Last modified: 2021-05-29 by rob raeside
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image by Ivan Sache, 21 April 2021
Source: Brown's Flags and Funnels [Wedge 1926]
Mogul Steamship Company, Limited (Gellatly, Hankey & Co), London - white flag,
blue cross with in the center red diamond.
Jarig Bakker, 24 January 2005
In St Boniface Anglican Church in Antwerp some flags may be seen in the cloth
but also in windows, one of which was donated by a shipping company from the UK.
See text on West Window here, rather down the page:
http://www.boniface.be/PDF/history2.pdf
“The West window, donated by an English shipping company in Antwerp, Gellatly,
Hankey in 1921, commemorates the casualties of the Great War. (…) Underneath the
window are two plaques with details of the dedication of the window.” The second
plaque, under the West Window picture, (click to enlarge, new ‘window’) shows
the house flag of this firm, white with a blue cross throughout and a red
diamond placed in the centre.
I’ve not discovered very much on this firm, other than that it was founded in
1862 and that for some time it was known as Gellatly, Hankey and Sewell; seat:
London; now engaged in ‘Marine Services’ under the name Gellatly Hankey
International about which I have found nothing substantial.
Jan Mertens, 22 May 2005
Gellatly, Hankey, Sewell & Co. was a shipping company that was established by
Edward Gellatly at 109 Leadenhall Street, London, in 1862. The company operated
for a hundred years, closing in 1962.
http://cosgb.blogspot.com/2011/10/gellatly-hankey-sewell-co.html
COSGB
Lloyd's Book of House Flags and Funnels (1912) shows the same house flag
(#151, p. 44).
https://research.mysticseaport.org/item/l011061/l011061-c008/#9
Photo
https://collections.rmg.co.uk/collections/objects/975.html
Ivan
Sache, 21 April 2021
From Scott, R.M., The Caltex book of Flags and Funnels, Cape Town, Caltex Africa
Ltd. (1959).
Monarch Steamship Co., Glasgow - red swallowtail, blue cross, with blue disk in
center, all outlined white; white "M".
Jarig Bakker, 2 January 2005
image by Ivan Sache, 3 May 2021
Monarch Steamship Co. A British trampship company originating from Raeburn &
Vérel Ltd. who commenced steamship operations out of Glasgow in 1880 with
Monarch Steamship Co. Ltd. appearing to date from 1902. The original flag, shown
by early sources and some later ones only under Raeburn & Vérel Ltd., was a red
swallowtail with a black cross surmounted by an undefined black circle and this was used until around the mid-1950s when the NMM version was adopted. The company seems to have gone
into abeyance in the late 1960s and was finally acquired by European
Ferries Ltd. in 1973 and then the name resurfaced as ship owners of
ferries and it finally ended up part of P&O for the name to then slide
into oblivion. I doubt if the flag ever flew again after the 1960s
with thereafter it flying the flag of its then owner.
Neale Rosanoski, 18 April 2005
The second flag shown here also appears (#1623, p. 114) in Lloyd's Book of House
Flags and Funnels (1912) as the house flag of Monarch Steamship Co., Ltd.
(Raeburn & Vérel), a Glasgow-based shipping company.
https://research.mysticseaport.org/item/l011061/l011061-c008/#79
Ivan Sache, 3 May 2021
Based on Sampson (1957)
James Dignan, 14 October 2003
W. Montgomery & Co., Ltd., London. The flag is blue with a M (white) in the
middle.
Based on
The Mystic Seaport Foundation
Ivan Sache, 1 February 2004
image by Jarig Bakker, based on the website of the National Maritime Museum.
From the website of the National
Maritime Museum, "the house flag of Monroe Brothers, Liverpool. A white flag
with a blue saltire and a red diamond in the centre bearing a white letter 'M'.
The flag is made of a wool and synthetic fibre bunting. It has a cotton hoist
and is machine sewn. A rope and toggle is attached."
Jarig Bakker, 21 August 2004
image by Ivan Sache, 3 May 2021
Fleetwood’s steam trawling era began in 1891 with the arrival of the vessel
'Lark', owned by Moodys & Kelly of Grimsby. This appearance displayed the port’s
potential to other companies, who soon added vessels to their fleets already at
Fleetwood. Moody & Kelly added their ‘ABC fleet’ which included the Arctic,
Baltic, Celtic, Doric, Electric, Frolic, Gaelic, Hellenic and Ionic.
Fleetwood Online Archive of Trawlers
http://float-trawlers.lancashire.gov.uk/index.php?a=fishingsteamtrawlers
Moodys and Keely contributed to fish science by forwarding a hermaphrodite
cod to the Plymouth Laboratory. A.E. Hefford described the fish in the Journal
of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom (New Series) (1908)
8, 315-317, with the following abstract:
On February 27th, the roe of a
cod having a testicular portion attached was received at the Laboratory from
Messrs. Moodys and Kelly, of Grimsby. It had been taken from a cod caught by a
steam trawler fishing in Icelandic waters. Owing to the rough removal of the
organs from the fish on the trawling ground, the genital ducts were missing and
the region of their origin was ruptured, while the testis had been somewhat
damaged in the course of its long journey to Plymouth.
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=6414764
Lloyd's Book of House Flags and Funnels (1912) shows the house flag of
Moodys & Kelly (#1693, p. 117), a Grimsby-based fishing company, as vertically
divided white-blue.
https://research.mysticseaport.org/item/l011061/l011061-c008/#82
Ivan
Sache, 3 May 2021
Moore & Co., established in 1925 in Wroxham, Norfolk, operates "the finest motor
cruisers on the Norfolk Broads". The Broads are presented as follows in the
booklet released by the Norwich City Council:
"The Norfolk Broads is one of the most popular inland waterway in Europe, with
200 km of lock-free boating. It is Britain's largest protected wetland with
status equivalent to a National Park, made of navigable rivers, shallow lakes,
woodland, fens and grazing marshes. It is also home to some of the rarest plants
and wildlife in the United Kingdom.[...] The Broads were formed in the Middle
Ages when peat was dug for fuel. Over the centuries, water level rose and the
peat diggings flooded, forming the Broads. For many centuries the rivers were
vital trading passages. The famous Norfolk Wherries, designed especially to
negotiate the shallow waterways of the Broads, carried cargo around inland
communities and to and from the coast.[...] Wroxham is the starting point for
many boating holidays on the Broads for over a century. Its broad is one of the
largest and most beautiful."
The house flag of Moore & Co. is a triangular blue flag with a big yellow M
letter.
Company website:
http://www.boatingholidays.co.uk
Ivan Sache, 11 September 2004