
Last modified: 2005-03-12 by rob raeside
Keywords: dart container ships | dodwell | dundee perth & london shipping | donaldson line | d | devitt and moore | dominion shipping | dplc |
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by Jarig Bakker, 29 December 2004
R.S. Dalgleish Ltd., Newcastle - blue flag, red "D"; inside D white space.
From Scott, R.M., The Caltex book of Flags and Funnels, Capetown, Caltex Africa
Ltd. (1959).
Jarig Bakker, 29 December 2004
by
Jarig Bakker, 29 December 2004
However Brown (1951) [Wedge (1951)] has a
slightly different "D", whose inside is blue.
Jarig Bakker, 29 December 2004
by Ivan Sache, 17 March 2004The flag is swallow-tailed, blue with three darts horizontally divided white-red and placed 2 + 1.
![[J. & J. Denholm, Ltd. houseflag]](../images/g/gb~s0978.gif)
from Stewart and Styring's Flags, Funnels and Hull Colors 1963
White with a dark blue lozenge and a white
"D" in the lozenge.
Jorge Candeias, 17 Feb 1999
The current name of the company is Denholm Shipping Services Ltd. The company
was founded in 1866 as a ship agency on the Clyde, in Scotland. It is now
registered in Glasgow. Denholm's first ship was the sailing ship David Sinclair,
bought in 1873. The company experienced heavy losses in the 1940s and had to
move to on-shore activities. Denholm recently diversified its activity among
four branches: logistics (ship agency), shipping, sea foods and industrial
services. The company website is at
http://www.denholm-shipping.co.uk
Ivan Sache, 1 March 2004
![[Devitt and Moore houseflag]](../images/g/gb~dm.gif)
Devitt and Moore ran a fleet of about 20 sailing ships in the wool trade to Australia in the 1800s and early 1900s. In the 1920s they got rid of the ships and founded The Nautical College Pangbourne which, along with the Conway and Worcester, provided cadet training for the MN, RNR and direct entry to the RN College, Dartmouth. The design was wine red and deep blue alternate quarters with a white rectangle (woolsack?) centred in the flag.
Peter Armitage, 24 June 2000
This flag is illustrated in Carr (1961), Flags of the World, and in
Barraclough (1971), Flags of the World.
Jarig Bakker, 24 June 2000
Devitt & Moore of London carried passengers and cargo between Great Britain and
Australia from 1863 until the end of the First World War, mainly in sailing
vessels.
Port Cities: Jan Mertens, 7 February 2005
by Jarig Bakker,
based on the website of the National
Maritime Museum.
From the website of the National
Maritime Museum, "the house flag of Dodwell & Co. A white rectangular flag
with a red cross overall and red borders. A black saltire is in the canton. The
flag is made of a wool and synthetic fibre bunting. It has a cotton hoist and is
machine sewn. A rope is attached."
Jarig Bakker, 11 August 2004
by Ivan Sache, 17 March 2004The flag is red with a black diamond.
by Jarig Bakker
Donaldson Atlantic line, Ltd. had a red-white-blue vertical tricolor with a
blue D on the white stripe but above flew a white pennant with the thistle (the
related Donaldson Line, Ltd. flew the same flag, but not the pennant).
Source: Stewart (1953)
Ned Smith, 1 July 2003
According to "All about Ships & Shipping, E.P.Harnack (ed), 1938", There were three companies:
A similar flag, but with a gold D, was seen on a
pin and one without the letter D also on a large sailing vessel in
West Bay of Victoria Harbour (B.C., Canada).
Charla "Vikingwoman", 6 October 2003
The companies as detailed were managed by the owners who originated as
Donaldson Brothers around 1855, by 1938 becoming Donaldson Bros. & Black Ltd.
Griffin 1895 shows a tapered swallowtail with a black letter but nobody else
supports this version. There does seem to be a connection with the version with
the yellow D from the pin as T.S.S. Captain Cook was managed by them for the N.Z.
Government between 1951 and 1960 but I cannot find any comment on such a flag.
Whether it has any connection with the sighting on the sailing vessel depends on
what it was and when, as Donaldsons folded in the 1970s.
Neale Rosanoski, 9 January 2004
The Dornoch Steamship Co. has a strikingly similar house flag to the Temple Steamship Co. Ltd..
Both house
flags are white with a red triangle. They differ only by the geometry of the
triangle. It seems to me very weird that two different companies could have had
so similar and potentially confusing house flags.
Ivan Sache, 28 February 2004
It sometimes helps to record the funnel marking as well as the house flag. A
white flag with a red triangle, point uppermost, was also the house flag of Lambert Brothers.Ltd.
Their ships had black funnels with the red triangle on a white band.
David Prothero, 29 February 2004
Source: Brown's Flags and Funnels [Wedge 1926]
J.T. Duncan & Company, Cardiff - blue burgee, red cross, in the center white
"D".
Jarig Bakker, 31 January 2005
from
Port Cities located by Jan Mertens
Duncan Dunbar established a business in London, and with his son built up a
sailing-ship empire which traded all over the world from Dunbar Wharf,
Limehouse.
Jan Mertens, 7 February 2005
![[Dundee, Perth & London Shipping Co., Ltd houseflag]](../images/g/gb~s0947.gif)
from Stewart and Styring's Flags, Funnels and Hull Colors 1963
by Jarig
Bakker, 13 December 2004Based on
Wedge 1926 T. Dunlop & Sons, Glasgow - white
flag; white diamond bordered red, charged with blue "D".
Jarig Bakker, 13 December 2004