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KEMAEKS 
 
 ON THE 
 
 BILL PRESENTED TO PAELIAMENT, 
 
 AND READ A FIRST TIME, 
 , FOB, 
 
 IMPROVING THE CONDITION 
 
 OE 
 
 MASTERS, MATES, AND SEAMEN 
 
 IN THE MERCHANT SERVICE. 
 
 BY 
 
 EEAR-ADMIEAL BOWLES, M.P. 
 
 LONDON: 
 JAMES RIDGWAY, PICCADILLY. 
 
 1849. 
 
London, Oct. 26th, 1849. 
 
 My dear Sir, 
 
 As your name is on the back of the Bill 
 to which the accompanying suggestions refer, and 
 as the question is one so intimately connected with 
 our Naval interests, you will, I hope, excuse my 
 troubling you with them in the first instance ; and 
 if the matter is not in your hands, you will perhaps 
 have the kindness to forward them to Mr. Labou- 
 chere, to whom I intimated my intention of offering 
 some remarks on this subject during the recess. 
 
 I am, my dear Sir, 
 
 Very faithfully, yours, 
 
 W. BOWLES. 
 
 The Right Hon. Sir F. T. Baring, Bt. 
 &c. &c. &c. 
 
<1 
 
 m 
 
 9m 
 
SUGGESTIONS for the extension and further 
 amendment of the Bill for improving the condition 
 of Masters, Mates, and Seamen in the Merchant 
 Service. 
 
 There can be no doubt of the beneficial results 
 to which we may confidently look forward in a few 
 years after this law has come into operation, and 
 when under its provisions a superior class of men, 
 well educated and qualified for their situations, 
 shall be established in the command of our Mer- 
 cantile Marine. 
 
 It is equally certain that its enactments will pro- 
 tect our Merchant Seamen from many abuses and 
 impositions which now weigh heavily upon them ; 
 but there are still two very material points which 
 have been almost entirely overlooked, and which, if 
 not duly attended to, will after all render this 
 measure much less useful and effective than it 
 would otherwise be. 
 
 These are, First, the necessity for the promulga- 
 tion of a distinct and simple code of offences and 
 punishments at sea, following as nearly as the dif- 
 
V ^l 
 
 I 
 
 
 ■;f 
 
 
 fercncc of circumstances will admit, the languafre 
 and arrangements of the Act of Parliament under 
 which the Royal Navy has so long been governed, 
 and its order and discipline so successfully main- 
 tained and preserved < and, Secondly, the formation 
 of such tribunals in Foreign ports as may take 
 cognizance of, and, if possible, finally arrange and 
 decide, all offences committed on the outward pas- 
 sage, or during the time of the ships remaining in 
 such foreign port. 
 
 With respect to the first point, it will be neces- 
 sary to examine carefully, with a view to their con- 
 solidation into one Act, all the staiutes which relate 
 to the subject, and which are at present very im- 
 perfectly known to those whom they most nearly 
 concern. It is obviously impossible to maintain 
 any rational discipline or "subordination, except both 
 those who command and those who are to obey, 
 clearly comprehend their respective powers and 
 duties ; and a great proportion of the complaints as 
 well as irregularities in our Merchant Service may 
 be attributed to the absence of such a code as that 
 which I now propose to establish, and which (like 
 our Articles of War in the Royal Navy) should be 
 hung up in some public part of every merchant 
 ship, and always accessible to every one wishing to 
 peruse it. 
 
 We have already compressed our Criminal Code 
 within the space of a small octavo volume ; there 
 
5 
 
 can surely bo very little difficulty in following the 
 same course with respect to the various Acts of 
 Parliament scattered throughout our Statute liooks 
 which relate to our Merchant Navy ; and offences 
 and their penalties being thus clearly defined, it 
 would only remain to provide for that more speedy 
 and certain inquiry and decision which forms so 
 important a feature in our modern jurisprudence. 
 
 Grave and heavy crimes must of course be reserved 
 for our National Courts, but lighter and smaller 
 offences might be at once investigated and disposed 
 of by establishing such tribunals in foreign ports as 
 I am now about to propose, and which I believe 
 when placed under proper regulations (and made 
 reciprocal if it was so desired), no other nation would 
 object to. 
 
 All tiwi^who have read with any attention those 
 reports from our Consuls abroad on the present 
 character of the British commercial marine, which 
 are contained in the papers presented last year to 
 Parliament^ will see that I recommend nothing 
 which these gentlemen do not almost unanimously 
 state to be absolutely necessary, and without which 
 their best efforts can be of very little avail. The 
 powers I would confide to them are already possessed 
 by the Consuls of almost every other maritime 
 nation, and it is to our own defective regulations in 
 this respect, and to the absence of a sufllicient 
 authority and control over our mercantile navy in 
 
6 
 
 
 
 foreign porta, thai most of the irregularities and 
 discreditable occurrences so fully detailed in these 
 reports are attributable. 
 
