
Last modified: 2021-05-29 by rob raeside
Keywords: geest line | galgate co. | general steam navigation co. | gsnc | globe | 
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![[John Gaff & Co. houseflag]](../images/g/gb~hfjga.gif) image by Ivan 
Sache, 20 March 2008
 image by Ivan 
Sache, 20 March 2008
Lloyds Book of House Flags and Funnels (1912) 
shows the house flag of "John Gaff & Co." (#45, p. 39), a company based in 
Glasgow, as white with a blue saltire charged in the middle with a red letter 
"G".
Ivan Sache, 12 March 2008 
![[Galbraith, Pembroke & Co. houseflag]](../images/g/gb~hfgap.gif) image by Ivan 
Sache, 29 March 2008
 image by Ivan 
Sache, 29 March 2008
Lloyds Book of House Flags and Funnels (1912) 
shows the house flag of "Galbraith, Pembroke & Co. " (#127, p. 43), a company 
based in London, as divided per saltire white-red-white-blue.
Ivan Sache, 
29 March 2008 
The company was formed in 1877 to trade mostly to the Mediterranean. A short 
lived venture into tankers was attempted in 1895 but these ships were sold in 
1899-1900. The tramp fleet expanded rapidly and in 1897 were registered under 
the ownership of Austin Friars Steamship Co. By this time the company was 
trading worldwide and by 1914 owned thirteen ships, but lost three during the 
Great War.
In 1919 the fleet was sold to Houlder, Middleton & Co who traded 
the Austin Friars SS Co until 1921 when it went out of business. Galbraith, 
Pembroke & Co withdrew from ship owning during the inter war years but continued 
as ship brokers until 1940 when they purchased three old ships. The Basra Steam 
Shipping Co was formed in 1945 and operated until 1952 when it was sold to Graig 
Shipping Co, Cardiff. Galbraith, Pembroke & Co returned to ship broking and are 
still in business.
http://www.mariners-list.com/mobi/site_pages.php?section=Shipping+Companies&category=English&page_name=Galbraith%2C+Pembroke+%26+Co
Mariners L
Ivan Sache, 21 April 2021
Galgate Co., Ltd. (John Joyce & Co.), Liverpool
The flag is red with a white saltire and J (blue) in the middle of the saltire.
Source: 1911 Lloyd's flagbook, as illustrated at
The Mystic 
Seaport Foundation.
Ivan Sache, 24 January 2004
![[Game Cock Steam Towing Co. houseflag]](../images/g/gb~hfgcs.gif) image by Ivan 
Sache, 4 May 2021
 image by Ivan 
Sache, 4 May 2021
Lloyd's Book of House Flags and Funnels (1912) shows the house flag of Game Cock 
Steam Towing Co. (#1856, p. 125), a Gravesend-based tugging company, as blue 
with a yellow game cock in the center.
https://research.mysticseaport.org/item/l011061/l011061-c008/#90 
Ivan Sache, 4 May 2021
![[Galgate Co., Ltd. (Gamecock Tugs Ltd.) houseflag]](../images/g/gb~gcoc2.gif) image by Eugene Ipavec, 17 February 2009
 
image by Eugene Ipavec, 17 February 2009
Gamecock Tugs Ltd (or Steam Towing Co.) is described on
http://www.thamestugs.co.uk/GAMECOCK-S--T--Co--Ltd-.php: 
“The Gamecock 
Steam Towing Company was formed in 1880, originally being a consortium of London 
River Pilots. In 1928, a company with Turkish roots, The Ocean Towage And 
Salvage Company Ltd acquired Gamecock, but they continued to trade under their 
own name. In 1950 they became part of the Ship Towage [London] Ltd combine.” 
Gamecock’s contribution to Ship Towage was four vessels.
