
Last modified: 2011-06-11 by rob raeside
Keywords: united states shipping lines | 
Links: FOTW homepage |
search | 
disclaimer and copyright | 
write us | 
mirrors
See also:
![[Wait & Pierce]](../images/u/us~wtprc.gif) image by Joe McMillan
  
image by Joe McMillanWait & Pierce, Salem 
One of the sailing lines operating out of Salem, Massachusetts, in the
early 19th century. I don't know anything more about it, but the flag was
distinctive: burgee-shaped with a deep swallowtail, the hoist yellow as
far as the fork with the blue letters WP, the upper tail red and the lower
tail blue.
Source: painting 
at www.pem.org/archive/
Joe McMillan, 30 November 2001
Ward Line (New York & Cuba Mail Steamship Co), New York (1856-1959)
The Ward Line was formed by James E. Ward of New York in 1856 as a scheduled 
cargo and passenger service using sailing vessels. When the line began shifting 
to steam after the Civil War, it officially became the New York & Cuba Mail 
Steamship Company, but was always known as the Ward Line.  After Ward's 
death in 1894, his successors carried on until 1907, when they decided to sell 
the company to Charles W. Morse's Consolidated Steamship Company. Consolidated 
collapsed a year later, and Ward Line passed to the Atlantic, Gulf & West Indies 
Lines, within which it operated under its own name. The line's reputation went 
downhill and was severely tarnished by the shipwreck of the cargo-passenger ship 
Morro Castle in 1934, the worst ocean disaster ever to occur to a U.S.-flag 
merchant vessel. The Ward Line briefly regained its independence after World War 
II. When AGWI went into liquidation in 1954, a group of outside investors bought 
the Ward Line subsidiary. However, the new owners did not want to accept the 
conditions imposed by the U.S. Maritime Administration for the receipt of 
government subsidies, so they began shifting the Ward Line away from the U.S. 
flag. In addition, as they diversified the company's businesses, forming Ward 
Industries as a holding company, they paid less and less attention to shipping, 
and in 1956 sold the name and assets to the Cuban company Cia Naviera García, 
which renamed itself Ward-García. Ward-García kept the name alive until 1959, 
but the combination of declining demand and the Cuban Revolution soon put it out 
of business. The Ward Line flag was always a white swallowtail with a black W 
inside a black ring.
Sources: Lloyds 1912, Wedge (1926), 
National Geographic (1934),  Talbot-Booth (1937),
US Navy's 1961 H.O.
Joe McMillan, 1 December 2001
Ward changed their house flag after the Morro Castle (1930) disaster in 1934, and adopted at least 2 more under AGWI until they were liquidated in 1953.
Michael Alderson, 6 May 2003
Ward Line. Talbot-Booth (1936) mentions that the original Ward flag was done away with although he does not give it happening until 1939 and does not specify it being replaced. Up until 1938 he showed the flag given by Joe but with his announcement of the change in his 1942 Merchant Ships he shows a tapered version but it is not clear whether this is meant to be a replacement In fact Brown 1929 and 1934 and the National Geographic (1934) all show such a version anyway. More to the point in view of Michael's comments is that Talbot-Booth shows a second flag of a blue tapered swallowtail with a white star within a white ring [see above] under the name of the Cuba Mail Line.
Neale Rosanoski, 27 April 2005
For post WW2 Brown 1951 (Wedge (1951)) under New York & Cuba Mail Steamship Co. shows blue with a broad white horizontal band bearing a red star which happens to be that used by Clyde-Mallory Lines, an AGWI associate
Neale Rosanoski, 27 April 2005
Thomas Wardle & Co., New York (mid-19th century)
No information on this company. The flag was a blue burgee-shaped pennant with a 
white disk.
Source:  chart of "Private Signals of the Merchants of New York" 
Joe McMillan, 1 December 2001
Thomas Wardle. The Mystic Seaport Foundation dates him 1840 on the East Indies and California service also showing the same design, but as a normal rectangular flag, as an alternative.
Neale Rosanoski, 27 April 2005
![[G.E. Warren Corp.]](../images/u/us~gewco.gif) image 
by Eugene Ipavec, 17 June 2006
image 
by Eugene Ipavec, 17 June 2006
The pennant flag of the George E. Warren Corporation from Vero Beach, Florida, 
USA ( http://www.gewarren.com/ ). The 
company wholesales and blends petroleum products. It has no subsidiaries and no 
affiliate companies.
