Building complex in London
The Admiralty complex in 1794. The colours indicate departments or residences for the several Lords of the Admiralty. The pale coloured extension behind the small courtyard, on the left is Admiralty House.
The Admiralty buildings complex lies between Whitehall , Horse Guards Parade and The Mall and includes five inter-connected buildings.
Since the Admiralty no longer exists as a department, these buildings are now used by separate government departments:
The oldest building was long known simply as The Admiralty ; it is now known officially as the Ripley Building,[ 1] a three-storey U-shaped brick building designed by Thomas Ripley and completed in 1726. Alexander Pope implied that the architecture is rather dull, lacking either the vigour of the Baroque style, fading from fashion at the time, or the austere grandeur of the Palladian style just coming into vogue. It is mainly notable for being perhaps the first purpose-built office building in Great Britain. It contained the Admiralty board room, which is still used by the Admiralty Board , other state rooms, offices and apartments for the Lords of the Admiralty. Robert Adam designed the screen, which was added to the entrance front in 1788. In January 1806, the body of Lord Nelson lay in the building on the night preceding his state funeral .[ 2] The Ripley Building is currently occupied by the International Development section of the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office .[ 3]
The Old Admiralty (Ripley Building) in 1760, before the addition of the Adam screen
The Ripley Building in 2018
Admiralty House is a moderately proportioned mansion to the south of the Ripley Building, designed by Samuel Pepys Cockerell and built in the late 18th century as the residence of the First Lord of the Admiralty in 1788.[ 4] Winston Churchill was one of its occupants in 1911–1915 and 1939–1940. It lacks its own entrance from Whitehall and is entered through the Ripley Courtyard or Ripley Building.[ 4] It is a three-storey building in yellow brick with neoclassical interiors.[ 5] The ground floor comprises meeting rooms for the Cabinet Office and the upper floors are three ministerial residences.[ 6]
Admiralty House, Hong Kong in 1935
There was formerly also an Admiralty House located at, or near to, the main base and dockyard in each station of the Royal Navy for use of the Commander-in-Chief. Each property was designated as the Admiralty House named for its location, but often possessed a property name (similarly to stone frigates being commissioned with a name distinct from their functional designations, such as HMS Malabar , functionally Her Majesty's Naval Base, Bermuda , which closed in 1995).[ 7]
The Commander-in-Chief of the station used the Admiralty House when based ashore, but was otherwise based afloat aboard the flagship of the squadron. There may have been more than one Admiralty House per station, as with the North America Station (later the North America and West Indies Station , and finally the America and West Indies Station ), the squadron of which was for a time based in Bermuda during the winter months and Halifax, Nova Scotia, during the summers, before Bermuda became the year-round headquarters. Former Admiralty Houses would cease to have that function, either being disposed of (if having been on Admiralty property) or re-purposed as separate stations were merged, such as the Jamaica Station being merged with the North America Station to create the North America and West Indies Station .[ 8]
Other Admiralty Houses or former Admiralty Houses include:
Admiralty House , Bermuda (successively Rose Hill , Mount Wyndham , and St. John's Hill , which was re-named Clarence Hill )[ 9]
Admiralty House , English Harbour , Antigua , Leeward Islands (now housing Nelson's Dockyard Museum ).[ 10]
Admiralty House , Halifax , Nova Scotia , Canada (now the Naval Museum of Halifax )[ 11]
Admiralty House , Hong Kong (Marble Hall )[ 12]
Admiralty House , Malta [ 13]
Admiralty House , Mount Wise , Devonport , Plymouth , England (Hamoaze House )[ 14]
Admiralty House , Mount Wise , Devonport , Plymouth , England (formerly Government House )[ 15]
Admiralty House , Port Royal , Jamaica [ 16]
Admiralty House , Singapore [ 17]
Admiralty House , Sydney , New South Wales , Australia [ 18]
Admiralty House , Trincomalee , Ceylon [ 19]
There are two former naval properties today known as Admiralty House , though it is unclear whether they were ever so designated by the Admiralty, or ever served that function:
Admiralty Extension [ edit ]
The Admiralty Extension (which is also one of the two buildings which are sometimes referred to as the "Old Admiralty") dates from the turn of the 20th century.
