pressgangs
Pressgangs were organized groups that forcibly recruited sailors for naval service, primarily for the Royal Navy, from the 17th through the early 19th centuries. The practice peaked during periods of intensive warfare with France, when manpower shortages made impressment politically and militarily attractive. The term “press” came from the act of forcing men into service, sometimes by coersion in port towns or aboard ships.
Operation and methods varied. Press gangs—often led by press masters or naval officers—would seek out able-bodied
Legal basis and context were complex. Impressment was a prerogative claimed by the Crown and authenticated
Decline followed the end of major wars and reforms in the 1820s–1840s, with a shift toward voluntary