Last modified: 2005-02-19 by ivan sache
Keywords: paquet | letters: cnp (white) | letters: npc (white) | letters: ncp (white) | lozenge (red) | stars: 5 (white) | letters: cfn (black) | compagnie francaise de navigation | nouvelle compagnie de paquebots |
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Nicolas Paquet (1831-1909) was the elder son of a wine-grower from Lorraine. Aged 17, he was hired by the Messageries Nationales and worked in Dunkerque and later in Reims. One of his distant relatives, Antoine Vautier, appointed him as his secretary in Marseilles. Vautier was director of the railway P.L.M. (Paris-Lyon-Méditerranée) and specifically in charge of the building of the railway line between Marseilles and Avignon. The material used in those works was shipped from Antwerp by sailing ships of the Belgian company Deppe, and consigned by the house Caussac et Jules Vautier. Antoine Vautier assigned Paquet to work with his brother Jules, so that Paquet learned how to manage maritime affairs. Paquet was sent for three years in Algiers to study the wheat market. Aged 26, he was appointed Vautier's authorized representative after Caussac's withdrawal from business. Two years later, Jules Vautier passed away and his brother asked Paquet to take Vautier's assets and found a consignation company, which became a shipping company.
Paquet named his company Compagnie de Navigation Nicolas Paquet Aîné et Cie. In 1860, the company signed a contract with the Spanish government
for the transport of troops to Morocco, where the Rif war had broken
out. Paquet's first ship was SS Languedoc, initially bought in 1855 by
Vautier and Caussac, and purchased in 1863 by Paquet in co-ownership
with Deppe and Bristaud. Paquet bought another two ships and created
the first scheduled service between Marseilles and the coast of Morocco.
In 1861, the company was renamed Compagnie de Navigation Marocaine and
was associated to a commerce company set up by Paquet in the most
important cities of Morocco. The shipping company progressed slowly and
extended its lines to the Canary islands in 1868. The main activity of
the Moroccan line was transportation of wool. Since the fleet was fully
used only three months per year, Paquet attempted to find new outlets.
Helped by his brother, Paquet established the first French lines to
Caucasus and the Black Sea.
Accordingly, the company was renamed in 1874 Compagnie de
Navigation Arménienne et Marocaine. The new line linked Marseilles to
Constantinople, Batum and Poti, and was initially used to ship sugar from
Marseilles. The line was successful in spite of problems caused by
quarantines, war between Greece and Turkey, a customs conflict
between France and Romania, etc.. In 1878, the company owned nine ships.
In 1891, Paquet pushed a law extending subsidizes initially granted to ocean navigation to coastal navigation. Trafic increased, especially with Morocco. In 1907, France decided to 'pacify' Morocco, and Paquet was in charge of all the transport activity required by the pacification war. Next year, the Moroccan lines were extended to Black Africa. The service by cargo-passenger ships from Marseilles to Oran, Casablanca and Dakar lasted 65 years. Nicolas Paquet died in 1909, aged 88. He was vice-president of the Chamber of Commerce (now Chamber of Commerce and Industry) of Marseilles from 1891 to his death.
In 1913, the name of the company was simplified to Compagnie de
Navigation Paquet. The company operated 15 ships. During the First
World War, the fleet of the company was commissioned for the transport
of troops from Africa, the evacuation of the Serbian army, the transport
of Russian troops from Arkhangelsk to Brest and the American resupplying
of Bordeaux and Saint-Nazaire. The company lost four ships during the war.
After the war, the company resumed its service to Morocco, the Canary
islands, Senegal, Levant and Black Sea. The service of Black Sea became
less and less profitable because of the increased English and Italian
competition and was definitively suppressed in 1934. Conversely, the
Moroccan lines became more and more profitable, because of the
development of administration and tourism. Six modern liners were
allocated to this line between 1922 and 1935, including SS Anfa, which
brought back to France marshal Lyautey in 1925; MS Maréchal-Lyautey, the
first screw-propelled ship of the company, built in 1924; her
sister-ship MS Nicolas-Paquet; and MS Chella, the company flagship. The
company also opened a chain of hotels in Morocco and bought a series of
cargo ships in order to import Moroccan vegetables and fruit to
France (one of the main actions of Lyautey had been to promote the
development of agriculture in Morocco).