The images above are based on the on-line 1912 Lloyds Flags & Funnels:
http://library.mysticseaport.org/initiative/Impage.cfm?PageNum=90&bibid=11061&ChapterId=8: 
No. 1856 ‘Game Cock [sic, jm] Steam Towing Co., Gravesend’. Blue flag with 
yellow cock or rooster, standing, facing the hoist. 
The Hull Museums 
Collections’ poster by H.H. Rodmell shows a modern rendition of above house 
flag. Easiest reached by filling in “rodmell” in the search box:
http://www.hullcc.gov.uk/museumcollections/, then selecting the first item: 
third picture on page. This has a different blue colour and the fowl is standing 
on a ground, also yellow: a difference in design, however small.
Jan 
Mertens, 15 February 2009
![[James Gardiner & Co. houseflag]](../images/g/gb~hfjga1.gif) image by Ivan Sache, 
21 April 2021
 image by Ivan Sache, 
21 April 2021
William Guthrie Gardiner (c1848-1935) was one of the [Glasgow] University's most 
generous benefactors. With his younger brother Sir Frederick Crombie Gardiner, 
he endowed the Gardiner chairs of Music (founded 1928), Physiological Chemistry 
(1919 - renamed Biochemistry in 1958), Bacteriology (1919, renamed Immunology in 
1990)), Organic Chemistry (1919, the restriction removed in 1942 and the Chair 
simply named the Gardiner Chair of Chemistry) and the Gardiner Chair in the 
Pathology of Diseases of Infancy and Childhood (1928). The brothers had endowed 
a lectureship in Organic Chemistry in 1898. The cost of building the Gardiner 
Institute of Medicine, which opened in 1938, was met from their bequests.
Gardiner was a shipowner who founded James Gardiner & Co with his brothers 
Frederick and James c1880. They sold their company at the end of the First World 
War. Gardiner lived in Stirling, where he supported several local charities and 
served as a President of Stirling Royal Infirmary. He bequeathed £10,000 to the 
University to fund research scholarships in science and medical subjects.
https://www.universitystory.gla.ac.uk/biography/?id=WH0036&type=P 
University of Glasgow
Lloyd's Book of House Flags and Funnels (1912) 
shows the house flag of James Gardiner & Co. (#44, p. 39) as swallow-tailed, 
blue with a white border and a blue "G" in the center.
https://research.mysticseaport.org/item/l011061/l011061-c008/#4 
Ivan Sache, 21 April 2021
![[Gardline Shipping Ltd. houseflag]](../images/g/gb~gardl.gif) image by
Jarig Bakker, 29 January 2006
 image by
Jarig Bakker, 29 January 2006
Gardline Shipping Ltd., Lowestoft - blue flag, a white canton. charged with 
stylized blue "GDL".
Source: 
    Loughran (1995)
Jarig Bakker, 29 January 2006
![[J. & A. Gardner & Co. Ltd. houseflag]](../images/g/gb~gardn.gif) image
by Jarig Bakker, 
based on the website of the National 
Maritime Museum.
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 J. & A. Gardner & Co. Ltd., Glasgow. A 
dark blue rectangular flag with a red 'G' in the centre. The flag is made of 
cotton fabric and is machine sewn. A rope and toggle is attached."
Jarig Bakker, 18 August 2004
![[Gate Steamship Co., Ltd. houseflag]](../images/g/gb~hftms.gif) image by Ivan 
Sache, 1 May 2021
 image by Ivan 
Sache, 1 May 2021
Lloyd's Book of House Flags and Funnels (1912) shows the house flag of Gate 
Steamship Co., Ltd. (Thomas Middleton & Son) (#1536, p. 110), a Hull-based 
shipping company, as triangular, red with the white letters "TM&S".
https://research.mysticseaport.org/item/l011061/l011061-c008/#75 
Ivan Sache, 1 May 2021
![[GBLT Shipmanagement (UK) Ltd. houseflag]](../images/g/gb~gblt.jpg) image located by Jan Mertens, 21 January 2011
 
image located by Jan Mertens, 21 January 2011
GBLT Shipmanagement (UK) Ltd is a British, Glasgow based subsidiary of tanker 
shipping company BLT, Indonesia. Website:
http://www.gblt.co.uk/index.shtml. 