This is the largest of the Admiralty Buildings.[ 22] It was begun in the late 19th century and redesigned while the construction was in progress to accommodate the extra offices needed by the naval arms race with the German Empire . It is a red brick building with white stone, detailing in the Queen Anne style with French influences. It has been used by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office from the 1960s to 2016. The Department for Education planned to move into the building in September 2017 following the Foreign and Commonwealth Office's decision to leave the building and consolidate its London staff into one building on King Charles Street. A change of contractor (BAM was replaced by Willmott Dixon ) then delayed consolidation of the Department for Education to autumn 2018.[ 23] In 2021, the building became the home of the Department for International Trade .[ 24]
Admiralty Arch
Admiralty Arch is linked to the Old Admiralty Building by a bridge and is part of the ceremonial route from Trafalgar Square to Buckingham Palace . In 2012, HM Government sold the building on a 125-year lease for £60m for a proposed redevelopment into a Waldorf Astoria luxury hotel and four apartments.[ 25]
The Admiralty Citadel [ edit ]
Bomb proof citadel constructed 1940 for Admiralty headquarters
The Admiralty Citadel is a squat, windowless Second World War fortress north west of Horse Guards Parade, now covered in ivy .[ 26]
Bradley, Simon, and Nikolaus Pevsner . London 6: Westminster (from the Buildings of England series). New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press , 2003. ISBN 0-300-09595-3 .
C. Hussey, "Admiralty Building, Whitehall", Country Life , 17 and 24 November 1923, pp. 684–692, 718–726.
^ Philip Carey. Central Westminster London Photo Routes: Charing Cross to The Houses of Parliament . Philip Carey. p. 254. GGKEY:4R61C7KPJYX. Retrieved 7 January 2021 .
^ Adkin, Mark (2005). The Trafalgar Companion: The Complete Guide to History’s Most Famous Sea Battle and the Life of Admiral Lord Nelson . London: Aurum Press Ltd. p. 548. ISBN 978-1845130183 .
^ "The Architecture of British Naval Power in Whitehall" . Essential London. 4 March 2021. Retrieved 9 September 2022 .
^ a b Historic England . "Grade I (1267114)" . National Heritage List for England . Retrieved 5 June 2009 .
^ "Open House – Going inside Admiralty House" . Ian Mansfield. ISSN 2753-7846 . Retrieved 9 September 2022 .
^ Parliament — Ministerial Residences (21 July 2016,PDF) from the UK Parliament website
^ Tucker, Spencer C. (2012). The Encyclopedia Of the War Of 1812: A Political, Social, and Military History . ABC-CLIO. p. 59. ISBN 978-1851099573 .
^ Cundall, Frank (1915). "Historic Jamaica : With fifty-two illustrations". archive.org. London : Published for the Institute of Jamaica by the West India Committee, p. xx.
^ Worth, Margaret (9 January 2022). "The History of Admiralty House" . The Bermudian. Retrieved 9 September 2022 .
^ "Nelson's Dockyard Museum" . Paradise Islands . www.paradise-islands.org/. Retrieved 2021-08-08 . The Nelson's Dockyard Museum is housed on the ground floor of the original Naval Officer's House (Admiral's House). The building is Victorian dating back to 1855.
^ Admiralty House National Historic Site of Canada . Canadian Register of Historic Places . Retrieved 22 August 2012.
^ "Marble Hall Gatekeeper's Lodge (1901– )" . Gwulo. Retrieved 9 September 2022 .
^ "Admiralty House undergoing restoration with a $4.3m investment - TVM News" . TVM English . Retrieved 2019-05-16 .
^ Historic England , "Hamoze House and attached railings (1386257)" , National Heritage List for England , retrieved 12 July 2019
^ Historic England . "Admiralty House, Plymouth (1386256)" . National Heritage List for England . Retrieved 22 November 2015 .
^ "Admiralty Houses" . Jamaica National Heritage Trust . Jamaica National Heritage Trust. Retrieved 2021-08-08 .
