In 1983, Brigadier L G Hinchliffe MBE introduced his book, "Trust
and Be Trusted", with the following Author's Note:
" Paymasters first served with the English
Army in the latter part of the Sixteenth Century. At least two of the
Treasurers-at-War appointed by Queen Elizabeth I to look after her
military finances on the Continent had Paymasters on their staffs. There
is no detailed record of these Paymsters' duties, but almost certainly
they included the supervision of the Army's Treasure Chest. This massive
box, iron-bound and furnished with huge locks, was dragged along on a cart
by horses or oxen in the army train. Its immediate protection was provided
by a guard of at least a score of soldiers. The keys never left the
possession of the Treasurer-at-War.
In the field all transactions were
conducted in coin. For the pay of soldiers it was issued from the Treasure
Chest to the Captains of companies by the Treasurer-at-War on the basis of
muster rolls. All dealings with soldiers were in the hands of the Captains
and their clerks. These regimental pay duties were jealously retained by
the Captains. The reason was plain. So crude and open to malpractice were
the methods that the opportunities for peculation, not only from the
illiterate soldiers, but from the Queen herself, were many.
During the Eighteenth Century some Colonels
of Regiments gave the title "Paymaster" to officers who became
involved in the payment of soldiers as a main part of their duties and
this practice was formalised in 1797 when Paymasters with special
commissions were gazetted to the Regiments. eighty years later, following
the administrative disasters of the Crimean war and encouraged by the
reforming zeal of Edward Cardwell, it was decided to bring all Army
Paymasters into a single organisation to be known as the "Army Pay
Department". The Royal Warrant giving effect to this was signed by
Queen Victoria on 22nd October 1877 and the Department came into being on
1st April 1878. Four years later its complementary organisation comprised
of non-commissioned officers was established and called the "Army Pay
Corps". The Department and the Corps served through the South African
War and, as a result of their efforts in the 1914/18 War, were, in 1920,
independently awarded the prefix "Royal". In the same year they
were amalgamated into the "Royal Army Pay Corps".
When and where then does this history have its
beginnings? Some of the present-day duties of the Royal Army Pay Corps are
as old as soldiering itself, as the derivation of the word indicates. We
do not know when English soldiers first received pay, but we do know that
financial inducements were offered when feudal obligation, as the means of
raising armies, began to be replaced by other methods in late Mediaeval
times"