I don't hate these threads like some people, they often generate some pretty good discussion. But for me the novelty of repeating things I've posted before wears off.
That said, I will once again post something I've posted several times because it's from a memoir I really enjoyed. It's about the British Mediterranean Fleet in the 1890s. Was the Victorian Royal Navy a military organization?
I don't think we thought very much about war with a big W. We looked on the Navy more as a World Police Force than as a warlike institution. We considered that our job was to safeguard law and order throughout the world — safeguard civilization, put out fires on shore, and act as guide, philosopher, and friend to merchant ships of all nations.
VAdm (ret) Humphrey H. Smith, A Yellow Admiral Remembers, 1932.
Yes! It's very much like the Royal Navy in the Long Peace from 1815 to 1914. If there was a war, they would have to fight it, but as a practical matter most of the time there wasn't a war. They spent their time on training missions, some of the most amazing expeditions in history (Darwin on HMS Beagle, HMS Discovery on the west coast of North America, the James Cook expeditions to the Pacific, the Arctic expedition of a later HMS Discovery), making nautical charts that mariners the world over relied on, conducting search and rescue operations and aiding mariners in distress all over. They needed to be able to expand the navy in case of war, they'd need enough skilled sailors and officers to staff a larger fleet, so they did many things in peacetime to train and keep their officers and sailors sharp while doing something useful for the world as a whole.