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Aberdeen Shipmaster Society Mortification Board
Aberdeen Shipmaster Society
Aberdeen Shipmaster Society Mortification Board
Aberdeen Shipmaster Society Mortification Board

Aberdeen Shipmaster Society

About MeThe Seamen's Box of Aberdeen was founded in 1598 and incorporated by charter of James VI in 1600. The objects of the Society were essentially charitable, being established to make provision for families of skippers, masters and mariners who were drowned at sea. By virtue of these interests, it quickly gained considerable importance in the municipal life of the Burgh of Aberdeen, pressing for improvements in both administration and the physical development of the harbour area.

During it's first 200 years, the Society raised funds through the collection of poor money and prime gilt from mariners using the port at Aberdeen, poor money being levied on the wages of masters and seamen belonging to the port, whilst prime gilt, a tax imposed on the tonnage of a ship as well as the wages of her seamen, was due from skippers of both home and foreign-going vessels. In 1775 it brought an action in the High Court of Admiralty against John Auldjo, merchant in Aberdeen, for non-payment of prime gilt for 75 voyages made from the port of Aberdeen. The litigation lasted ten years, going before the House of Lords and the Court of Session before finally being ruled in favour of Auldjo, a decision which brought an end to the practice, and to the provision of charity for foreign seamen which it had funded. It seems that a further consequence of the litigation process was the Society's decision to reconstitute the organisation and to petition for a new charter. This was granted on 16 April 1801, and the Society reconstituted under a new name, the Aberdeen Shipmaster Society.

The Society was a wealthy organisation and a substantial land owner in the city of Aberdeen. As well as holding properties purchased for rental, in 1670 it erected a loft in the Quire of St Nicholas Parish Church, with accommodation for all of its members, and in 1788 purchased St Andrew's Lodge, on the south side of the Shiprow, for use as the Society's meeting hall. The building was sold during the development of Market Street in 1840, and a smaller property at 22 Regent Quay purchased by way of replacement.

See Alexander Clark, A Short History of the Shipmaster Society, or The Seamen's Box of Aberdeen (Aberdeen: William Smith, 1911) for further details
Captain Norman Ross certificate of competency as master of a foreign going ship
Aberdeen, Scotland, born 1940
Andrew Walker
Aberdeen, Scotland, born 1959
Valentines
Dundee, founded 1851
Solva Harbour - Dyfed
London, England, 1913 - 1983
Clare Leighton
London, England, 1898 - 1989
Eclipse, Auxiliary Steam Whaler
auxiliary steam whaler, built 1867
Sir John Lavery
Belfast, Northern Ireland, 1856 - 1941
Sylvia Wishart
Stromness, Scotland, 1936 - 2008
Charles Georges Dufresne
Millemont, France, 1876 - 1938
Hercules Linton
Inverbervie, Scotland, 1837 - 1900
Ian Robertson
Aberdeen, Scotland, born 1957
Sandy Dunbar
London, England, 1929 - 2012
Ian Fleming
Glasgow, Scotland, 1906 - 1994
Sir James McGrigor
Cromdale, Moray, Scotland, 1771 - 1858
David Henderson
Aberdeen, Scotland, born 1956
The Tide Is High
by Graeme Swanson
Aberdeen, Scotland, born 1957
Front of Photograph
Aberdeen, Scotland, 1830 - 1919
Doug Cocker
Alyth, Scotland, born 1945