^ "Sembawang Residents to Embrace Sport, Health, Food, Greenery and Heritage at Bukit Canberra" . Sports Singapore (Press Release) . 1 July 2018. Retrieved 5 May 2020 .
^ "Admiralty House Garden and Fortifications (CHL) (Place ID 105399)" . Australian Heritage Database . Australian Government . Retrieved 12 October 2017 .
^ "Admiralty House - 200 years of naval tradition" . Sunday Observer. 16 February 2020. Retrieved 11 July 2021 .
^ "Admiralty House, Mount Pearl" . The Trident . 1998 (Southcott ed.): 2–3.
^ "Admirable homes in the Sun" . The Jewish Chronicle . London. 2009-04-03. Retrieved 2021-08-08 .
^ Philip Carey. Central Westminster London Photo Routes: Charing Cross to The Houses of Parliament . Philip Carey. p. 103. GGKEY:4R61C7KPJYX. Retrieved 7 January 2021 .
^ "Willmott Dixon wins Old Admirality [sic] Building refurb" . constructionenquirer.com .
^ Fisher, Liz (6 April 2021). "Licence to trade: Liz Truss will use Ian Fleming's old office to strike post-Brexit deals" . The Telegraph . London. Archived from the original on 8 June 2021. Retrieved 30 June 2021 .
^ Batty, David (24 October 2012). "This article is more than 8 years old London landmark Admiralty Arch sold to become luxury hotel" . Guardian Media Group. The Guardian. Retrieved 7 January 2021 .
^ Derelict London by Paul Talling, page 190, publ. 2008 by Random House , ISBN 978-1-905211-43-2
Direction and control of Admiralty and Naval affairs Boards and offices under the First Lord Direction of Admirals Naval/Sea Lords War and Naval Staff Secretariat and staff under the First Sea Lord Operational planning, policy strategy, tactical doctrine requirements Divisions and sections under the War and Naval Staff Offices of the Sea Lords Admiralty civil departments and organisations under the Sea Lords
Admiralty Area Cash Offices
Admiralty Central Dockyard Laboratory
Admiralty Central Metallurgical Laboratory
Admiralty Civilian Shore Wireless Service
Admiralty Compass Observatory
Admiralty Constabulary
Admiralty Constabulary Headquarters
Admiralty Engineering Laboratory
Admiralty Experimental Station
Admiralty Experiment Works
Admiralty Gunnery Establishment
Admiralty Interview Board
Admiralty Labour Department
Admiralty Marine Technology Establishment
Admiralty Materials Laboratory
Admiralty Mine Design Department
Admiralty Mining Establishment
Admiralty Naval Aircraft Materials Laboratory
Admiralty Record Office
Admiralty Regional Offices
Admiralty Research Laboratory
Admiralty Signal Establishment
Admiralty Signals and Radar Establishment
Admiralty Surface Weapons Establishment
Admiralty Surveying Service
Admiralty Torpedo Experimental Establishment
Admiralty Underwater Weapons Establishment
Admiralty Underwater Weapons Launching Establishment
Architectural and Engineering Works Department
Air Equipment and Naval Photography Department
Air Department
Air Materiel Department
Air Personnel Department
Amphibious Warfare Headquarters
Armament Supply Department
Board of Invention and Research
Board of Longitude
Boom Defence Department
Boom Defence and Marine Salvage Department
Britannia Royal Naval College
Chemical Board
Chemical Department
Civil Catering Department
Civil Engineer in Chiefs Department
Coastguard and Reserves Branch
Combined Operations Headquarters
Commissioner for Property and Income-tax for the Naval Department
Compass Department
Contract and Purchase Department
Council of Naval Education
Dental Examining Board
Department of Radio Equipment
Department of the Accountant-General of the Navy
Department of Aeronautical and Engineering Research
Department of Miscellaneous Weapons Development
Department of Naval Assistant (Foreign) to Second Sea Lord
Department of Naval Education
Operational Research
Department of Personal Services and Officer Appointments
Department of Physical Research
Department of Physical Training & Sports
Department of Radio Equipment
Department of Research Programmes and Planning
Department of Superintendent of de-magnetisation
Department of the Admiral of the Training Service
Department of the Chief Inspector of Naval Ordnance