Valentin Poposki, 17 June 2006
George E. Warren is a major private wholesale distributor of petroleum in the 
eastern US. Founded in Boston by George E. Warren in 1907 as a coal and oil 
distributor, it moved to Florida in the early 1990s. The company distributes 
product mostly by barge and pipeline, though it uses some tank trucks as well. 
Warren has distribution facilities in the southeastern and southwestern US. It 
distributes products including ethylene and heating oil to various industries. 
President and CEO Thomas Corr owns the company." 
This means that the pennant may well be, or has been, in use as a house flag.
Source: 
http://biz.yahoo.com/ic/40/40169.html 
Jan Mertens, 17 June 2006
Quite possibly so, but it would be well to remember that all we have so far is a 
flagoid, without evidence that it was ever actually flown in the cloth in any 
context at all.
Ned Smith , 17 June 2006
Warren Petroleum Co., Houston (1922-present?)
Warren Petroleum was established by William K. Warren in Oklahoma in 1922. It 
became a subsidiary of 
Gulf Oil in 1956 and seems to still be in operation as a 
division of 
Chevron, which merged with Gulf in 1984. I do not believe it still 
operates ships, however, as it seems to be mainly in the natural gas 
distribution business in the Midwest and Southwestern U.S. The house flag was 
green with a white W circumscribed by a white ring.
Source:
US Navy's 1961 H.O.
Joe McMillan, 1 December 2001
Waterman Steamship Corporation (Mobile, later New York, now New 
Orleans)(1919-present)
Until the 1970s, Waterman was exclusively in the business of providing ocean 
transportation between the Gulf of Mexico and the Mediterranean. Since then it 
has diversified its services. It was founded by John Waterman as the Mobile, 
Miami & Gulf Steamship Company, with the motive of building up the port of 
Mobile, which had long been overshadowed by New Orleans. Waterman got his start 
managing war surplus ships that belonged to the U.S. Shipping Board. Because of 
good management and effective lobbying in Washington, it flourished despite 
vicious competition from 
Lykes Brothers. After World War II, Waterman became the 
third largest fleet under the U.S. flag, with 55 ships in service in 1949. 
Malcolm McLean bought the company in 1955 and put it into danger of bankruptcy 
by drawing on its assets to fund other shipping ventures, but it was rescued by 
new buyers in 1965, survived reorganization under bankruptcy court protection. 
It now focuses on servcie from the U.S. east coast to the Middle East and South 
and Southeast Asia. The flag as shown on the company website is a slightly 
tapered blue swallowtail, with a black W on a white lozenge. Other sources show 
the same design on a rectangular field, and  Talbot-Booth (1937) shows a red field.
Sources:
Stewart (1953),
US Navy's 1961 H.O.;
www.waterman.com
Joe McMillan, 1 December 2001
Waterman Steamship Corporation. Talbot-Booth noted the change from red to blue for the flag field in his 1938 "Ships & The Sea".
Neale Rosanoski, 27 April 2005
Webb & Knapp, New York
Webb and Knapp is a New York real estate development and architectural firm, and 
I have no idea why they would have had a shipping fleet, but this flag--white 
with a wide blue horizontal stripe bearing a white diamond with a red P--shows 
up in the U.S. Navy's 1961 house flags book. The initial "P" suggests that this 
may have been a successor to some other line that W&K bought for diversification 
purposes, but I really have no idea.
Source:
US Navy's 1961 H.O.
Joe McMillan, 1 December 2001
Webb & Knapp Inc. The obvious answer would seem to be Penn Shipping Co. Inc. who existed from the latter 1950s to c.1980 as it is unlikely that there would be two New York companies at the same time using identical livery. The only shipping connection that I can trace for Webb & Knapp Inc. is that they held hull insurance and assume that the shipping interest was an offshoot to the main property development in which Webb and Knapp were a major player under the control of William Zeckendorf.
Neale Rosanoski, 27 April 2005
Benjamin Webster, Portland, Maine  
No information on this company. Flag was a blue trapezoid with a white star in 
the hoist.
Source: Flaggenbuch 1905
Joe McMillan, 2 December 2001
West Coast Line, New York  
No information on this line, either. The flag was red with a white H, clearly 
shown as shadowed in black in Wedge (1951). I don't know what the H might have stood 
for.
