This page is part of © FOTW Flags Of The World website

House Flags of U.S. Shipping Companies: N

Last modified: 2005-03-12 by rob raeside
Keywords: united states shipping lines |
Links: FOTW homepage | search | disclaimer and copyright | write us | mirrors



See also:


Naess Shipping Co

[Naess Shipping Co]  by Joe McMillan

Naess Shipping Co, New York <us~$naes.gif> (Source: [usn61])
As Naess was one of the members of the American Committee for Flags of Necessity, I assume it did not operate under the U.S. flag but under flags of convenience. As it evidently did not belong to the successor organization, the Federation of American-Controlled Shipping, I would assume it was out of business by the time FACS was formed in 1974. The house flag was red with a large white lozenge and a blue N.
Source: US Navy's 1961 H.O.

Joe McMillan, 2 November 2001

Naess Shipping Co. According to Loughran (1979) the company had an extensive fleet of tankers and bulk carriers and was taken over by Zapata Marine Services Inc. of Houston who operated the new fleet as Zapata Naess Ltd. out of Hamilton, Bermuda. This was a short lived venture as by the end of the year it was acquired by P&O. Whilst operating the ships were not registered in their name but under assorted companies. They appear to have been part of an international grouping with others being Naess, Denholm & Co. Ltd. of the U.K. and Nederlandse Norness Scheepvaart Maatschappij N.V. of Holland with the latter having a similar flag but the diamond being smaller.

Neale Rosanoski, 9 March 2003

Navios

[Navios Shipping Co] by Ivan Sache

Navios - a horizontal blue-white-blue-white-blue flag charged with a red circle and a white 'N'.
Source: www.navios.com/navios_company/index.html
Dov Gutterman, 11 October 2003

[Navios Shipping Co] by Ivan Sache

Navios Corporation. They appear to have recently changed their flag going by the current image appearing on their website.
Neale Rosanoski, 9 March 2004

This looks very much like the house flag of Montemar, Uruguay.

Charles Nelson Steamship Company

[Charles Nelson Steamship Company]      [Charles Nelson Steamship Company] by Joe McMillan

Charles Nelson Steamship Company
Primarily a coastwise firm serving the Pacific coast, Nelson also went into the intercoastal business for a time but in 1934 was shut out of the group that fixed rates for the Pacific-to-Gulf of Mexico traffic on the grounds that it was too small to sail a regular schedule. I have found two flags. The first (ca. 1908) was white with red stripes along the upper and lower edges, with a blue lozenge on the center bearing the letter N between two white stars. The later flag was blue with a yellow N.
Source: 1908 update to Flaggenbuch 1905, Wedge (1926), Talbot-Booth (1937)

Joe McMillan, 2 November 2001

New England Fuel Transport Company

[New England Fuel Transport Company]  by Joe McMillan

New England Fuel Transport Company, Boston (?-1926)
The flag was more interesting than most of tonight's set: white with a blue cross separating the letters N,E,F, and T in red, and on the center a blue disk inscribed "Co" in white.
Source: www.steamship.net (no longer available)

Joe McMillan, 2 November 2001

[New England Fuel Transport Company] by Jarig Bakker

New England Fuel & Transport Company, Inc., Boston, Mass. - as Joe McMillan's gif, but red "Co".
Source: Brown's Flags and Funnels of British and Foreign Steamship Companies [Wedge 1926]
Jarig Bakker, 12 February 2005

New York & Brazil Mail Line

[New York & Brazil Mail Line]  by Joe McMillan

New York & Brazil Mail Line, New York
Although listed under this name in Manning, the only line serving New York and Brazil during this period seems to have been the U.S. and Brazil Mail Steamship Company, which was the name for three different entities that operated from 1865-1875, 1878-1881, and 1883-1893. The line was viewed by the British government as an intruder on the British monopoly over mail service to and from Brazil, and was conseqently driven out of business by heavy British government subsidies to the Royal Mail West Indies Company. Manning also labels the same flag as representing the "Empire Line." The flag was white with a blue saltire and the red letters G and A in the hoist and fly. No information on what the letters stood for, but I'm struck by the presence of the blue saltire, which also appears in the city flag of Rio de Janeiro.
Source: Manning (1874)

Joe McMillan, 5 November 2001

New York & Brazil Mail Line. This flag is given by Griffin 1895 as being that of Ocean Steamship Co., also known as the Savannah Line, of New York, and according to Loughran (1979) it is the original for that company, preceding that shown in the "O" page of this series, bearing the initials of the managers. Unfortunately he does not give the managers name but it seems that there may be a connection with them between the two and the reference to the Empire Line may refer to another company handled by said unknown managers.

Neale Rosanoski, 8 March 2004

New York & Charleston Steamship Co

[New York & Charleston Steamship Co]  by Joe McMillan

New York & Charleston Steamship Co.
Based on the fact that the flag was white with a red M, and that the Morgan Line served Charleston at several times, this may be one of the various companies making up Charles Morgan's coastwise empire, but I'm not sure of that.
Source: Manning (1874)

Joe McMillan, 5 November 2001

The New York and Charleston S.S. Co. was founded in 1875, and ran wooden-hulled steamers in coastal service to and from Charleston until it folded in 1885. It was better known as the Quintard Line or the Charleston Line. George W. Quintard was the son-in-law of Charles Morgan (hence the M?) and worked in the ironworks business. Like most men in the business, he dabbled in steamship routes. When the line was dissolved in 1885, the ships CITY of COLUMBIA (1881) and CITY of ATLANTA (1875) passed to the Alexandre Line, while the CITY of PALATKA (1883)passed to the Clyde Line (under charter to the Ward Line.) Ward changed their house flag after the MORRO CASTLE (1930) disaster in 1934, and adopted at least two more under AGWI until they were liquidated in 1953.

