History of the Name
"Kings Shilling"
The Royal Navy always had trouble recruiting enough men to
man all the ships. This was especially so in wartime. At the beginning of
the year war broke out Parliament increased the size of the Navy to 45,000
(the population of Britain at the time was around 9 million). In 1794 this
was increased to to 85,000 and in 1799 to 120,000. The most notorious way
Navy gained seamen was by Impress service
The organisation at the ports charged with obtaining seamen was known as the Impress Service. The Impress service was limited to seizing men who were seamen, a word given a broad interpretation. The age limits were set at 18 to 55 years of age, frequently these limits were ignored. The word 'press' itself was a corruption, in regular use at the end of the Eighteenth Century, of the word prest. It came from the old French prest which was a loan or advance. A man paid the Kings shilling to enlist became an imprest or prest man.