
Last modified: 2021-08-25 by  christopher oehler
 christopher oehler
Keywords: house flag | shipping: norway | 
Links: FOTW homepage |
search | 
disclaimer and copyright | 
write us | 
mirrors
See also:
![[B. Stolt Nielsen flag]](../images/n/no~stolt.gif) 
 
image by Jarig Bakker
Source: Brown's Flags and Funnels of British and Foreign Steamship 
Companies, 1926 [9]
Haugesund - red flag bordered white; white "S".
Jarig Bakker, 11 February 2005 
![[B.J. Ruud-Pedersen A/S]](../images/n/no~ruped.gif) 
 
image by Jarig Bakker, 23 January 2006
Source: Brown's Flags and Funnels of Shipping Companies of the 
World [4]
Oslo - Spanish-style 
Blue-White-Blue swallowtail; on white blue "R-P".
Jarig Bakker, 23 January 2006 
![[Bachke & Co.  houseflag]](../images/n/no~bachk.gif) 
 
image by Jarig Bakker
Source: Brown's Flags and Funnels of British and Foreign Steamship 
Companies, 1926 [9]
Trondhjem - red flag, white "B".
Jarig Bakker, 30 Janurary 2004 
![[flag of Bergenske Dampskibsselskab]](../images/n/no~berge.gif)
image by James Dignan
Source: The dumpy book of ships and the sea [16]
House flag: Red Burgee with Blue Borders, top and bottom, two White Bands 
  and BDS over Star in White on Red.
  Jarig Bakker, 13 October 2003 
It was founded in Bergen in 1851. According to my sources, the letters were 
  arranged in a semi-circular pattern above the star.
  Jan Oskar Engene, 16 October 2003 
In All about Ships and Shipping 1959 the letters are in a row, like 
  James drew them, so possibly two variations existed. Description: Red Burgee 
  with Blue Border, top and bottom, two White Bands and BDS over Star in White 
  on Red. Funnel: Black, with three White Bands.
  Jarig Bakker, 16 October 2003 
The letters also appear in a straight line in 
  "Flags, Funnels and Hull Colours"
  Ned Smith, 16 October 2003 
Given that the BDS existed for more than 130 years, variation in house flag and funnel is not unlikely. However, I am not sure that such variation actually occurred with the BDS house flag.
Last night I went through an illustrated history of the company, the book 
  by shipping historian Dag Bakka jr: Bergenske: Byen og selskapet (Bergen: 
  Seagull, 1993). Judging from ship photos of real house flags the letters were 
  arranged in an arch (or semi-circle to use the term of yesterday) and this is 
  how it remained throughout the company's 132 years. However, in printed 
  material, the BDS used a logo consisting of a drawing of a flying house flag - 
  as if it folded out in the wind. In these drawings the letters appear to be in 
  a line. In real use, however, the letters appear to have been arranged in an 
  arch. The back cover of Bakka's book illustrates the house flag and funnels of 
  the BDS in colour. The house flag has the letters in an arch. The funnel was 
  originally black with three white rings, at a later date (1960's ?) changed to 
  yellow with three white rings.
  Jan Oskar Engene, 17 October 2003
![[Bergesen d.y ASA]](../images/n/no~basa.gif)
image by Ivan Sache, 30 November 2003
The first Bergesen shipping business was founded in the XIX century by Berge 
  Bergesen in Stavanger. His great-grandson Sigval Bergesen founded in 1935 the 
  Bergesen company, buying his first tanker the same year. The number of tankers 
  was 4 in 1950 and 7 in 1955. In 1967, the company diversified in dry bulk 
  cargo shipping. Sigvald Bergesen retired in 1976, aged 83, and the company 
  became a public company in 1978. The same year, the company started gas 
  transportation, taking over six vessels ordered by the defunct Fearlney & Eger 
  company. In 1996, Bergesen merged with Havtor ASA, owning then more than 100 
  vessels.
	Since April 2003, the company is a fully-owned subsidiary of 
  World-Wide Shipping. It hires 3,500 people and has offices in France, Japan, 
  the United States, the Philippines, India and Latvia.
	The flag is 3:4, swallow-tailed, white with a green diagonal stripe and the 
  black monogram of the company, made of a B and an half-anchor.
  Ivan Sache, 30 November 2003
My contribution above is unsourced. It is based, however, on the (former 
	and no longer online) company website, reported on 30 November 2003 by the 
	late Dov Gutterman. The swallow-tailed house flag of the company is shown on 
	that website as the company's logo. 
	http://web.archive.org/web/20050924014440/http://www.bergesen.no/Bergesen/Company.nsf
	
