4. "Royal United Service Institution." The Times (London, England), 19 Mar. 1874, p. 7.
  5. "Naval & Military Intelligence." The Times (London, England), 5 Sept. 1881, p. 10.
  6. "Naval & Military Intelligence." The Times (London, England), 1 Feb. 1883, p. 4.