Last modified: 2008-08-30 by jarig bakker
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The flag is white with a broad 3-sided red border and with very large
initials W&K occupying almost the whole of the white area. The caption,
guessing like crazy, seems to read "Watsmidt & Kognise".
Jorge Candeias, 30 Dec 2004
It's No. 2083 (Sailing Vessels section) in the on-line 1912
Lloyds Flags & Funnels, i.e. 'Wachsmuth & Krogmann, Hamburg'.
Jan Mertens, 31 Dec 2004
H.D.J. Wagner - At first Hans Detlev Jacob Wagner was a shipbroker but
in 1880he established a shipping company, which existed until 1924.
The company used a red flag with a capital "W" in its centre and white
stripes on either edge.
Source: Jürgen Meyer: "Hamburger Segelschiffe von 1795-1945";
ISBN 3-89225-400-1; Hamburg 1999; p.158-159.
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 2 Apr 2007
Wappen-Reederei GmbH & Co. KG - It is a white flag with a dark blue
edged white square in its centre. Within the square are five s-shaped greenish
blue waves touching one another in the middle. The company is located at
Johannisbollwerk, Hamburg. All ships have names starting with "Wappen
von...". I spotted this flag on 16 March 2007 on top of the companies
building. The waves have been reconstructed from the image upon the doorplate.
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 3 June 2007
An East-Friesland-like flag, probably with
a family resemblance: black-red-blue horizontal tricolour with a white
lozenge, fimbriated black, centred and charged with a black 'W'.
Jorge Candeias, 10 Mar 1999
Reederei Warrings. Brown 1995 shows the flag with a blue "W" in the
name of Bernhard Warrings who appears to be the originator of a family
group of which Rita Warrings and Harle Warrings Reederei are the last components
which I have been able to trace.
Neale Rosanoski, 25 Oct 2004
Washbay Linie G.m.b.H., Hamburg - blue flag, white connected
white "WL".
Image after Brown's Flags and Funnels Shipping Companies of the World,
compiled by J.L. Loughran, Glasgow, 1995 [lgr95]
Jarig Bakker, 4 Dec 2005
This time the caption is really illegible, so that "D. H. Watice &
Co." above is nothing but pure guesswork.
Jorge Candeias, 4 May 2004
I read "D.H. Wätjen & Co." out of the caption, and indeed
a Google search will find a ship and a shipping company of that name.
Stefan Schwoon, 5 May 2004
Some time ago I managed to identify several house flags in this photograph, but the white one in the middle (red rectangle and red oval with white ‘W’ within black contour line) remained unknown. Pure luck led to the following site, presenting Weert Ihnen GmbH at Emden on the River Ems, NW Germany.
This is a ship broker – in business since more than a century, according to the homepage – and also a shipping agent, inland navigation freighting agency, owner of an oil terminal, and bunker vessel operator. In addition, this firm delivers various fuels to the East Frisian islands and construction sites on the coast.
See the logo on the site, uniting as it does the initials ‘W’ and ‘I’
(together forming another ‘i’) differs in detail from the one on the flag.
The oil tanks you can see on the homepage show an oval… I think.
Jan Mertens, 25 Oct 2006
Hans Peter Wegener, Jork - white over blue flag, on white near
hoist red "W".
Image after Brown's Flags and Funnels Shipping Companies of the World,
compiled by J.L. Loughran, Glasgow, 1995 [lgr95]
Jarig Bakker, 17 Dec 2005
F.C.C.Wehrhahn - Cesar Wehrhahn imported salpetre to Hamburg. In order
to keep the costs for transportation low he at first chartered ships but
in 1892 he bought own ships. According to source the shipping company was
never very important. Though the ships were not very good for a while Wehrhahn
made good business. The company existed at least until 1902. After Wehrhahn
had sold his last two ships (the date I don't know) he became director
of Kosmos-Linie.
The company used a blue over red horizontal bicolour. In the centre
of the flag was a white 5-point star with a black serifed capital "W".
Source: Jürgen Meyer: "Hamburger Segelschiffe von 1795-1945";
ISBN 3-89225-400-1; Hamburg 1999; p.166-167.
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 25 Mar 2007
B.Wencke Söhne - In 1851 Robert M.Sloman
the elder asked Bernhard Wencke to come from Bremen to Hamburg in order
to build up a dock. In 1857 Wencke established his own shipping-company.