	
	Josef Nuesse's "Ships and Flags" website shows the same house flag, but 
	rectangular instead of swallow-tailed.
	Source:
	
	http://www.flagpole.de/reedereiflaggen/europa/nordeuropa/ 
  Ivan Sache, 14 December 2013
The reason the website is no longer online is: In 2003, Bergesen was 
	acquired by Hong Kong-based World-Wide. Together they formed Bergesen 
	Worldwide. In 2005, the company was re-branded as BW, with Bermuda-based BW 
	Group as the [obligatory] holding company.
	I feared that the house flag of World-Wide might be hard to find, due to the 
	name's meaning having relevance for all global shipping, but fortunately the 
	flag is in the Greenwich National Maritime Museum collection:
	
	http://collections.rmg.co.uk/collections/objects/410.html 
	It's a white flag with a blue border and a centred couped red stripe bearing 
	a white "W".
	It's also how the flag was depicted on the sides of the funnel, e.g.
	
	http://www.histarmar.com.ar/BuquesMercantes/Chimeneas/Bergesen%20DY.jpg.
	
	A nice detail is that on the starboard side of the funnel, you'd see the 
	reverse of the flag, so it would always fly from stem to stern. The anchor-B 
	was in obverse on both sides, though.
	On the funnels, the swallowtail is tapering, but I don't know whether that 
	was true for actual flags.
	To me it looks like he has merely chosen a rather unfortunate method of  
	indicating gaps, with a light green meant to represent parts of the drawing 
	that don't exist.
	The funnels of the ships don't show a flag any more; they are now dark blue 
	with the BW logo on them. And the Bergesen ships, that all were called 
	"Berge <something>", have apparently been renamed and are now called "BW 
	<something>", which doesn't have quite the same ring to it.
	But next on that same page is what appears to be a BW house flag.
	Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 16 January 2014
Bergesen really only had a swallowtail flag, and that Josef Nuesse shows 
	it thus, with the impression of a rectangular flag being caused by a rather 
	light green background colour for the individual flags.
	Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 22 June 2014
![[Bergh & Helland]](../images/n/no~bh.gif)
image by Jarig Bakker
Source: Brown's Flags and Funnels of British and Foreign Steamship 
Companies, [9]
White flag blue "B&H".
Jarig Bakker, 24 December 2004 
![[Bergshav Managmeent AS]](../images/n/no~bmat.gif) 
 
image by Ivan Sache
Source: Bergshav.com
The Bergshav family has been involved in shipping since 1772, when they operated their first vessel called "Fortuna".
In 1930, J.M. Ugland, grandfather of the present Bergshav owner, founded the AS Ugland Rederi. In 1980, Ugland operated car carriers, tankers, bulk carriers and owned a repair yard. Bergshav Management was founded in 1989 following the de-merger of Ugland.
The flag is red with (apparently) a thin white border and a white
stylized B in the middle. This flag is fairly similar to the house flag
of Ugland, which is also used by the
branch of the company incorporated in Bermuda, 
Andreas Ugland & Sons Ltd.
  Ivan Sache, 30 November 2003, with textual corrections 28 September 
  2006
Bergshav Management - Brown rendition
![[Bergshav Managmeent flag]](../images/n/no~berg0.gif)
image by Jarig Bakker, 18 October 2005
Source: Brown’s Flags and Funnels of Shipping Companies of the World, 
1995 [4]
According to Brown 1995 there is no white border in 
hoist and fly i.e. only in chief and base.
Neale Rosanoski 26 August 2004 
Grimstad - Spanish-style white-red-white - opened 
white "B".
Jarig Bakker, 18 October 2005
![[Bergshav Managmeent flag]](../images/n/no~b812.gif)
image by 
Neale Rosanoski, 31 August 2010
The actual flag as shown flying in a ship photo, which though small, under the magnifier shows no 
white at hoist with the fly being less definite, but I am happy with it in the 
circumstances, supported by my image and turns out to be 
a mixture of the two shown by FOTW. Ivan's is based on the flag image logo shown 
on the company website and this has had white added to the hoist and fly 
presumably to provide a better contrast with the background but it explains why 
these look narrower than those at top and bottom. The format is thus in line 
with that shown by Brown 1995 and imaged by Jarig as "Bergshav Management - 
Brown rendition" but that has the white too wide and also the shape of the "3" 
like stylized "B" differs with the shape being in line with Ivan's rendition but 
I make that to be too thin. Both company names apply - it was formed in 1988/9 
as Bergshav A/S and changed in 1999 to Bergshav Management A/S.
Neale Rosanoski, 31 August 2010