GBLT acts as a local BLT representative:
“Today our main function is as a 
commercial office trading and operating group vessels in co-ordination with BLT 
and Chembulk. GBLT (UK) become involved with pre- and post-fixture activities 
when the BLT and Chembulk [US firm now owned by BLT, jm] vessels are located 
West of the Suez Canal.”
We learn that more and more of the eighty-strong 
BLT fleet shows up in that area where GBLT is in charge of all commercial and 
technical aspects, training, and quality standards. For the fleet, see:
http://www.gblt.co.uk/fleet_entire.shtml. As may be seen throughout the 
website and especially on these pages:
http://www.gblt.co.uk/2007_december_11.pdf, and
http://www.gblt.co.uk/news.shtml, 
the house flag is displayed prominently but as a drawing only. Clearly it is 
based on BLT’s flag – red field with blue diamond touching the flag’s edges 
bearing white initials “GBLT” without serifs.
I suppose the “G” makes the 
link with “BLT” to indicate Great Britain. 
Jan 
Mertens, 21 January 2011
![[Geest Line houseflag]](../images/g/gb~geest.gif) image
by Jorge Candeias, 21 Mar 1999
image
by Jorge Candeias, 21 Mar 1999
White with two light blue horizontal stripes
near the upper and lower edges. A yellow lozenge
centered with a thick red border and a fancy red
"G" inside. Crampton ’90 
[cra90] shows this 
flag and calls the company “Geest Industries, 
Ltd.”
Jorge Candeias, 24 Feb 1999
House flag of this Southampton (UK) based maritime company at
http://www.geestline.co.uk
Dov Gutterman, 28 Jan 1999
Geest Line. The company originates from the van Geest family in the 
Netherlands, beginning in Britain in 1935 and forming their shipping company in 
1964. The flag was also used by the Netherlands company of Waling van Geest en 
Zonen.
Neale Rosanoski, 14 July 2005
![[Geest North Sea Line houseflag]](../images/g/gb~gnsl.gif) image by Jarig 
Bakker, 11 November 2005
 image by Jarig 
Bakker, 11 November 2005
Geest North Sea Line, Spalding; blue flag, "Geest" under a small disk between 
two drop-like things, all white.
Source: Loughran (1995)
Jarig Bakker, 11 November 2005
![[General Steam Navigation Company houseflag]](../images/g/gb~gsnc.gif) image 
by Ivan Sache, 
based on the website of the National 
Maritime Museum.
 
image 
by Ivan Sache, 
based on the website of the National 
Maritime Museum.
A white flag with the letters (clockwise from honour point) G S C N in the four 
corners in red. between the N and C is the date "1824". In the centre is a ring 
containing a globe (constructed from latitude and longitude lines, no lands 
shown).
James Dignan, 18 October 2003
Founded 1824 in East London. In 1834 they were awarded contract to provide mail 
service to various European ports. In 1920 it was bought by 
P&O
and eventually 
merged (1960) into P&O and no longer operates independently.
Phil Nelson, 19 October 2003
General Steam Navigation Co. Ltd. As befits a small image sources tend to differ 
or not clearly show the more intricate detail. This includes the colour of the 
globe, its outline and longitude/latitude lines, whether there was a riband 
around the globe, whether the date was in red or black, and whether there were 
continents shown on the globe. In the latter case for example Griffin 1895 and 
Reed 1912 both show continent outlines but everyone else gives no such design 
until at the end Stewart (1963) 
and Brown 1978 both show a globe with continents. The company was formed with the original intention of
trading worldwide hence the adoption of the globe. Talbot-Booth in a
1944 book claims that the original flag was red with a yellow ring
enclosing a yellow circle with the latter having blue lines of longitude
and with a red upright cross placed across the centre. This flag was
reputed to be worn by the "Trident" when Queen Victoria traveled in it in
either 1842 or 1847, the flag being discovered in 1944 in good
condition. This is the only mention I have found of this flag so I am
somewhat doubtful of it. Otherwise the original flag is noted as the one
described but without the date which was not added until 1880 though
this is shown by sources between 1885 and 1909 and without a riband
which is confusing. The Fleet Commodore had a pennant of the flag with
the design placed in the hoist with the length of white in the fly
providing the ready differential from the house flag. The company itself,
according to Lloyds, continued in name until the early 1970s, becoming
General Steam Navigation (Trading) Ltd. and still being noted as using
the flag by a 1975 publication before finally becoming completely
absorbed by  P&O.
