Last modified: 2004-12-22 by phil nelson
Keywords: hong kong | maritime shipping |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
See also:
Yellow flag with a red T inside a red O in the middle.
Source: Josef
Nüsse
Ivan Sache, 25 August 2002
Original flag noted as white with a blue ring or "O"
enclosing a blue "T".
Neale Rosanoski, 23 January 2003
Yellow flag with a red flower with white stamens in the middle. The flower has five petals, five long stamens on hte median of each petal, and five groups of two shorter stamens each placed between the long stamens. all the stamens converge into a small central white disk.
The 1993 flag is yellow with OOCL in red in the middle. A flower is placed in the middle of the second O. The flower is similar to that described above but with a different axis and different colours: petals are yellow and stamens are red.
Source: Josef
Nüsse
Ivan Sache, 25 August 2002
Correct name is Orient Overseas Container Line. Loughran 1979
shows the 1st flag with a white field but in Brown 1982 he
shows the yellow version.
Neale Rosanoski, 23 January 2003
There are some political meanings in this flag, since the flower on this flag is a plum blossom, stylized in the RoC-TW style-- Plum blossom is the alternative emblem of RoC-TW. Historically, the founder of OOCL, C.Y.Tung (1912-1982), was heavily aligned with the Taiwanese cause. C.Y. Tung established the China Lines in 1935 and moved to Taipei in 1949, while the OOCL was established in Hong Kong a few years after that. Until mid-eighties both companies were held by the Tung family, first C.Y. Tung then to Chee-Hwa Tung (Yes, the Chief Executive of Hong Kong, PRC -- surprised?). Chiang Kai-shek had seen them for a number of times, and he always regarded the OOCL THE shipping company of the Republic of China. The head of China Lines is, in fact, Chee-Hwa Tung's brother-in-law.
The OOCL shifted their preference towards the PRC side
because the company was in crisis in the mid-eighties, the
Taiwanese failed to give them any help, but it was the PRC
(plus HSBC) which gave them enough help for them to pass
it...
China Lines has officially merged into the OOCL, called OOCL
Taiwan.
John Ma, 31 August 2002