Department of the Chief of Naval Information
Department of the Chief Scientist
Department of the Civil Engineer-in-Chief
Department of the Comptroller of Steam Machinery
Department of the Comptroller of Victualling and Transport Services
Department of the Controller of the Navy
Department of the Controller-General of Merchant Shipbuilding
Department of the Controller for Navy Pay
Department of the Deputy Controller for Auxiliary Shipbuilding
Department of the Deputy Controller for Dockyards and Shipbuilding
Department of the Director Contract-Built Ships
Department of the Director-General Aircraft
Department of the Director-General of Manpower
Department of the Director-General, Supply and Secretariat Branch
Department of the Director of Aircraft Maintenance and Repair
Department of the Director of Contract Labour
Department of the Director of Dockyards
Department of the Director of Electrical Engineering
Department of the Director of Manning
Department of the Director of Merchant Shipbuilding
Department of the Director of Merchant Shipbuilding and Repairs
Department of the Director of Merchant Ship Repairs
Department of the Director of Naval Construction
Department of the Director of Naval Equipment
Department of the Director of Naval Recruiting
Department of the Director of Naval Weather Service
Department of the Director of Personal Services
Department of the Director of Physical Training and Sports
Department of the Director of Torpedoes and Mining
Department of the Director of Transports
Department of the Director of Underwater Weapons
Department of the Director of Underwater Weapons Materials
Department of the Director of Unexploded Bombs
Department of the Director of Warship Production
Department of the Director of Welfare and Service Conditions
Department of the Director of Wreck Dispersal
Department of the Flag Officer Sea Training
Department of the Engineer in Chief
Department of the Paymaster Director-General
Department of the Inspector of Anti-Aircraft Weapons
Department of the Inspector of Dockyard Expense Accounts
Department of the Inspector-General of Naval Hospitals and Fleets
Department of the Medical Director-General of the Navy
Department of the Physician of the Navy
Department of the Physician General of the Navy
Department of the Storekeeper-General of the Navy
Department of the Surveyor of Buildings
Department of the Surveyor of Dockyards
Directorate-General, (Naval Manpower and Training)
Directorate General Training
Dockyards and Fleet Maintenance Department
Dockyards Branch
Dockyard Expense Accounts Department
Dockyard Schools
Electrical Engineering Department
Engineer Branch
Engineering Department
Experimental Department
Fire Control Group
Greenwich Hospital Department
Inspector of Telegraphs
Inspector of Repairs
Joint Warfare Establishment
Medical Consultative Board
Medical Examining Board
Historical Section
Hydrographic Department
Marine Department
Marine Pay Department
Materials and Priority Department
Medical Consultative Board
Medical Department
Medical Examining Board
Movements Department
Nautical Almanac Office
Naval Artillery and Torpedo Department
Naval Engineering College
Naval Equipment Department
Naval Historical Branch
Naval Construction Department
Naval Intelligence Department
Naval Medical Service
Naval Law Division
Naval Manpower Department
Naval Mobilisation Department
Naval Ordnance Department
Naval Ordnance Inspection Department
Naval Ordnance Stores Department
Naval Personnel Services and Officer Appointments Department
Naval Publicity Department
Naval Regional Offices
Naval Reserve Department
Naval Security Department
Naval Stores Department
Naval Training Department
Naval Works Department
Navy, Army and Air Force Institute
Navy and Army Canteen Board
Navy Works Department
Navigation Department
Observatory at the Cape of Good Hope
Office of the Admiral Commanding Coast Guard and Reserves
Office of the Admiral Commanding, Reserves
Office of the Admiralty Chemist
Office of the Adviser on the Naval Construction to the Board of Admiralty
Office of the Assistant Controller