Neale Rosanoski, 4 June 2004
The house flag of the General Steam Navigation Co. Ltd., London. A rectangular 
white flag with a red globe in the centre surrounded by a red ribbon. The 
letters 'GSNC' in red are in the corners. The date '1824' is placed below the 
globe. 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.
In 1821 a small group of London businessmen and steam packet operators formed a 
syndicate for the purpose of developing steam-ship communication. The success of 
this venture prompted the membership to turn the existing arrangement into a 
joint stock undertaking and in 1824 the General Steam Navigation Company was 
incorporated by private Act of Parliament. One of the earliest steamship 
concerns on the Thames and almost certainly the first to operate a steamer 
service to foreign ports, the new company began to increase its tonnage and by 
the time of the first half-yearly meeting of the shareholders owned fifteen 
steamers; by 1834 it had won the contract for carrying the mails from London to 
Boulogne, Ostend, Rotterdam and Hamburg. Earlier, in the mid-1820s, the company 
had gained permission for its ships to engage in the movement of goods as well 
as passengers, whereupon it moved into the carriage of live cattle from the 
Continent, a trade upon which the prosperity of the company was to be founded 
for much of the nineteenth century.
In 1836 the company acquired the London 
and Edinburgh Steam Packet Company, a purchase which included six steamers and 
property in both London and Edinburgh. Soon afterwards the Margate Steam Packet 
Company was also taken over and by 1840 the General Steam Navigation Company 
operated forty steamers serving all the principal East Coast and near 
Continental ports. After its early success the company encountered a number of 
setbacks. The railways began to affect the passenger business while the cattle 
trade was adversely affected, by an outbreak of plague on the Continent and also 
by the Order-in-Council of 1884 prohibiting the carriage of live cattle, which 
by the early 1890s had virtually put an end to this trade. In 1902, under the 
chairmanship of Richard White (d.1926), the structure of the company was 
reorganized and its capital reduced. During this period the company consolidated 
its long association with the London river, where in the 1880s it had 
successfully revived the excursion trade between the capital, Southend and the 
North Kent resorts. At the same time it took over the firm of John Crisp and 
Sons, whose activities included not only a service between London and East 
Anglia, but the river trade as well, a transaction which incidentally made 
G.S.N. the operator of a fleet of Norfolk wherries.
At the end of the 
First World War, the company was able to expand its interests in several fields 
but larger companies, keen to acquire a fleet of smaller ships to provide feeder 
services and a network of agency services for their own vessels, began to look 
at the potential of G.S.N. in this respect and in 1920 it was taken over by the 
P&0 Company. In turn, G.S.N. acquired several other small companies. Although 
wholly owned by the larger company, the G.S.N. Company led a largely autonomous 
existence until 1971. In this year the P&0 Group, as it had now become, 
reorganized its subsidiaries and the old G.S.N. Company became a part of P&0 
European and Air Transport Division.
https://collections.rmg.co.uk/archive/objects/491998.html 
National 
Maritime Museum
Lloyd's Book of House Flags and Funnels (1912) shows the 
same house flag (#48, p. 39).
https://research.mysticseaport.org/item/l011061/l011061-c008/#4 
 Ivan Sache, 
21 April 2021