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House Flags of U.S. Shipping Companies: B

Last modified: 2015-12-12 by rob raeside
Keywords: united states shipping lines |
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Baker-Whiteley Towing Co.

[Baker-Whiteley Towing Co.] image by Jarig Bakker

Baker-Whiteley Towing Co., Baltimore, MD - blue flag, in center white disk; in top hoist and fly and in bottom white "BWT".
Source: Loughran (1995)
Jarig Bakker, 5 November 2005


Balboa Transport Co.

[Balboa Transport Co.] image by Joe McMillan

Blue with a white disk, and thereon a blue star fimbriated red with a white "B" in the center.
Source: Wedge (1951)

Joe McMillan, 23 September 2001


Baltimore Mail SS Co.

[Baltimore Mail SS Co.] image by Joe McMillan

Baltimore Mail SS Co., Baltimore (1930-38)

Created by a group of Baltimore investors as a result of the 1928 Merchant Marine Act to provide fast cargo service to Hamburg, Le Havre, London, and Southampton. Another unsuccessful attempt by an east coast city to set up a line expressly to divert cargo away from New York, although the lack of success was more a result of government action (cancellation of all mail contracts under the 1936 Merchant Marine Act) rather than through any fault of the line's management. The flag was a variation on the Maryland state flag, white with a cross bottony per cross golden orange and black.

Source: National Geographic (1934) 

Joe McMillan, 27 August 2000

[Baltimore Mail SS Co.] based on image by Joe McMillan

Baltimore Mail Steamship Co. Talbot-Booth in 1937 and 1938 shows a slightly different version with the cross being within the field and coloured red and black.
Neale Rosanoski, 20 July 2005


Baltimore Steam Packet Co. (Old Bay Line)

[Baltimore Steam Packet Co] image by Joe McMillan

Baltimore Steam Packet Co (Old Bay Line), Baltimore

An old company dating back, I believe, to the 19th century. Flag was red with white B.

Sources: National Geographic (1934)  US Navy's 1961 H.O.

Joe McMillan, 27 August 2000


Barber International

[Barber International] image by Ivan Sache

White flag bordered in blue charged with W. The W probably came from the former parent company Wilh. Wilhelmsen
Source: http://www.barbership.com
Dov Gutterman, 11 October 2003

My interpretation of the originating logo on the company website is that it represents the normal Wilh. Wilhelmsen ASA flag i.e. white with a blue "W", with the apparent border being merely a means of highlighting the flag edges, as is continued to be done with the flag pole and hence the lighter shade of blue compared to that of the letter. The company states that it has operated independently since 1975 but Lloyds still show it as being part of the Wilhelmsen group. Although it appears that they originated (guesswork here) from Barber Steamship Line Inc. they are now with a registered head office in Hong Kong, an operating head office in Kuala Lumpur, and subsidiaries worldwide and so not exactly an American company.
Neale Rosanoski, 26 January 2003


Barber SS Line

[Barber SS Line] image by Joe McMillan

Barber SS Line

Again, not much but the flag, a fairly attractive swallowtail of blue and white stripes with a white disk bearing a red star and a white B.

Source: Stewart (1953)
Joe McMillan
, 27 August 2000

[Barber SS Line] image by Ivan Sache

Originated 1902 as Barber & Co. Inc. operating the New York & Oriental Steamship Co. with sources initially showing the central white circular section being outlined black. From the 1930s they are shown as operators of American West African Line. Talbot-Booth in 1944 advises that the flag was sometimes a swallow-tailed pennant whilst Loughran (1979) shows a normal rectangular flag but also states that in 1970 there was a change to a swallowtail divided vertically orange and white with the orange further divided by a narrow white vertical band. They do not appear to have been ship-owners as such as I cannot locate them in Lloyds but Loughran indicates they were still operating in the 1970s, possibly as charterers or possibly as agents as it is under this latter description that it is reported in 1989 that they had been renamed Wilhelmsen Lines (USA) Inc. and it would seem that that at some stage they were acquired by Wilh. Wilhelmsen and were probably the beginning of what is now Barber International.
Neale Rosanoski, 26 January 2004


Barry Brothers Transportation Co.

A short-lived Great Lakes shipping company was operated by the Barry brothers from 1900 on. Named the Barry Brothers Transportation Co., it was also known as the Barry Brothers Boat Line. Peter and Thomas Barry started out with a small ship but quickly replaced it, then bought two fine steamers from the Northern Navigation Co. of Cleveland and had them overhauled at great cost. The firm operated a route between Muskegon, Mich. and Chicago but was ambitious enough to contemplate linking Detroit and Cleveland, monopolized at the time by the Detroit & Cleveland Navigation Co. It was not to be.

In 1901, the ‘State of Michigan’ sank but there is also the anecdote of the ‘Empire State’ being caught in the ice for a week while the passengers remained cheerful and had a good time (1902). Later this ship caught fire when moored (1906) and this may have hastened the demise of the company but I’ve been unable to find out when this happened.

