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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: I27-INV |
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IMPRESSMENT , the name given in English to the exercise of the authority of the state to " press"' or compel the service of the subject for the defence of the realm. Every sovereign state must claim and at times exercise this power. The" drafting " of men for service in the American Civil War was a form. of impressment. All the monarchical, or republican, governments of Europe have employed the press at one time or another. All forms of conscription, including the English ballot for the militia, are but regulations of this sovereign right. In England impressment may be looked upon as an erratic, and often oppressive, way of enforcing the common obligation to serve in " the host " or in the posse comitatus (power of the county). In Scotland, where the feudal organization was very complete in the Lowlands, and the tribal organization no less complete in the Highlands, and where the state was weak, impressment was originally little known. After the union of the two parliaments in 1707, no distinction was made between the two divisions of Great Britain. In England the kings of the Plantagenet dynasty caused Welshmen to be pressed by the Lords Marchers, and Irish kerns to be pressed by the Lords Deputy, for their wars in France. Complaints were made by parliament of the oppressive use of this power as early as the reign of Edward III., but it continued to be exercised. Readers of Shakespeare will remember Sir John Falstaff's commission to press soldiers, and the manner, justified no doubt by many and familiar examples of the way in which the duty was performed. A small sum It is now accepted generally that " to press " is a corruption of prest," as " impress " is of " imprest," but the word was quite early connected with "press," to squeeze, crush, hence to compel or force. The " prest " was a sum of money advanced (O. Fr. prester, modern paler, to lend, Lat. praestare, to stand before, provide, become surety for, &c.) to a person to enable him to perform some under-taking, hence used of earnest money given to soldiers on enlistment, or as the " coat and conduct " money alluded to in this article. The methods of compulsion used to get men for military service naturally connected the word with " to press " (Lat. pressare, frequentative of premere)to force, and all reference to the money advanced was lost (see Skeat, Etym. Diet., 1898, and the quotation
A distinction between the liability of sailors and of other men dates from the 16th century. From an act of Philip and Mary (1556) it appears that the watermen of the Thames claimed exemption from the press as a privileged body
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Subject to such limitations as these, all seafaring men, and watermen on rivers, were liable to be pressed between the ages of eighteen and fifty-five, and might be pressed repeatedly for so long as their liability lasted. The rogue and vagabond element were at the mercy of the justices of the peace. The frightful epidemics of fever which desolated the navy till late
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supply the number of men required. In 1795 it was .found necessary to impose on the counties the obligation to provide " a quota " of men, at their own expense. The local authorities provided the recruits by offering high bounties, often to debtors confined in the prisons. These desperate men were a very bad element in the navy. In 1797 they combined with the United Irishmen, of whom large numbers had been drafted into the fleet as vagabonds, to give a very dangerous political character to the mutinies at the bore and on the south of Ireland. After the conclusion of the great Napoleonic wars in 1815 the power of the press Was not again exercised. In 1835 an act was passed during Sir James Graham's tenure of office as first lord of the admiralty, by which men who had once been pressed and had served for a period of five years were to be exempt from impressment in future. Sir James, however, emphatically reaffirmed the right of the crown to enforce the service of the subject, and therefore to impress the seamen. The introduction of engagements for a term of five years in 18S3, and then of long service, has produced so large a body
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AuTxoRlrIES.Grose's Military Antiquities, for the general subject of impressment, vol. ii. p. 73 et seq. S. R. Gardiner gives many details in his history of James I. and Charles I., and in The Civil War. The acts relating to the navy are quoted in A Collection of the Statutes relating to the Admiralty, &c., published in 181o. Some curious information is in the papers relating to the Brest Blockade edited by John Leyland for the Navy Record Society. Sir James Graham's speech is in Hansard for 1835. (D. H.) End of Article: IMPRESSMENT If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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