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Customs
of the Navy
Introduction
By
Lieutenant Commander A.D. Taylor, C.D., R.C.N.
There
is a wealth of fascinating lore behind many of the routine practices
of our naval profession of which many serving officers and men are
not aware, or at least do not appreciate. In this small volume are
recorded some of the more interesting of the nautical customs and
traditions - their origin, development, and present form.
It
is hoped that this book will in some way help to check the present
tendency noted in civilian circles and in the press to condemn our
allege unswerving allegiance to "the traditions of Nelson's
day". A custom that has no apparent basis is quite meaningless
and therefore might be reluctantly observed. If these pages should
serve to enlighten, to make at least some of the naval customs and
traditions meaningful, they will amply serve their purpose.
In
the Queen's Regulations and Admiralty Instructions is an order that
"...every officer...shall...in all respects conform himself
to the established customs and practices of Her Majesty's Service
at Sea". This is not strange and unreasonable if we realize
that the customs and practices referred to are the naval equivalent
of the unwritten common law of the nation.; we are legally bound
to conform with the law of the land, of which a large part is not
recorded in statute form. The naval enrolment form includes an obligation
"to comply with the usage's and customs of the Royal Canadian
Navy".
The
study of naval customs and traditions, like the study of the larger
body of history itself, is not an exact science, and much material
that has been stated as fact is actually little more than opinion
substantiated by some evidence. Although treated dogmatically by
some writers, much of what they have recorded is open to question.
If this volume should provoke discussion, whether on matters of
opinion or outright errors, it's production will have been justified.
A.D.
Taylor
H.M.C.S.
MAGNIFICENT,
at Portsmouth, England.
15 May 1954.
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