Source: Wedge (1951)
Joe McMillan, 2 December 2001
Wells & Emanuel is apparently a New York company as reported by 
Mystic Seaport.org. The flag is a red swallowtail with a blue cross throughout, in the cross’s centre a
white disk bearing the black initials ‘WE’ (may we suppose the letters were 
readable on the reverse?).  This flag is among the “Private Signals of the Merchants of New York” 
(clickable chart - the seventh one on row four).
The same image is on the card (“burgee”): at
http://www.mysticseaport.org/library/initiative/SignalImage.cfm?PageNum=2&BibID=36294&ChapterNo=14 
(14.2.1 - first flag on this page) described as: ‘Wells & Emmanuel (sic), New York (1850) Empire Line’, refs. given are 5, 18, 35, 66, and 76 
(see further).
![[Wells & Emanuel / Empire Line]](../images/u/us~weemst.jpg) image provided by Burton Green, 7 May 2009
 
image provided by Burton Green, 7 May 2009
(Image provided for identification.)
Two different versions are shown on this page (“swallowtail”):
http://www.mysticseaport.org/library/initiative/SignalImage.cfm?BibID=36294&ChapterNo=27
- the first one (first flag on this page) has tapering edges and does not
show the initials: 27.1.1;
‘Empire Line’ is not mentioned; refs. given are 2, 14, and 52
- the second one, third on the same row and bearing no. 27.1.11, has the
initials; refs. given are
54 and 62 (now ‘Empire Line’ is added but I do not suppose that the name
has any influence
on the presence or absence of initials).  
The references given are:
2. "House Flags of New York, 1800's". Booklet, Seaman's Savings Bank, NY; 1944
5. House flags described in "The Clipper Ship Era" by Capt. Arthur H. Clark
14. House flags of New York, 1800's poster in the "The Clipper Ships"
18. House flags on sailing ship cards, etc. Peabody Essex Museum, Salem
35. House flag data from New Bedford Whaling Museum, Pennsylvania paintings, etc
52. "Shipping House Flags" by Capt. H. Percy Ashley
54. House flags books unpublished, Penobscot Marine Museum, Searsport, Maine
62. "The Shipbuilders of Essex" by Dana A. Story, published 1995 by Ten Pound 
Island Book Co., Gloucester
66. Private signals of the merchant(s) of New York and San Francisco, South 
Street Seaport Museum
76. House flags from Mystic Seaport Library (Part 1 of 2 - part 2 is in Mystic).
All I can add now is a reference from Mystic Library Manuscript Collection 4 
“Records of the Ship HOUND”:
http://www.mysticseaport.org/library/manuscripts/coll/coll004/coll004.html: 
“The clipper ship HOUND was built at Mystic, Connecticut, by Charles Mallory, 
in 1853. She was owned during this period by Charles Mallory, Charles H. 
Mallory, David D. Mallory,and George W. Mallory. The HOUND sailed for the Empire 
Line and was managed by Wells & Emanuel, of New York.” 
Jan Mertens, 25 August 2005
West Coast Steamship Co., Portland, Oregon
An earlier line by this name was apparently bought out by Pacific Coast 
Steamship, which later became part of the Admiral Line in the early 1900s.  
This is obviously a different company given the source, but I have found nothing 
about it. The flag was blue with a large white disk bearing a red W.
Source:
US Navy's 1961 H.O.
Joe McMillan, 2 December 2001
West Coast Steamship Co. Appears to have originally been West Coast Trans-Oceanic Steamship Line which would explain the flag shown by Brown 1958 where the red letters "T/O" are used instead of the "W". Apparently operated post WW2 until the early 1960s.
Neale Rosanoski, 27 April 2005
![[J.W. Westcott]](../images/u/us~wstct.gif) image 
located by Jan Mertens, 28 September 2005
image 
located by Jan Mertens, 28 September 2005
The flag of J.W. Westcott was shown on the Boatnerd site (no longer available). The flag is a white, tapering swallowtail, edged above and below 
in red, and bearing the name WESTCOTT in blue letters.
Another photo 
shows this flag with the name in a different font and the tongues edged red, as 
well.
This Detroit based company is rather special, delivering mail, messages, food 
and whatnot (people, too) to ships on the Lakes, not counting office hours and 
busy at it between April and Christmas. (I should note here that during the 
other months its clients are usually laid up.) And so a particular boat carries 
a US Zip Code all its own! Other services rendered include piloting for Detroit.
Official postal deliveries have been going on since 1895 – the firm was founded 
in 1874 by John Ward Westcott to do just that – deliver things and people to 
ships, sailing or otherwise. Perhaps the house flag has never changed: it has a 
definite 19C look!
