Ordnance Department: Difference between revisions

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==External links==
==External links==
*''The East India Company's Arsenals & Manufactories'' by Brig-Gen Henry A. Young, Director of Ordnance Factories in India 1917-1920, first published in 1937 and re-published by [http://www.naval-military-press.com/east-india-company-s-arsenals-and-manufactories.html Naval & Military Press] in 2005 gives historical background of munitions factories etc. The original edition is available at the [[British Library]]
*''The East India Company's Arsenals & Manufactories'' by Brig-Gen Henry A. Young, Director of Ordnance Factories in India 1917-1920, first published in 1937 and re-published by [http://www.naval-military-press.com/east-india-company-s-arsenals-and-manufactories.html Naval & Military Press] in 2005 gives historical background of munitions factories etc. Available through Amazon.co.uk from the [http://astore.amazon.co.uk/faminbriindso-21/detail/1845740203 FIBIS Shop. The original edition is available at the [[British Library]]


*This [http://books.google.com/books?id=n1ABAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA164 Google Books link] gives details of the Ordnance Department factories etc  c 1864. pages 164-167 from  ''Strength, Organisation and Composition of the Army of Great Britain'' by Martin Petrie. It indicates that in Bengal, the Stud Department was part of the Ordnance Department.
*This [http://books.google.com/books?id=n1ABAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA164 Google Books link] gives details of the Ordnance Department factories etc  c 1864. pages 164-167 from  ''Strength, Organisation and Composition of the Army of Great Britain'' by Martin Petrie. It indicates that in Bengal, the Stud Department was part of the Ordnance Department.

Revision as of 04:51, 26 January 2010

The Ordnance Department was the part of the military responsible for the supply of weapons and ammunition. It appears that, at least in Bengal, it was also responsible for the Stud Department.

External links

  • This Google Books link gives details of the Ordnance Department factories etc c 1864. pages 164-167 from Strength, Organisation and Composition of the Army of Great Britain by Martin Petrie. It indicates that in Bengal, the Stud Department was part of the Ordnance Department.
  • "The Origin of "the Pusa Experiment" : The East India Company and Horse-Breeding in Bengal, 1793-1808" by Garry John Adler, Bengal Past & Present, 98 (1979), 10-32. Publisher: Calcutta Historical Society. ISSN 00058807. Also refer Veterinary Surgeon for details of William Moorcroft who was the first English Veterinary Surgeon at Pusa.