HM Victualling Yard, Deptford

The Main Gate to the former Victualling Yard

HM Victualling Yard, Deptford was a Royal Navy Victualling Yard established alongside Deptford Royal Dockyard on the River Thames. There was victualling activity on the site for the best part of 300 years from the mid-17th century through to the early 1960s.

Previously known as the Red House, Deptford, the site with its wharf and storehouses was taken over by the Victualling Commissioners in 1743 to serve as their main operational facility. Rebuilt in the late 18th century, it soon became 'the largest food-processing operation in Britain, if not in Europe'.[1] After 1858 it was formally known as the Royal Victoria Victualling Yard.

Deptford's proximity to the food markets of London made it especially convenient for victualling, and it served the requirements not only of its own neighbouring Dockyard but also those of Woolwich, Sheerness and Chatham, as well as of the fleet and vessels based in the Nore (which was one of the Navy's principal anchorages).[2] In addition, it routinely supplied the other naval victualling yards, both at home and abroad, with items of stock (to supplement those sourced or produced locally) ranging from rum, food and tobacco to clothing and medical supplies.[3]

  1. ^ Coad, Jonathan (2013). Support for the Fleet. Swindon: English Heritage.
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference Lavery1989 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ Dews, Nathan (1884). The History of Deptford. London: Simpkin, Marshall & Co. pp. 267–269.