Michael Alderson, 6 May 2003

New York, Havana & Mexican Mail Line (Alexandre Line)

[New York, Havana & Mexican Mail Line (Alexandre Line)]  by Joe McMillan

New York, Havana & Mexican Mail Line (Alexandre Line), New York (1867-1888)
The Alexandre Line provided the first regularly scheduled steamship service between New York and Veracruz, later expanding to other Mexican ports and Cuba. Purchased by the Ward Line in 1888. The flag was red with a white lozenge bearing the black initials F.A.
Source: Manning (1874), Flaggenbuch 1905

Joe McMillan, 5 November 2001

New York, Philadelphia & Norfolk Railroad Co

[New York, Philadelphia & Northern Railroad Co]  by Joe McMillan

New York, Philadelphia & Norfolk Railroad Co, Philadelphia
No information on this company; presumably it served the Philadelphia-New York-Norfolk area. The flag was a red burgee with a white lozenge bearing the company initials in red.
1909 update to Flaggenbuch 1905

Joe McMillan, 5 November 2001

New York & Porto Rico Steamship Co

[New York & Porto Rico Steamship Co]  by Joe McMillan

New York & Porto Rico Steamship Co (Porto Rico Line), New York (1885-1949) <us~nypr.gif> (Source: Lloyds 1912, [gsh34])
The roots of this company, like those of the Bull Line, go back to Archibald H. Bull's fleet of sailing vessels that operated from New York to Puerto Rico beginning in 1873. In 1885, Bull incorporated the New York & Porto Rico [sic] Steamship Company, along with other investors, operating under the British flag. When Puerto Rico became a US possession after the Spanish-American War, the U.S. cabotage privilege was extended to the new territory, forcing Bull to sell his British ships and buy American ones instead (until 1912, a ship had to be U.S.-built to fly the U.S. flag). The expense involved caused Bull's other shareholders to seek a buyer for their shares. The man they found, John Berwind, proposed an all or nothing deal and Bull was forced to sell his shares as well. Bull went on to found another company, known as the Bull Line, while Berwind sold out to Charles Morse's Consolidated Steamship Lines in 1907. Consolidated went broke in 1909 and the NY&PR was taken over by the Atlantic, Gulf & West Indies Steamship Lines holding company. However, AGWI continued to operate it under its own name and flag until 1949, when the Bull Line bought the Porto Rico Line and ended its separate identity. The flag for most of the lines existence was a yellow B (for Bull or Berwind) on a red triangular pennant. I have also seen occasional renderings with the B in white.

[New York & Porto Rico Steamship Co]  by Joe McMillan

During the period when it was owned by the Consolidated Steamship Lines, a C rather than a B appeared on the pennant.
(Sources: www.steamship.net (no longer available), Flaggenbuch 1905

Joe McMillan, 5 November 2001

New York & Porto Rico Steamship Co. The dates do not tie up very well. Lloyd 1904 show the version with a "C" (and a yellow one at that) and as Flaggenbuch 1905 also shows the "C" version this does not appear to be a connection with Consolidated Steamship Lines if they did not take over until 1907. Bull left in 1900 so the subsequent adoption of a "B" would seem to favour Berwind but it all seems uncertain.
Neale Rosanoski, 8 March 2004

New York & West Indies Steamship Co

[New York & West Indies Steamship Co]  by Joe McMillan

New York & West Indies Steamship Co, New York
A distinctive flag, white with a central disk divided blue over red.
Source: Manning (1874)

Joe McMillan, 6 November 2001

Norfolk & Southern Steamship Co

[Norfolk & Southern Steamship Co]  by Joe McMillan

Norfolk & Southern Steamship Co (ca. 1905-07)
A red burgee with the white initials N&S.
Source: www.steamship.net (no longer available)

Joe McMillan, 6 November 2001

North Atlantic & Gulf Steamship Co

[North Atlantic & Gulf Steamship Co]  by Joe McMillan

North Atlantic & Gulf Steamship Co, New York
A tramp company dating back to at least the late 1940s. (Tramp companies dispatch vessels to pick up cargoes as orders for transportation arrive rather than keeping to fixed steaming schedules.) This company flew a red and white checkered flag (two rows of three rectangles each) with the initials NA&G in counterchanged letters.
Source: US Navy's 1961 H.O.

Joe McMillan, 6 November 2001

North Pacific Steamship Co

[North Pacific Steamship Co]     [North Pacific Steamship Co]  by Joe McMillan

North Pacific Steamship Co, San Francisco
Evidently this line functioned in the early 20th century, but I have no other information. I have two flags under this name: Flaggenbuch 1905 shows a red flag with a white chevron extending from the lower edge to the center of the upper edge. Lloyds (1912) shows a blue flag with a white disk bearing a red star. As the contemporary Great Northern SS Co. used a similar flag with the addition of a white saltire, there may well have been a corporate relationship, especially as another company under the same ownership as the GNSS was called the Great Northern Pacific SS Co.. But this is speculation.
Flaggenbuch 1905, Lloyds (1912)

Joe McMillan, 6 November 2001

North Pacific Steamship Co. Lloyds 1904 also shows the 2nd blue version although at that point it domiciles at Eureka.

Neale Rosanoski, 8 March 2004

Northwestern Steamship Co

[Northwestern Steamship Co]  by Joe McMillan

Northwestern Steamship Co, Seattle (1904-08)
This company provided service between Seattle, Vancouver and Alaska. It was taken over by the Alaska SS Co. As in the case of the 1912 flag of the North Pacific Steamship Co, this one seems to have features in common with the Great Northern SS Co flag--it was white with a blue saltire and a red star overall.
Source: 1909 update to Flaggenbuch 1905

Joe McMillan, 6 November 2001