Office of the Assistant Controller Research and Development
Office of the Clerk of the Journals
Office of the Chief Polaris Executive
Office of the Deputy Controller of Navy
Office of the Deputy Controller Production
Office of Extra Naval Assistant to Second Sea Lord
Office of the Inspector Gun Mountings
Office of the Keeper of Records
Office of the Senior Psychologist (Naval)
Office of the Senior Psychologist of the Navy
Office of the Translator of French and Spanish Languages
Office of the Vice Controller Air
Office of the Vice Controller of the Navy
Organisation and Methods Department
Packet Service
Regional Organisation for Merchant Shipbuilding and Repairs
Royal Corps of Naval Constructors
Royal Flying Corps
Royal Marine Police
Royal Marines Office
Office of the Chaplain of the Fleet
Royal Naval Academy
Royal Naval Aircraft Workshops
Royal Naval Air Service
Royal Naval Air Stations
Royal Naval Armaments Depot
Royal Naval Auxiliary Service
Royal Naval Cordite Factories
Royal Naval Propellant Factory
Royal Naval College
Royal Naval College and the School for Naval Architecture
Royal Naval College, Dartmouth
Royal Naval College, Greenwich
Royal Naval College, Keyham
Royal Naval College, Osborne
Royal Naval Engineering College
Royal Naval Film Corporation
Royal Naval Hospital
Royal Naval Medical Depot
Royal Naval Minewatching Service
Royal Naval Mine Depot
Royal Naval Patrol Service
Royal Naval Scientific Service
Royal Naval Sick Quarters
Royal Naval Torpedo Depot
Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve
Royal Naval War College
Royal Naval War College, Portsmouth
Royal Navy Dockyard
Royal Navy Medical Service
Royal Navy Shore Signal Service
Royal Observatory, Greenwich
Royal School of Naval Architecture
Salvage Department
School of Mathematics and Naval Construction
Scientific Research and Experiment Department
Sea Transport Branch
Sea Transport Department
Sea Transport Division
Ship Department
Ship Design Department
Signal Department
Signal School
Sixpenny Office
Statistics Department
Steam Department
Superintendent of De-magnetisation
Torpedo Experimental Establishment
Transport Department
Undersurface Warfare Department
Victualling Department
Volunteer Boys and Cadet Corps
Weapons Department
Weapons Department (Naval)
Women's Royal Naval Service
Wireless Telegraphy Board
Direction/Command of the Fleet Naval formations after 1707
1st Fleet
2nd Fleet
3rd Fleet
Commander-in-Chief, Africa
Atlantic Fleet
Commodore, Arabian Seas and Persian Gulf
Australia Station
Cape of Good Hope Station
Cape and West Africa Station
Battle Cruiser Fleet
Battle Cruiser Force
Caspian Flotilla
Channel Fleet
Channel Squadron
Commander-in-Chief, Coast of Ireland
Cork Station
Coast of Scotland
Commander-in-Chief, China
Commander-in-Chief, Dover
Flag Officer, East Africa
East Indies Station
East Indies and China Station
Eastern Fleet
Far East Fleet
English Channel
Grand Fleet
Flag Officer Gibraltar
Harwich Force
Home Fleet
Jamaica Station
Leith Station
Commander-in-Chief, Levant
Levant and East Mediterranean
Commander-in-Chief, Leeward Islands
Mediterranean Fleet
Medway
Newfoundland Station
New Zealand Division
New Zealand Naval Forces
Nore
North America and West Indies Station
Commander-in-Chief, North Sea
Admiral Commanding, Orkneys and Shetlands
Pacific Fleet
Pacific Station
Admiral of Patrols
Commander-in-Chief, Plymouth
Commander-in-Chief, Portsmouth
Queenstown Station
Royal East African Navy
Royal Indian Navy
Flag Officer Submarines
Commander-in-Chief, Rosyth
Reserve Fleet
Scotland and Northern Ireland
Commander-in-Chief, South Atlantic
South East Coast of America Station
Commander-in-Chief, Thames and Medway
West Africa Squadron
Flag Officer, West Africa
Commander-in-Chief, Western Approaches
Naval formations before 1707 Direction of Naval Finance Departments under the Parliamentary and Financial Secretary Direction of Naval Administration and the Admiralty Secretariat Branches and offices under the Permanent Secretary Civil Administration Departments under the Civil Lords Legal
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