He died in 1868 and the company got its final name. Friedrich Wencke died
in 1905 and according to his last will the company was discontinued. The
company used a white flag with black serifed capital letters "BW" plus
half the size "S" and even smaller but double underlined small letters
"ne".
Source: Jürgen Meyer: "Hamburger Segelschiffe von 1795-1945";
ISBN 3-89225-400-1; Hamburg 1999; p.103ff.
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 22 Mar 2007
Weserfähre - This ferry company, active on the River Weser as
says its name, operates a line connecting Bremerhaven and Nordenham up
the river. Active since 1954, it transports passengers and motor vehicles
(cars and lorries). Ferry
website. To see and learn about the ferries, click “Schiffe” at the
top of the page – the ‘Bremerhaven’ is flying the flag (click to enlarge).
In a less serious vein, you can rent a vessel and turn it into a partyboat.
The flag is a vivid blue and bears a yellow diamond with a blue intial
‘W’.
Jan Mertens, 21 Feb 2006
Reederei Weser Schifffahrts Agentur G.m.b.H., Brake - horizontal
BWB flag; several blue geometrical forms on white.
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
Obviously a design attempt to create the WSA in geometric format, with
two downward pointing triangles forming a stylized Latin letter "W", a
"sinister-pierced" square representing the letter "S" and sinister-leaning
parallelogram over a triangle to represent the letter "A".
I would think that the two triangles forming the "W" might be touching
which might have made this interpretation clearer.
Phil Nelson, 19 Jan 2006
Make that stylised W over SA in blue on white...?
James Dignan, 20 Jan 2006
A.G. Weser, Bremen: blue with thin white horizontal edges and...
what is this white figure? a ship? or initials in filigrane perhaps?
Jan Mertens, 16 Nov 2003
Blue with white inscription 'WESSELS' in italics. The 'W', however,
is transformed into a navigating ship through its shape, a wavy line below
and light blue additions of several parts typical of cargo ships.
Jorge Candeias, 10 Feb 1999
Wessels Offshore Schleep G.m.b.H & Co., K.G., Emden - BWB
flag proportioned c. 1:3:1, in center red "W". ("Schleep" is saksisch
for tug)
Image after Brown's Flags and Funnels Shipping Companies of the World,
compiled by J.L. Loughran, Glasgow, 1995 [lgr95]
Jarig Bakker, 11 Sep 2005
Image from "The dumpy book of ships and the sea" (ed. Henry Sampson,
published by Sampson Low, London, circa 1957). Caption: Westfal-Larsen
& co.
James Dignan, 15 Oct 2003
Adolf Wiards, Bremen
The flag is the same like the 8-stripes variant of the city of Bremen.
It has however a big blue capital "W" in a white circle surrounded by a
thin red line in its centre.
Source:
I spotted this flag on 28 May 2004 in a pub in St.Pauli. The flag was
identified with the help of Josef Nuesse, Drochtersen on 25 September 2007.
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 29 Sep 2007
Lloyd's Book of House Flags and Funnels (1912) shows the house flag
of "Hochseefischerei J. Wieting A.G." (#320, p. 52), a company based in
Bremerhaven, as white with a black "W" in the middle.
Ivan Sache, 27 Apr 2008
J.H.L. Wilckens - The company was established in 1884 by Julius Leonhard
Heinrich Wilckens, a man from Altona, who was signing clerk of the shipbrokers
Rettmeyer & Hessenmüller. Wilckens became owner of this company after
the death of both partners. In May 1900 the last ship was sold to a company
in Senegal and the company was dissolved.
The company used a red flag with a white bend sinister. Within the
bend are four blue lines forming a lozenge.
Source: Jürgen Meyer: "Hamburger Segelschiffe von 1795-1945";
ISBN 3-89225-400-1; Hamburg 1999; p.141ff.
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 3 Apr 2007
The flag is a triangular blue flag with the company's initials in white:
"T.W.". And the caption reads "Th. Wille".
Jorge Candeias, 6 Jan 2005
This must be the Th(eodor) Wille in question - we see his gravestone
here.