 I ivould suggest therefore that on the arrival of 
 all British merchaut ships at their foreign port of 
 destination, they should as soon afterwards as 
 possible be visited by the Consul or Vice-Consul, 
 or in their absence by some Officer of the Royal 
 Navy, v'hose ship may be lying at the port in 
 question, and the papers being produced and 
 verified, the crew should bo mustered, the ship's 
 log-book examined, the list of fines and other 
 punishments inflicted during the voyage publicly 
 read, and if complaints or appeals against the justice 
 or legality of such punishments be made, it shall 
 be the duty of the Consul, or in his absence of any 
 commanding Officer of llor Majesty's ships who may 
 be present, to fix a time and place for the inquiry into 
 the said appeal and complaint, and forming a court 
 of not less than three persons, proceed to investigate 
 and summarily determine the cases brought before 
 them,keepinga record of their proceedings, inserting 
 in the ship's log-book any increase or remission of 
 fine or other punishments, and in all important and 
 aggravated cases, especially where either the masters 
 or mates may have misconducted themselves, re- 
 porting the particulars to the Board of Trade for 
 the purpose of the investigation directed in clause 
 '10 of this Act. 
 
I would further sug<,'C8t that every merchant ship 
 before clearing out for return to England shall bo 
 aixam visited bv some of the before named authorities, 
 the crew mustered, the absence of every individual 
 satisfactorily accounted for,* and all complaints up 
 to the day of departure inquired into and decided 
 on — recording thci proceedings in the log-book as 
 before directed. 
 
 These proceedings will have a tendency to pre- 
 serve a constant chock over both superiors and 
 inferiors, to dc^ar the Commanders from inflicting 
 any unjust or excessive punishments, and to prove 
 to the seamen that the superintending power of 
 their Government was alwavs at hand as well for 
 their protection, when necessary, as for the preser- 
 vation of order and discipline. 
 
 Perhaps the proposed tribunal (which would be 
 a kind of Petty Sessions), might advantageously 
 consist partly of Naval officers, and partly civilians ; 
 but as the Consuls at foreign porU are subordinate 
 in authority to the C .mmanders of Her Majesty's 
 ships, it would be necessary to define their re- 
 spective powers in these cases very carefully j to 
 prevent disputes or collisions. 
 
 If these suggestions should be thought worthy 
 of attention, a Commission might be formed to 
 
 * This precaution is particularly necessary to prevent the too 
 common practice of leaving men behind wilfully at foreign ports, 
 that their wages may become forfeited as deserters. 
 
frame the Code in question, consisting of one or 
 more officers of the Royal Navy, who have com- 
 manded on foreign stations, two Masters of experi- 
 ence and good character in the Merchant Service, 
 and the Solicitor of the Admiralty, or some other 
 competent legal adviser; and the same persons, 
 with the assistance of any of Her Majesty's Consuls 
 now in England, might draw up the regulations and 
 form of proceeding for hearing and determining all 
 complaints, and offences committed by British mer- 
 chant seamen on the High Seas or in foreign ports, 
 which the Act of Parliament placed under their 
 jurisdiction. 
 
 I will only add, that having served nearly five 
 years in South America at a period when no recog- 
 nized Consular authorities existed in that country, 
 and all the duties devolved on the Naval Officer in 
 command, I do not speak without some considerable 
 experience on the subject I am now discussing, and 
 I am able to corroborate by my own testimony all 
 the more important facts contained in the various 
 reports submitted to Parliament last year, and to 
 which I have already referred. 
 
 It is deeply to be regretted, that the improve- 
 ments now contemplated did not precede (or at least 
 accompany) the repeal of the Navigation Laws ; and 
 that our commercial marine should not have been 
 more carefully prepared for the great struggle for 
 superiority in which it is now invcl/ed with rivals, 
 
 f 
 
 ■ 
 
 
 i 
 
who, during the last thirty years, have been rapidly 
 advancing in experience and arrangement ; but 
 these reflections come too late to be useful, and I 
 will conclude by expressing my earnest hope that 
 the time already lost may. warn us of the dangers of 
 further delay. 
 
 W. B. 
 
 NOnaiAN AND 5KEEN, I'RINTEHS, MAIDEN LANE, COVENT OAHDEN.