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Elder Dempster Lines

Elder Dempster Lines was a UK shipping company that traded from 1932 to 2000, but had its origins in the mid-19th century.

Elder Dempster Lines
IndustryShipping
PredecessorAfrican Steamship Co Ltd
FoundedLiverpool, England (1932)
Defunct2000
FateWound up
HeadquartersLiverpool, England
Key people
Sir Geoffrey Ellerton, Kt, CMG, MBE (Chairman 1972–74)
ParentOcean Group plc
SubsidiariesSeaway Car Transporters Ltd
Abosso (7,782 GRT), built in 1912 and sunk by enemy action in 1917, killing 65 people

Founders

Alexander Elder

Alexander Elder was born in Glasgow in 1834. He was the son of David Elder, who for many years was manager of Robert Napier and Sons, the engine and shipbuilders and the brother of John Elder.[citation needed]

Alexander Elder was chief engineer of Columbian,[citation needed] a 2,180 GRT iron-hulled barque with a 2,116 ihp engine. She was built for the Australian run, and was chartered by France in 1855 as a troop ship for the Crimean War.[1]

In 1856 Alexander Elder joined W and H Laird as superintendent engineer for the African Steamship Company.[citation needed]

John Dempster

John Dempster was born in 1837 in Penport, Thornhill, Dumfriesshire where his father, William Dempster, was builder to the Duke of Buccleuch. The Dempster family moved to Birkenhead in the 1840s and John joined W and H Laird as a clerk in 1851 when he was aged 14.[citation needed]

History

Elder Dempster and Company

 
Share of the Elder Dempster and Company, Ltd, issued 5 May 1916
 
Mendi (4,222 GRT), built in 1905 and sunk in a wartime collision in 1917, killing 646 people

Elder Dempster and Company began its commercial activities on 1 October 1868,[2] when John Dempster made it his business to circularise all potential customers:

"I beg to inform you that this Company intend to dispatch, early in January next, the first of their line of Steamers, at present being constructed on the Clyde for trading between Glasgow, Liverpool and the West Coast of Africa.
"The Steamers are to sail monthly, and the ports which it is intended shall be called at are Sierra Leone, Cape Palmas, Cape Coast Castle, Accra, Lagos, Benin Bonny, Old Calabar and Fernando Po, but should sufficient inducement offer, arrangements will be made for their calling at other ports, either on the outward or homeward voyages. The Steamers are being specially built for the African Trade and, besides being comfortably fitted up for passengers, they will have extensive cargo space, which will enable them to carry rough goods at moderate rates."[1]

Elder Dempster Shipping Limited

Elder Dempster Shipping Limited was formed in 1899. Among their ships were the liner SS Monterey and the steamer SS Montezuma, which in early 1900 were both chartered as transport ships for British troops destined for South Africa during the Second Boer War.[3]

In 1900 they established a direct steamship service between the United Kingdom and the West Indies.

Elder Dempster Lines

In 1932 Elder Dempster Shipping Ltd, together with the African Steamship Company, and the British & African Steam Navigation Company, came under the Elder Dempster Lines name.[4]

The company operated from British ports, mainly Liverpool, where it was based, to West African destinations. It ran numerous cargo ships and a small number of passenger liners. Before the Second World War its passengers liners were Accra and Apapa, built in 1926 and 1927, plus its flagship Abosso (11,330 GRT) which was launched in 1935.[5] In the Second World War the company lost a number of ships to enemy action, including both Accra[6] and Apapa[7] in 1940 and Abosso[8] in 1942. However, during the war its passenger services continued to run between Liverpool and West Africa, escorted by British submarines.[citation needed] Among its passengers were students from British colonies such as the Gold Coast and Nigeria awarded imperial scholarships to study at Oxford and Cambridge universities, such as the Gold Coast student PK Owusu, on his way to study English literature at Queens College, Cambridge in 1944.[9]

 
Apapa (11,651 GRT), built in 1948 to replace an earlier Apapa sunk in 1940

After the war a new Accra and Apapa were launched in 1947[10] and 1948,[11] followed by a new flagship, Aureol (14,083 GRT) in 1951,[12] for the company's services to Ghana and Nigeria.

The company expanded, taking over a number of other shipping companies between 1951 and 1965,[4] one of which was British & Burmese Steam Navigation Co Ltd which was purchased in 1952. The chartered ships were retained on the West Africa routes while P. Henderson & Co. continued to manage the Burma traders. In 1967 the six day war closed the Suez Canal causing Henderson's service to Burma ceased and their last three ships transferred to Elder Dempster routes.

When the Nigerian National Shipping Line was formed in 1957, Elder Dempster took a 33 percent stake, selling in 1961 to the Nigerian government.[13]

Ocean Fleets

In 1965 the company came under the ownership of the Ocean Steamship Company (Blue Funnel Line).

By 1970 all stock in the former Shaw, Savill & Albion Line had been transferred to Elder Dempster.

Delmas-Vieljeux

The end for the Elder Dempster Lines name came in 1989 when it was bought by the French firm Delmas-Vieljeux, although the company continued as a shipping agents until 2000 when it was wound up.[4]

Non-shipping interests

At the end of the 19th century the company had been instrumental in forming the Bank of British West Africa[14][15] (renamed the Bank of West Africa in the 1950s, and subsequently acquired by the Standard Bank).

