![]() |
British Army of the British Armed Forces |
---|
Components |
Administration |
Overseas |
Personnel |
Equipment |
History |
Location |
United Kingdom portal |
The Quartermaster-General to the Forces, commonly just referred to as the Quartermaster-General (QMG), was a senior general in the British Army. Latterly, up until 2016, the office was held by a senior General Officer in the army with responsibility for logistics. The post was superseded by that of "Chief of Materiel (Land) Defence Equipment and Support".
A Quartermaster-General first appears in English Army records in 1667; as a permanently established post it dates from 1686.[1]
The Quartermaster-General was (like the Adjutant-General) a senior staff officer of the Commander-in-Chief of the Forces, responsible for the movement and quartering of troops. From the 1680s to the 1880s, the QMG periodically had responsibility for military intelligence in addition.[1]
In 1888, the Quartermaster-General took over responsibility for the transport and supply of equipment, provisions and munitions,[2] formerly overseen by the Commissariat and Transport Department and the Surveyor-General of the Ordnance.[1] From 1904 the Quartermaster-General to the Forces was the Third Military Member of the Army Council (1904) and its successor, the Army Board.[3][4]
The appointment of a Deputy Quartermaster-General dates from 1710 and Assistant Quartermasters-General are recorded from as early as 1692.[1]
In January 2007, following the formation of Defence Equipment and Support, Lieutenant General Richard Applegate assumed the appointment of 'Chief of Materiel (Land), Defence Equipment and Support Organisation';[5] the following month, he was appointed to the office of Quartermaster General.[6] His two immediate successors were also gazetted as holding 'the appointment of Chief of Materiel (Land) Defence Equipment and Support and the office of Quartermaster General',[7] but when Paul Jaques was appointed in 2016 it was simply as 'Chief of Materiel (Land) Defence Equipment and Support'.[8] (The Ministry of Defence organisation charts have not used the term "Quartermaster-General" since 2011.)[9][10][11]
In June 2020, the post of Chief of Materiel (Land) (CoM(L)) was renamed Director General Land (DG(L)), 'to bring DE&S in line with other Civil Service departments and better reflect our business focus'.[12]
Holders of the post have included:[13]
wikipedians
This is the start of the #wikipedians chat. #wikipedians — chat for Wikipedians about leveraging the hub to improve its root Wikipedia article.