Most of the Paquet fleet was lost during the Second World War and the remaining ships were obsolete. The building of a new, modern fleet started in 1946. The new flagship, MS Lyautey was launched on scheduled lines to Morocco and Senegal in 1952. However, the cargo ships were progressively sold to foreign or French rival companies, and passenger trafic decreased because of the ascendancy of air transport. In the 1960s, all the French shipping companies had to restructure and most of them created subsidiaries dedicated to passenger transport.
In 1960, Paquet created the wholly-owned subsidiary Compagnie Française de Navigation (CFN) for the service of the Marseilles-Israel line, to which three liners were allocated, MS Phocée (ex MS Koutoubia), MS Césarée (ex MS Djenné) and MS (ex MS Lyautey). The creation of the CFN allowed Paquet to bypass the Arab League's boycott of firms trading with Isreal and to maintain good relations with Morocco. The line was abandoned in 1966.
In 1964, Chargeurs Réunis absorbed Fraissinet and its two subsidiaries, Fabre and the Société Générale de Transports Maritimes, but kept only the cargo ships. Paquet absorbed the five remaining liners of the west African line and created the Nouvelle Compagnie de Paquebots, operating MS Foch, MS Général-Leclerc, MS Foucauld, MS Général-Mangin and MS Jean-Mermoz (later MS Mermoz). The company sold most of its liners operating on scheduled lines and kept only cruise liners. Its last flagship, MS Ancerville, once the biggest French liner, operating on the Dakar line, was sold in 1970.
In July 1993, the Commission of the European Communities accepted the concentration of Il Ponte (Italy), Chargeurs and Accor (France), which jointly toook the control of Costa Crociere. Chargeurs and Accor acquired a stake in Costa Crociere, which was partly paid with the transfer of Compagnie des Croisières Paquet. Costa acquired MS Mermoz, which is still marketed under the Paquet label, although Paquet is today only a travel agency.
Source: Paul Bois. Armements marseillais - Compagnies de navigation et navires à vapeur (1831-1988), published by the Chamber of Commerce and Industry Marseille-Provence [boi03].
Ivan Sache, 9 February 2004
Compagnie de Navigation Nicolas Paquet Aîné et Cie
The house flag of Compagnie de Navigation Nicolas Paquet Aîné et
Cie is horizontally divided blue-red-blue (1:2:1) with the white letters NP & CIE on the red stripe.
The same flag was used by Compagnie de Navigation Marocaine and
Compagnie de Navigation Arménienne et Marocaine.
Source: Paul Bois. Armements marseillais - Compagnies de navigation et navires à vapeur (1831-1988), published by the Chamber of Commerce and Industry Marseille-Provence [boi03].
On a poster advertizing the lines to Contantinople, the Black Sea and Morocco, the flag is, however, charged with NPC instead of NP & CIE.
Ivan Sache, 9 February 2004
Compagnie de Navigation Paquet
The Compagnie de Navigation Paquet has a flag similar to the previous one, but with the white letters CNP.
Source: Paul Bois. Armements marseillais - Compagnies de navigation et navires à vapeur (1831-1988), published by the Chamber of Commerce and Industry Marseille-Provence [boi03].
Here again, the flag shown on posters is sometimes different, being blue with a red lozenge charged with the white letters CNP
.Ivan Sache, 9 February 2004
Nouvelle Compagnie de Paquebots
Nouvelle Compagnie de Paquebots has a flag similar to the previous one, but with the white letters NCP and five white stars, two in the upper blue stripe and three in the lower one.
Source: Paul Bois. Armements marseillais - Compagnies de navigation et navires à vapeur (1831-1988), published by the Chamber of Commerce and Industry Marseille-Provence [boi03].
Ivan Sache, 9 February 2004
Compagnie Française de Navigation
Compagnie Française de Navigation has a flag completely different from the other Paquet house flags. It is light blue with two white stripes in the upper and lower part of the flag and the black letters Cie FN in the blue stripe. I guess that the design of the flag was inspired by the flags of Marseilles and Israel.
Source: Paul Bois. Armements marseillais - Compagnies de navigation et navires à vapeur (1831-1988), published by the Chamber of Commerce and Industry Marseille-Provence [boi03].
Ivan Sache, 9 February 2004
The flag of Croisières Paquet, as shown by Joseph Nuesse, is blue with a horizontally divided blue-red letter P, crossed by a seabird.Compagnie des Croisières Paquet
Ivan Sache, 27 February 2004