Sources (third url leads to page with many pictures)
http://www.hometowntales.com/jwwestcott.html (no longer available) 
http://continuouswave.com/boats/westcott/ 
http://www.boatnerd.com/westcott/
http://www.cardcow.com/catalog/product_13216_JW_Westcott_II__Mail_Boat.html
Jan Mertens, 28 September 2005
This clickable photo shows a rectangular variant among the many
flags flying on the Great Lakes Maritime Center at Port Huron, Michigan:
http://www.boatnerd.com/news/newsthumbs/images-09-3/GLMCFDAA-016-(4992-x-3328).jpg.
Jan Mertens, 20 January 2010
Western Transportation Co., Buffalo
This company appears in New York state documents on shipping and canal boat 
companies as early as 1859, when it was operating 14 steamships, 2 sailing 
ships, and 164 canal boats on Lake Erie and the Erie Canal and had 1,000 
employees. Obviously it was still in business in the early 1900s. The flag was 
red with a white W.
Source: 1909 supplement to Flaggenbuch (1905)
Joe McMillan, 2 December 2001
Western Transportation Co. Formed 31.12.1855 it was reorganized 4.12.1883 becoming the Western Transit Co. as a subsidiary of the New York Central Railroad and then in 1916 following the passing of acts forbidding railroad companies to own fleets the ships were sold to the newly formed Great Lakes Transit Corporation. Lloyds (1904) shows a different version having a red swallowtail with a white circle but with both sources quoting the old name the position is unclear.
Neale Rosanoski, 27 April 2005
Western Union Telegraph Co., New York (1856-present)
For all practical purposes, Western Union has been the U.S. equivalent of a 
national telegraph company. It was originally founded as the New York and 
Mississippi Valley Printing Telegraph Company of Rochester, New York, and 
changed its name to Western Union Telegraph Co in 1856. In 1861, Western Union 
completed the first transcontinental telegraph link, introduced the stock ticker 
machine for the New York Stock Exchange in 1866, and established the first 
consumer credit card in 1914. With changes in communications technology, 
telegrams are no longer an important source of business, but Western Union still  
operates the world's largest electronic money transfer service. Western Union's 
shipping fleet was, of course, cable laying and cable repairs ships. These 
included the C.S. Minia, which was contracted by White Star Line to search for 
debris from the Titanic, and the 130-foot sail schooner Western Union, launched 
in 1939 and still engaged in cable maintenance in the Caribbean and Gulf of 
Mexico until 1974. It is now a separately owned cruise ship. I don't find 
anything listed under Western Union in Lloyd's Register for 2001, however. The 
Western Union house flag was interesting, a blue burgee-shaped pennant with a 
white border. Horizontally across the center was a horizontal band thinly 
striped diagonally in blue and yellow, fimbriated white, between the white 
letters W and U. I take it that the horizontal band was intended to suggest a 
coaxial cable. Unfortunately, I can't find the source for this flag; it was one 
of the numerous "flags and funnels" books. I will send the source when I track 
it down in my notes.
Joe McMillan, 2 December 2001
Western Union Telegraph Co. Brown 1951 and 1958 (Wedge (1951)) show the flag but with white diagonal bands not yellow. A different version entirely is shown in "Cableships & Submarine Cables" with a yellow tapered swallowtail bearing a world globe between a small "W" at top and a "U" at bottom, both black and completing the encirclement of the globe are many small black ? which may be letters, it cannot be made out. The company was merged into the Western Union Corporation in 1987 as part of what is basically described on one site as part of a downward spiral which has in effect left the name only in existence.
Neale Rosanoski, 27 April 2005
According to Brown 1995 Westwood Shipping Co. changed to a white flag bearing an orange stylized "W" and the logo appears on their website but in red.
Neale Rosanoski, 27 April 2005
Wetmore & Cryder, New York  
William S. Wetmore was a prominent merchant shipping operator in New York from 
the 1820s until his death in 1862. He made a considerable fortune in the China 
trade and is famous for having been the first wealthy New Yorker to build a 
summer "cottage" in Newport, Rhode Island, in 1852. This particular venture was 
founded as Alsop, Wetmore & Cryder and was mainly engaged in the Peruvian guano 
trade. The flag was quartered white and red, with black Ws on the white 
quarters.
Source:  chart of "Private Signals of the Merchants of New York" 
Joe McMillan, 4 December 2001
US shipping lines house flags - 'W' continued