Thanks, both, for your input.
Devenish wrote:
Tony,
I would imagine that a youth was recorded as either a boy or a man, depending purely on the judgement of the recruiting sergeant(?) or whoever made the entry. I imagine there may have been regulations as how a record was made, but they perhaps were not always followed and it might have been intially difficult to assess a young man's age – nothing new there then!
But their age (or at least their stated age) was known - it was recorded at the time of enlistment - so why enlist one sixteen year old as a private and another as a boy?
But there appears to be something different (other than rank) about the status of boys and privates. I have come across the comment against a private 'joined as a boy before enlisting as private'. For some other privates the date recorded as the date of enlistment is later than the date they joined as a boy. In other words boys don't seem to class as enlisted.
Brian Lavery, in
Nelson's Navy states that
'in 1804 , the regulations were altered to allow the recruitment of boys, who were to be paid as men on reaching the age of fifteen'.
There seems to have been confusion as to whether marines were enlisted indefinitely, or for a fixed period, or for the duration of the war. I am wondering whether boys were enlisted for a shorter period, and thus whether a recruit might elect to be recruited as a boy - even though this might perhaps be at a lower rate of pay and perhaps not be eligible for the bounty?
Another possibility is simply that the ages in the description books were inaccurately recorded. The notes to the Ayshford Trafalgar Roll do comment that they sometimes differ from the ages of the same men in other records.
Brian Lavery also states that:
'Drummers were senior to privates, being paid at the maximum rate for a private of fourteen years service in 1808. Unlike the army, the marines do not seem to have used boys in this role.' - Perhaps this is the reference you are looking for, Kester.