Dates 1818-1892. Founded a coffee export firm in Brazil in 1844, back in
1847 and active in insurance and shipping (not only in Germany but also
in Brazil: fisheries, first telephone grid in Rio de Janeiro), helped found
the well-known Commerzbank, left a fortune to Kiel (his hometown) to be
used for education (university etc.).
Jan Mertens, 7 Jan 2005
J.O.Williamson - This company had a white flag with a red centred cross
and a white 5-point star in a blue canton.
Source: Jürgen Meyer: "Hamburger Segelschiffe von 1795-1945";
ISBN 3-89225-400-1; Hamburg 1999; cover inside.
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 23 Mar 2007
J.E.A. Wimmer & Co - In 1887 Johannes Eduard Alfred Wimmer, a Hamburg
merchant established a shipping company. Though he settled down in 1898
in Lisbon the company remained in Hamburg. Wimmer chose a partner in 1907.
Since then to the company's name was added the "Co.". The company moved
to
Lisbon the same year but the ships stayed in the Hamburg ship-register.
When Portugal joined WWI his last ships were confiscated by Portuguese
government. Wimmer failed in reestablishing his company after WWI.
The colours in the flag are those of Portugal. The flag was white with
a green bend sinister, a red capital "J" in the upper hoist and a red capital
"W" in the lower fly.
Source: Jürgen Meyer: "Hamburger Segelschiffe von 1795-1945";
ISBN 3-89225-400-1; Hamburg 1999; p.144ff.
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 3 Apr 2007
Gebr[üder] (“Brothers”) Winter is a German shipping company established at Hamburg. Website (in English): From the ‘Company’ section (subsection ‘Background and History’) we learn that the Winter family has been active in shipping for a very long time now: inland shipping on the River Elbe “for many centuries” followed by maritime shipping from 1900 on. The current firm was founded in 1970 by brothers Harald and Jakob, and the next generation is now learning the trade. The ‘History’ subsection lists the various ships evolving from a small wooden vessel to the current freighter and container ships.
The second ‘Fleet’ picture (photo carrousel) shows the house flag, also shown as a drawing on the site, together with the flag of Antigua flag which flies on most of the ships - some are German registered. But to the house flag, attached as < de~gwin.jpg> (photo detail taken from site): white with narrow horizontal edges black-white-light blue (upper edge) and the reverse (lower edge), in the centre a large red initial ‘W’ in Gothic script.
For better detail see attachment < de~gwin2.jpg> which is a table
flag found – where else – on German eBay: offer no. 290081384592 (end 18
Feb 2007) put up by “shipflag”; dimensions given as approx. 15 cm x 25
cm. This item will help in determining the width of the various stripes
– something like 1:5:1 not counting the thin blue lines, of course.
Jan Mertens, 15 May 2008
Heinz Winter, K.G., Jork - triband NWN, on white small "H" above
large "W", all black.
Jork is a few kms west of Hamburg along the Elbe river.
Image after Brown's Flags and Funnels Shipping Companies of the World,
compiled by J.L. Loughran, Glasgow, 1995 [lgr95]
Jarig Bakker, 7 Sep 2005
The flag is a red saltire on white, with two initials in the hoist and
fly quarters: W and B. I think they are blue, but there are some doubts
there. In the caption there are also some doubts, but not many: it's something
like Will & Büsch.
Jorge Candeias, 23 Dec 2004
I'm inclined to think it's 'Witt & Büsch' as there are traces (on
the net) of such a firm engaged in African colonial trade (with German
Cameroun, for instance) and cooperating with Woermann.
Jan Mertens, 27 Dec 2004
Quartered per saltire, blue in the top and bottom and white at the hoist
and fly, with a red 't' on the hoist field and a red 'W' on the fly field.
Jorge Candeias, 13 Mar 1999
H.H. Wubbe Nachfolger, Hamburg - hor. BWB flag, in center red
"W".
Image after Brown's Flags and Funnels Shipping Companies of the World,
compiled by J.L. Loughran, Glasgow, 1995 [lgr95]
Jarig Bakker, 17 Dec 2005
The correct name is HH Wübbe Nachfolger. You may write Wuebbe instead.
The company still exists and its office is either on Vorsetzen or Johannisbollwerk
(streetnames) and the flag is the same as depicted on FOTW.
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 19 Mar 2007