Sources:
http://www.t-one.net/~bessey/barry.html
http://www.wisconsinshipwrecks.org/explore_bullhead_serv.cfm

A card recently offered on eBay (Item no. 6591171240) shows the ‘Badger State’ at Duluth and offers a partial view of the house flag (see this image). At any rate it had a dark colour, was traversed by a light-coloured cross throughout and apparently had the company’s light-coloured initials in the corners. Hopefully, a clearer picture will emerge some day.
Jan Mertens, 30 December 2005


Bartlett Line

[Bartlett Line] based on image located by Jan Mertens, 23 August 2005

A sailing card advertising connections to South America can be found at http://www.tenpound.com/clippercard.html (fifteenth card, ‘Golden Era’). Although the ship belongs to the Thorndike company, “Wm. Bartlett was the agent, and the color vignette on this card shows a man on a tropical island holding the Bartlett flag”. The card is not clickable and very small but large enough to see that it is white with something red on it. Luckily the Directory of Private Signals helps out, see: http://www.mysticseaport.org/library/initiative/SignalImage.cfm?PageNum=4&BibID=36294&ChapterNo=3, showing a red capital ‘B’ on white as the first flag on this page: 3.4.1. It is presented as “William Bartlett, Agent (?), New York (1850)”. Ref. provided by William Crothers is no. 51 being "Shipping House Flags" by H. Percy Ashley. Additional snippets of information are provided by the Mystic Seaport Library (Matthew Bartlett-John F. Brooks Papers (Coll. 157): http://www.mysticseaport.org/library/manuscripts/coll/coll157/coll157.html:

“The John F. Brooks Records total 111 volumes dated 1858 to 1915. (…) Volumes with entries prior to 1880 are primarily records of the M. Bartlett shipping  business of which John Brooks was a partner. Matthew Bartlett died in May 1880, and thus for all practical purposes entries after that date detail the business activity of the Boston shipping firm known as John F. Brooks.”
“Sometime during the 1860's John F. Brooks entered into a partnership with Matthew Bartlett, a shipping agent in Boston who conducted an active trade with numerous West African ports.”
Jan Mertens, 23 August 2005


W. E. Bedmont

[W. E. Bedmont] image by Joe McMillan

W. E. Bedmont, Boston
No information on the company. The flag, quarterly red, white, yellow, and blue, is from Flaggenbuch 1905.


Bermuda Line

[Bermuda Line]  image by Joe McMillan

Bermuda Line
This may not be a US company, as Manning does not give home ports. Not terribly interesting in any case--the initials L.B. in white on a red burgee.
Source: Manning (1874)

Joe McMillan, 15 September 2001


Bernuth Lembcke Co.

[Bernuth Lembcke Co.] image by Joe McMillan

Bernuth Lembcke Co., New York

Likewise, only the flag--white with a red border and the black initials of the firm.

Joe McMillan, 27 August 2001


Bethlehem Steel Corp.

Bethlehem Steel Corp.] image by Rob Raeside

A famous company, no longer with us, operating vessels on the Great Lakes was Bethlehem Steel. On this page we read under ‘Fleets and stack insignia’:
"Several insignia date back more than a century. Many are made up of common geometric shapes in combination with colored bands and initial letters while a few use corporate logos or other unique symbols. One might expect to see an initial "B" on Bethlehem Steel's insignia, pictured at left. Instead, one of the firm's products, an I-beam, is symbolized." A further link explains that an I-beam is “a rolled iron or steel joist (beam like those used in house construction) having an "I" section, with short flanges”. See, for instance, the lower corners of this company sharee (picture is clickable).

The house flag is seen flying on this (clickable) picture: http://www.boatnerd.com/news/newpictures03/FLAGSbh3-27-03-al.jpg. It is yellow and bordered by narrow black-white stripes (upper horizontal edge) and white-black stripes (lower horizontal edge) respectively; in the centre is a shield-shape, narrowly outlined in black, containing a red I-beam.

Interestingly, this source (last picture on the page) shows the firm’s emblem once again but also a red flag, fringed in yellow, showing the shield but adding the words ‘BETHLEHEM STEEL’ (black letters; partly visible). There seem to be no narrow stripes edging the red field, moreover the shield is white. Was this the main company flag? (Picture taken April 4, 2002.)

Some history, very briefly, quoted from http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/2568.html:
“Founded in 1899 in Pennsylvania, Bethlehem Steel expanded rapidly during the 1920s and became the second-largest U.S. steelmaker by the eve of World War II. (…) But (…) the American steel industry declined (…) In May 2003, its assets were acquired by the International Steel Group”

Jan Mertens, 11 October 2005


George E. Billings

[George E. Billings] image by Joe McMillan

George E. Billings, San Francisco
A vertically divided swallowtail, blue and red, with a white "H" on the center. No idea why "H."
Source: Lloyds 1912
Joe McMillan, 27 August 2001

I think George E. Billings was not the name of a shipping line, but the name of a ship - possibly the flag represented the Hall Brothers company of Washington state, who built it and who apparently also operated a fleet. According to www.merchantfleets.com/ShipPix/ShipPixG.html and pc-78-120.udac.se:8001/WWW/Nautica/Ships/Schooners/Schooners(5m).html the George E. Billings was a five-masted schooner built by the Hall Brothers shipbuilding company of Puget Sound in 1903 and was named for the manager of the Hall Bros. fleet.
Ned Smith
, 25 September 2001

The flag, as shown by Lloyds 1912, is actually tapered.
Neale Rosanoski, 26 January 2004

George E. Billings was the name of a ship. In my capacity as Project Archivist, I have encountered a photograph of a ship bearing the name of George E. Billings tied to the pier (locally referred to as The Embacadero).
Robert Ross, 20 May 2004


E.N. Bisso & Son

[E.N. Bisso & Son] image by Rob Raeside, 8 December 2015

Yellow flag charged with a device made of a wheel, two oars and "1880".
Source: www.enbisso.com/
Dov Gutterman, 11 October 2003

The flag for E.N. Bisso & son, Inc. has a ship wheel with two red boat paddles. We are a tugboat company.
Victoria Becnel, 1 December 2015


US shipping lines house flags - 'B' continued