Last modified: 2017-05-31 by ivan sache
Keywords: acher-duhamel et gournay | stars: 3 (white) | letters: adg (blue) |
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House flag of Acher-Duhamel & Gournay - Image by Ivan Sache, 26 September 2010
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The Acher family, from Fécamp, was involved in the "grand fishing" on the Grand Banks of Newfoundland. In 1898, Henri Acher purchased in Canada a wooden three-master he renamed Turenne. The ship was
registered by Henri Acher and his son René until 1909 (Acher & Fils),
then by René alone. The tenth campaign of the Turenne ended with the
loss of the ship, sunk on 6 April 1919 on the Grand Banks. The 36-men
crew was rescued by the three-master Anaïs and repatriated to France
in May 1919.
The writer and adventurer Henry de Monfreid (1879-1974) seems to have
attempted to purchase the Turenne in 1907; it is believed that the
loss of the ship inspired him for his novel Le naufrageur (1950).
Source: Turenne, by Étienne Bernet
On 11 June 1920, the newspaper L'Ouest-Éclair reports the blessing in Fécamp of the André-Pierre trawler (52 m, 553 tons), owned by Acher-Duhamel & Gournay.
Ivan Sache, 26 September 2010
The Yearbook of the Central Committee of France Shipowners (1922) shows the house flag of Acher-Duhamel & Gournay as white with a blue descending diagonal stripe charged with three white stars and the blue letters "A.D.G." placed horizontally in the lower hoist.
Dominique Cureau, 26 September 2010