
Last modified: 2010-12-29 by rob raeside
Keywords: red ensign | master of the merchant navy and fishing fleet | 
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Proposed but abandoned distinguishing flag of the Master of the Merchant Navy 
and Fishing Fleet and Royal Cypher of HM Queen Elizabeth II.
The three masted sailing ship "Cutty Sark" was built in 1869 as a tea-clipper, 
and is now preserved in a dry-dock near the National Maritime Museum in 
Greenwich. In 1954 she was still on the Thames waiting to be floated into the 
dock on the Autumn high tides, with re-rigging to be completed by Spring 1955. 
In May 1954 the Cutty Sark Preservation Society submitted a suggestion to the 
Duke of Edinburgh, Patron of the Society, that the ship should be a memorial to 
the Merchant Navy, and that the flag of HM the Queen as Master of the Merchant 
Navy and Fishing Fleet, (a title introduced by King George V in 1928) should be 
flown from Cutty Sark's main mast, day and night, after she has been berthed in 
the dry dock. The Queen agreed to the suggestion, and tentatively suggested that 
the flag might be the Red Ensign defaced with the Royal Cypher. The Head of 
Naval Law Branch wrote that the Admiralty had no objection, and that it was in 
any case not clear that the Admiralty had any say in the matter as Section 73 of 
the Merchant Shipping Act 1894 provided for the sovereign to issue warrants 
authorising flags. However the Head of the Military Branch pointed out that: