When the ship arrives from sea, the greatest dispatch is to be used in refitting and getting ready for sea again and until she is so, no officer or seaman is on any account to absent himself from duty. On Thursday afternoons, if the duty of the ship will permit, the ship’s company are to be ordered to mend their clothes.ġ1th. When any duty is to be performed out of the ship, where a part of the ship’s company is required, an officer with his division is to be sent and in like manner, when the service requires but a subdivision, a mate or a midshipman with his proportion of the division, is to be sent always taking great care that the officers and ship’s company are sent upon all duties in rotation.ġ0th. She is, on no pretence whatever, to be detained after that period.ĩth. When in port, and the duty of the ship will admit of the indulgence, a boat is to be ready at nine o’clock every morning, to carry any person, who may have permission, on shore another boat to go at one, and another at a sufficient time before sun-set to admit of her return to the ship at that time. These are always to be piped down after beating the retreat from quarters at sea, and after hoisting the boats up when at anchor.Ĩth. In the winter the hands are to be turned up at seven o’clock and the decks cleaned by 7 bells when the hammocks are to be got up. The boats required for the duty of the ship are to be hoisted out, and the decks scrubbed and washed the comings, ladders, and channels & gratings, are to be particularly well scrubbed the yards squared and hammock cloths spread by seven o’clock. When in harbour and other duty does not prevent it, the hands are to be turned up in the summer season at 5. ![]() When a Commodore arrives in port, the sails are to be loosened and taken in, agreeably to his movements but should any strange ship appear off the harbour, no boat is to board them, until it be ascertained that they are friends.ħth. And when a commanding officers gets underweigh, his motions if the weather will permit, are to be followed till he is clear of the harbour. When in harbour and particular duty on board prevents the motions of the senior officers from being followed, a message is always to be sent specifying the reasons which so prevented it. If in harbour and weather will permit, the sails are to be loosed and every evolution practised which may occur in action at sea.Ħth. When in harbour or at sea, and particular duty does not interfere, or when in company of a senior officer, who does not make the signal periodically, Monday Tuesday and Friday mornings are to be appropriated for the exercise of the great guns and small arms on which day, every officer on the spot is particularly required to attend. When the service will allow of leave being granted to the seamen and marines to go on shore, a regular list is to be kept, and none are to be permitted, but by the first lieutenant or by his consent.ĥth. Should it rain before they are perfectly dry, they are to be taken down, and put into clean half tubs under the charge of the sentinel at the cabin door.Ĥth. Clothes lines to be cut out of white line are to be kept for that particular purpose by the Boatswain’s yeoman the lines to be rove and marked off the preceding night, and the linen hung between the fore and main shrouds at sea. On Saturday mornings, the Ship Cooks are to be called at 4 o’clock, to boil water for washing the ship’s company’s clothes the hands to be turned up at 6 and to continue washing until half past 7 o’clock. ![]() Each Lieutenant is to take a copy of the General Orders, and those issued separately to the officers in their respective departments after which he is to sign his name in the orderly book, which signature is to be considered as an acknowledgement of his having so done.ģrd. Having thought proper to establish the following Rules for the guidance of the officers and the ships company under my command, it is strictly required that no deviation whatever take place without my knowledge and concurrence, but that every person obey them in the fullest sense, together with any additional instructions that I may think proper to insert in the orderly book, for the good of the United States Navy.Ģnd. ![]() The song is sung by Sgt Boudreau.Rules and Regulations generally applicable to the service:Īrticle 1st. DoD Navy the Eleven General Orders of a Sentry - Learn, Know, Do song from album DoD Navy Values Honor Courage Commitment is released in 2015. Listen to Sgt Boudreau DoD Navy the Eleven General Orders of a Sentry - Learn, Know, Do MP3 song.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |