Last modified: 2008-08-30 by jarig bakker
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Lloyd's Book of House Flags and Funnels (1912) shows the house flag of "J.H.D. Dabelstein" (#27, p. 38), a company based in Hamburg, as red with a white square diamond charged with a red letter "D".
The "The
ShipsList" website mentions SS "Fiume" as purchased by Dabelstein from
Hambourg South American Line in 1901.
The same year, Dabelstein purchased the "Europa
1879" from Witt & Busch and operated her until scrapped in 1914.
Ivan Sache, 15 Mar 2008
Dampfer-Genossenschaft Deutscher Strom- und Binnenschiffer GmbH (Gesellschaft mit beschraenkter Haftung). That is: Steamer Company of German River and Inland Shipping Ltd.
This company was a Co-operative Society of private skippers, founded
in 1889 in the city of Fuerstenberg (Oder), at present the city of Eisenhuettenstadt.
The skippers sailed on the Friedrich-Wilhelm-Kanal (at present Oder-Spree-Kanal).
They transported cargo from the river Oder to the German capital Berlin.
In 1956 the co-op was nationalised and became the Firma VEB Binnenschiffahrt;
in the German Democratic Republic it was a state-firm.
Jens Pattke, 11 Oct 2005
Herm Dauelsberg, Bremen - Israeli-style WBWBW flag; in center
black "D".
Image after Brown's Flags and Funnels Shipping Companies of the World,
compiled by J.L. Loughran, Glasgow, 1995 [lgr95]
Jarig Bakker, 19 Jan 2006
Peter Deilmann, Neustadt - white flag, red "D", containing a
ship's bow topped by an "F", all red.
(Guess this is Neustadt in Holstein)
Image after Brown's Flags and Funnels Shipping Companies of the World,
compiled by J.L. Loughran, Glasgow, 1995 [lgr95]
Jarig Bakker, 12 Oct 2005
From a Google cache
(news flash from 24 Sept.) we learn that:
"Deppe Line will withdraw from liner shipping effective 31 October.
To confirm with the FMC status of vessel operator, the Hamburg-based H.
Schuldt-owned carrier formally chartered a ship (lately a 3,000 TEU
unit) from its long-standing partner Lykes Lines (CP Ships).
Deppe, which had its roots in Belgium (Armement
Deppe) used to offer space on three weekly box services between N.
Europe and the US East Coast and Gulf, including Mexico."
I do not know anything about the degree of relationship between Deppe
Lines (DE) and Armement Deppe, but anyway, here goes:
Company website: The Delta
points to "Deppe", surely, and the choice of colours may not be accidental.
A quick look did not reveal anything on withdrawing from the shipping
business... But if the flag waves on, who are we to complain?
Jan Mertens, 5 Nov 2003
Friedrich A. Detjen G.m.b.H. & Co., Hamburg - Dov Gutterman
reported the link
of Detjen - flag: white with red bordered white diamond charged with black
capital D. At the history page of that site the black thingies at top and
bottom on a Macromedia Flash image are replaced by black shadows underlining
the flag flying. On that same history page is another houseflag: white
with a vertical chevron with in the center a capital D. It's black and
white, though...
Santiago Dotor, 6 Nov 2003
I would't call this design striking, but it's definitely interesting:
a sort of red and black saltire on white, where the saltire is formed by
two overlapping diagonals, the one that runs from top hoist to bottom fly
disposed above the other one, and both divided in two halves, the hoist
half red and the fly half black. The caption is another nightmare. The
first word looks like "Olick", OSLT, the second one seems to be "Rusit",
or "Dusit", the third is completely unreadable, but seems to begin with
a D, and the third one might be the "Gem." abbreviation.
Jorge Candeias, 23 Dec 2004
It's the Deutsch-Australische Dampfschiff(ahrts)-Gesellschaft, Hamburg.
The flag can be seen on a pdf file from the 1902
Brockhaus encyclopedia. No Australian angle as far as I can see, only
the (then) German national flag colours.
Jan Mertens, 24 Dec 2004
Deutsche Afrika-Linien John T.Essberger - The company is located at
Palmaille 45 in Hamburg-Altona and is today member of Rantzau group. The
company is using two flags, that one of John T. Essberger
(white with a blue capital "E") and Deutsche Afrika-Linien (yellow with
a black white red lozenge, but the lozenge
is not touching the edges). I have displayed a simplified logo of the
company. See also: Deutsch Ost-Afrika Linie.
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 13 Jun 2007
Deutsche Binnenreederei AG - it is a red flag with a blue edge
with white fimbriation at either edge without the hoist. In the centre
of the flag is a white anchor with a chain.
I spotted this flag on 15 January 2007 on top of Rödingsmarkt-office
of the company.
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 19 Mar 2007
Deutsche Conti Schifffahrts G.m.b.H., Hamburg - Israeli-style
WRWRW flag, in center red "C" containing yellow "C"-like item with on top
a yellow thingy.
Image after Brown's Flags and Funnels Shipping Companies of the World,
compiled by J.L. Loughran, Glasgow, 1995 [lgr95]
Jarig Bakker, 13 Jan 2006
Image from "The dumpy book of ships and the sea" (ed. Henry Sampson,
published by Sampson Low, London, circa 1957).", captioned: Deutsche
Levant-Linie.
James Dignan, 13 Oct 2003
German - Continental Ports - Mediterranean and Black Sea. Houseflag:
Red and White, quartered diagonally, with DL in White on Black Disk in
centre.
Jarig Bakker, 13 Oct 2003
Deutsche Nah-Ost Linie, Hamburg - white flag, the firm's logo.
Image after Brown's Flags and Funnels Shipping Companies of the World,
compiled by J.L. Loughran, Glasgow, 1995 [lgr95]
Jarig Bakker, 4 Sep 2005
Deutsche Orient Linie, Stettin - white flag, white saltire bordered
red and black; in center black diamond contoured white; white "DOL".
Image after Brown's Flags and Funnels of British and Foreign Steamship
Companies, compiled by F.J.N. Wedge, Glasgow, 1926 [wed26]
Jarig Bakker, 10 Feb 2005
Deutsche Seereederei Rostock G.m.b.H., Rostock - horizontal BRB
flag; on red white "DSR".
Image after Brown's Flags and Funnels Shipping Companies of the World,
compiled by J.L. Loughran, Glasgow, 1995 [lgr95]
Jarig Bakker, 2 Feb 2006
Jorge Candeias wrote: The flag is horizontally stripped of black-white-red-white-blue-white-red with a narrow yellow lozenge in the center that contains the company's sigla, DRNIG, in black capitals disposed in the shape of a cross.
The name of the company explains the colours: ‘Deutsch-Russische Naphta Import Ges.’ i.e. German-Russian Petroleum Import Co. and as the source must have been published in 1912 we understand why we find the pre-WWI colours of both countries.
So: six horizontal stripes, the German ones, NWR, above the Russian ones, WBR.
This flag does not represent a firm with a similar name, founded 1927
and again 1946, but the one named above ending in ‘…Gesellschaft zu Berlin’
probably found in 1883 according to this
text in Russian (near the end)…
As stated, Germany and the Soviet Union continued to trade oil after
WWI; after WWII, Soviet oil played an important role in the East German
economic build-up. But that is a long time after the peaceful co-existence
of the former national colours on a house flag...
Jan Mertens, 24 Dec 2006
The flag is blue with a white bolrder in three sides, leaving the hoist
side out, and a white initial "D" in the center. The caption has an initial,
H. and a long word, which I guess is "Dlederidars".
Jorge Candeias, 30 Dec 2004
It's No. 28 in the on-line 1912
Lloyds Flags & Funnels, i.e. 'H. Diederichsen & Co., Kiel'.
(In this picture, the 'D' is slightly more elaborate.)
Jan Mertens, 31 Dec 2004
Red, with a narrow white lozenge and two very narrow horizontal white
stripes along the top and bottom edges of the flag. In the lozenge, the
letters 'PD' in black bold capitals.
Jorge Candeias, 18 Feb 1999
This is not so nice – a flag picture but almost nothing on the firm! From various commercial information services on the internet we learn that a firm called ‘dotrans’ (lower case), also known as Christian Donner KG, is located at Hannover and engaged in shipping. That is all, really.
Found last year on French eBay (item no. 6535951661, offer finished
8 June 2005), a ‘dotrans’ flag: orange with the company name spared out
of a lowered black stripe fitted between two thin black stripes. As the
flag was part of a substantial offer of inland navigation flags and pennants
(some of them quite horrible), I suppose we may interpret the ‘shipping’
as being restricted to inland waterways, German or otherwise.
Jan Mertens, 30 Jun 2006