Last modified: 2020-07-26 by christopher oehler
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image by Jarig Bakker, 14 February 2006
Gefion Shipping A/S, Naestved - white flag, horizontal blue wave, interrupted
by slightly wavy blue "G".
Source:
Loughran (1995)
Jarig Bakker, 14 February 2006
image by Phil Nelson, 24 June 2000
based on Stewart and Styring's Flags, Funnels and Hull Colours, 1963
C.K. Hansen ("Dannnebrog" S.S. Co.), Copenhagen: the split Dannebrog on a blue
background, but without interrupting the swallowtail by a short right piece
ending the white cross. (Probably a mistake in detail.)
Jan Mertens, 11 December 2003
C.K. Hansen. A ship-broking firm, they were managing owners of A/S D/S Dannebrog
which they formed in 1883. A reorganization in 1967 saw them split and in 1970
the shipping company changed its name to Dannebrog Rederi A/S under which it
still operates using this flag.
Neale Rosanoski, 27 April 2004
C.K. Hansen. Jan is quite right about the squaring of the cross point of the
Dannebrog. All sources, apart from Stewart, so show it.
Neale Rosanoski, 11 September 2004
image by Phil Nelson, 24 June 2000
based on Stewart and Styring's Flags, Funnels and Hull Colours, 1963
image
by Eugene Ipavec, 15 June 2011
Based at Gentofte to the N. of Copenhagen, family owned Helle-Broe's
Baadmands ("boatmen") company was founded in 1857and is occupied in mooring,
unmooring, and shifting vessels in Copenhagen harbour round the clock. Website,
in English, with house flag drawing:
http://www.helle-broe.dk/
Launch ‘Forward III’ serves as a crew change, supply, and inspection boat,
photos of which are easily found on the ‘net but no house flag was spotted.
So the drawing will have to do, and a
striking flag it is: blue swallowtail, bearing a red Maltese cross in the centre
plus white serifed initials "H" (upper hoist) and "B" (lower fly).
Jan Mertens, 14 June 2011
image
by Klaus-Michael Schneider, 17 September 2008
Det Helsingforske Dampskibsselskab, P.Brown Jr. & Co., located in Copenhagen.
It is a white square flag with a red bordure and a black 5-point star in its
centre.
Source: Lloyds Book of House Flags and Funnels (1912)
p. 80, image no. 908
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 17 September 2008
Lloyds 1912
shows a dark blue star, not black, and the number is 910. The blue star version
is shown on these pages as "P. Brown, Jr (Det Helsingorske
Dampskibsselskab) together with an explanation of the connection between the two
companies. Lloyds 1904 shows a normal rectangular version.
Neale Rosanoski, 20 August 2011
We have Det Helsingorske Dampskibsselskab, red field bearing a white square
bearing a black five-pointed star. And we have
P.Brown, Jr., red field bearing a white square bearing a blue five-pointed
star. Now the entries suggest there's a connection, Lloyds 1912 [llo12]
apparently gives that connection explicitly, but from the pages, I'm not quite
sure what that connection is. Does anyone have that Lloyds handy, or does anyone
otherwise know how these fit together?
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 19 June 2013
image by Jarig Bakker, 14 February 2006
Per Henriksen (Mercandia Shipping), Copenhagen - blue flag, white outlined
shield, a white standing winged anchor.
Source:
Loughran (1995)
Jarig Bakker, 14 February 2006
image by Phil Nelson, 24 June 2000
based on Stewart and Styring's Flags, Funnels and Hull Colours, 1963
Holm & Wonsild. Some pre WW2 sources show the flag without the white border but
most agree with the flag shown here.
Neale Rosanoski, 27 April 2004
Version without the white border, after Brown's Flags and Funnels (Wedge 1926)
Continued as Danish Shipping Companies (J)