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Central Military Service Tribunal and Middlesex Appeal Tribunal : Minutes and Papers

Description and record details

Reference MH 47
Title Central Military Service Tribunal and Middlesex Appeal Tribunal : Minutes and Papers
Date 1915-1922
Description

This series contains records of the Middlesex Appeal Tribunal, 1916 to 1919, minute books and selected papers of the Central Tribunal, 1915 to 1922 and selected papers of the Veterinary Tribunal, 1918. Also contains a printed set of minutes of the Central Medical War Committee, 1916 to 1917.

Pieces 1-144 were transferred from PRO 10/162-281.

Note

A project to catalogue and digitise the records in this series was completed in January 2014, with funding provided by the Friends of The National Archives (FTNA) and the Federation of Family History Societies (FFHS) which has allowed this collection to be made available as free downloads for a 10 year period.

Related material

Some tribunal records for Cumberland and Westmorland are in the Cumbria Record Office.

For general files on National Registration and tribunals see RG 28

Held by The National Archives, Kew
Legal status Public Record(s)
Language

English

Creator

Central Medical War Committee, 1916-1917

Central Military Service Tribunal, 1915-1922

Middlesex Appeal Tribunal, 1916-1919

Veterinary Tribunal, 1918

Physical description 162 volume(s)
Access conditions Open
Selection and destruction information Further records were destroyed under a Ministry of Health schedule of 1921.
Administrative/ biographical background

In October 1915 local military service tribunals were appointed by local authorities under the instructions of the Local Government Board and the Scottish Office to consider the postponement of the calling up for military service of voluntarily attested men. They were part of the administrative provisions to co-ordinate military service requirements with those of civil departments and vital industries. In November a Central Tribunal was set up as a final committee to which the recommendations of local tribunals in cases involving occupational rather than personal grounds were to be forwarded for final decision and to which in other cases appeals could be made against the decisions of local tribunals.

After the passing of the Military Service Act 1916, which introduced compulsory military service, the local tribunals and the central tribunal were made statutory bodies, and intermediate tribunals called appeal tribunals were set up in counties or combinations of counties to divert the bulk of appeals from the Central Tribunal; appeal to the Central Tribunal existed only by leave of the appeal tribunals. Members of the Central Tribunal and the appeal tribunals were appointed by the crown.

The tribunals were bound by regulations issued under the Military Service Acts by the Local Government Board, and the Central Tribunal received the assistance of staff of the board and of the registrar general. The Central Tribunal also acted as an advisory body to the Army Council respecting men who had been sentenced by court martial to terms of imprisonment for breach of military discipline, and who pleaded a conscientious objection to undertaking combatant or non-combatant service as a reason for their refusal to obey military orders.

The Central Tribunal ceased to meet as a body on January 1919, but its life was prolonged to enable its members to fulfil the duty imposed on them by the Representation of the People Act 1918 of issuing certificates in appropriate cases to exempt conscientious objectors from loss of voting rights for a period of five years after the war.