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Alfred
Holt & Co. (Blue Funnel Line) (Est. 1865) |
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Alfred and Philip Holt
established the
Blue Funnel Line in 1865 to run steamers, equipped with Alfred's own
design of
compound engines, from Liverpool to In the 1870s the Holts
developed the
service further with the assistance of Butterfield and Swire, agents in
Blue Funnel continued to
expand, for
example, into Sumatra and the tobacco trade, and later a Dutch
subsidiary was
established to run a direct service from By 1911 Blue Funnel Line had
acquired
ownership of numerous previous competitors and owned between sixty and
seventy
ships. The First World Ward did, however, cost Blue Funnel twelve
vessels and
the 1920s witnessed such reduced demand for the The Second World War proved
extremely
costly for the Blue Funnel Line, with a loss of forty-one ships.
Peacetime
services utilised Liberty Ships for many sailings until A-class
replacements
were delivered between 1946 and 1953. The Blue Funnel Line
maintained its
dominant position in OCL began operations in 1969. Within a few years its Australian service was showing a profit, and it had joined a still larger international consortium to containerize the Europe-Far East route. At this point in the early 1970s, Ocean Steamship Co.'s stake in OCL grew to 49 percent, and its Blue Funnel fleet became largely superfluous and this famous company was discontinued. Thus Blue Funnel was another
famous British shipping company that disappeared as a result of the
container revolution in the late 1960s and early 1970s. It was the end
of an era as traditional shipping gave way to containerisation. |