
Last modified: 2011-02-26 by rob raeside
Keywords: united states shipping lines | 
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image by Fred Smith, 18 January 2011
The flag of Yates-Porterfield who did shipping in the mid to late 1800s is 
shown on the ship in the attached photo. It was a red flag with 2 white circles 
one with a Y and the other with a P. They operated out of NYC and did a lot of 
shipping to Liberia. The owners were Joseph W. Yates and Capt Robert 
Porterfield.
Fred Smith, 18 January 2011
Zapata Gulf Marine Corp., Houston, TX. - white burgee; red outlined 
compass-rose; "Z"-shaped blue block.
Source: 
    Loughran (1995)
Jarig Bakker, 22 October 2005
 image by Joe McMillanA. Zarega & Co., New York (1840s-50s) <us~zareg.gif>(Source: 
PSMNY)
Zarega & Co. ran several lines in the late 1840s and early 1850s, both 
trans-Atlantic and coastwise. Its ships are easily recognizable by their cryptic 
names, like A.Z. and I.Z. The Red Z Line, whose flag was a blue-white-red 
vertical tricolor with a red Z on the center, operated immigrant ships from 
Glasgow to New York from 1848 until the late 1850s. Another line, called simply 
the Z Line, operated immigrant ships from Antwerp to New York, 1847-1851. The 
company's Regular Line ran between New York and New Orleans.
Joe McMillan, 4 December 2001