From 1935 to 1940 the company jointly operated Elders Colonial Airways[14][15] based in Nigeria, together with Imperial Airways, for passengers within West Africa. The onset of WWII saw the end of this joint venture. At the height of its power it controlled the lands from Ijora-Olopa to Apapa in Nigeria's Lagos port area, the Nigerian Ports Authority grew out of the structure created by Elder Dempster.[16]

British Railways Merchant Navy Class steam locomotive 35030 was named Elder-Dempster Line after the company.

Involvement in the Belgian Congo

In the late 19th century Dempster held a shipping contract with King Leopold II to ship goods and supplies to and from the Congo Free State. E. D. Morel, the main activist in the movement to expose the abuses of Leopold in his private colony, first realized the discrepancy in value trade goods being sent to the Congo while working for Dempster. As much as 80 percent of the goods being shipped to the Congo on Dempster ships were ammunition and other weapons. From this shipping information Morel deduced the extremely aggressive tactics being used by Leopold.[17]

Notable litigation

Elder Dempster have been party to numerous cases which have later become a significant part of English common law precedent, particularly in contract law[18] and maritime law.[19] Such cases include Elder Dempster v. Paterson, Zochonis,[20][21] Elder Dempster v Dunn & Co,[22] Elder Dempster Lines v Zaki Ishag,[23] and Rudd v Elder Dempster.[24]

Legacy

The Elder Museum of Science and Technology on Gran Canaria in the Canary Islands takes its name from a building once owned by Elder Dempster Lines.[25][26]

References

  1. ^ "Columbian". Scottish Built Ships. Caledonian Maritime Research Trust. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  2. ^ Swiggum, S; Kohli, M (3 October 2016). "Elder Dempster & Company / African Steam Ship Company". The Fleets. The Ships List. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  3. ^ "The War - The Transports". The Times. No. 36054. London. 1 February 1900. p. 10.
  4. ^ a b c Ingham, Mike (12 June 2016). "An Introduction". Elder Dempster Lines. HFM Design. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  5. ^ Harnack 1938, pp. 466–467.
  6. ^ Helgason, Guðmundur. "Accra". uboat.net. Retrieved 21 April 2018.
  7. ^ Hague, Arnold. "SS Apapa". convoyweb.org.uk. Don Kindell. Retrieved 21 April 2018.
  8. ^ Helgason, Guðmundur. "Abosso". uboat.net. Retrieved 21 April 2018.
  9. ^ Hirsch, Afua (1 February 2018). Brit(ish): On Race, Identity and Belonging. Random House. p. 209. ISBN 9781473546899. Retrieved 3 April 2022. P.K. boarded an Elder Dempster boat
  10. ^ "The Elder Dempster Lines 'Accra' of 1947". www.liverpoolships.org. Retrieved 21 April 2018.
  11. ^ "Liverpool based British Ocean Liners of the post World War 2 period from 1946". www.liverpoolships.org. Retrieved 21 April 2018.
  12. ^ Harnack 1964, p. 496.
  13. ^ Sauvant, Mallampally & Dunning 1993, p. 171.
  14. ^ a b Davies 1973[page needed]
  15. ^ a b Davies 2000[page needed]
  16. ^ Bolaji 2012, p. 4.
  17. ^ Hochschild 1999[page needed]
  18. ^ Peel 2011[page needed]
  19. ^ Dockray 2004[page needed]
  20. ^ Elder, Dempster & Co. Ltd. v. Paterson, Zochonis & Co. Ltd. [1924] A.C. 522
  21. ^ cited in Scruttons Ltd v Midland Silicones Ltd 1961
  22. ^ 1909 15 Com Cas 49
  23. ^ Elder Dempster Lines v Zaki Ishag 1982 2LLR 548 QBD
  24. ^ "Rudd v. Elder Dempster & Co., Ltd. (1932) 44 Ll.L.Rep. 356". i-law. Informa UK Ltd. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  25. ^ "Descripción". www.museoelder.org (in Spanish). Museo Elder. Retrieved 1 February 2019.
  26. ^ "Museo Elder, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria's Science Museum". Spain-Holiday.com. 30 August 2013. Retrieved 1 February 2019.

Bibliography

  • Bolaji, Akinola (2012). Arrested Development: A journalist's account of how the growth of Nigeria's shipping sector is impaired by politics and inconsistent policies. Bloomington: Authorhouse. ISBN 978-1477238202.
  • Cowden, James (1981). The Price of Peace: Elder Dempster 1939–1945. Jocast. ISBN 0950748005.
  • Cowden, James; Duffy, John (1986). The Elder Dempster Fleet History 1852–1985. Mallett and Bell. ISBN 0950945315.
  • Davies, Peter N (1973). The Trade Makers: Elder Dempster in West Africa 1872–1972. London: George Allen and Unwin. ISBN 0043870031.
  • Davies, Peter N (2000). The Trade Makers: Elder Dempster in West Africa 1872–1972 1973–1989. International Maritime Economic History Association. ISBN 0968128890.
  • Dockray, Martin (2004). Cases and Materials on the Carriage of Goods by Sea. London: Routledge-Cavendish. ISBN 978-1859417966.
  • Harnack, Edwin P (1938) [1903]. All About Ships & Shipping (7th ed.). London: Faber and Faber.
  • Harnack, Edwin P (1964) [1903]. All About Ships & Shipping (11th ed.). London: Faber and Faber.
  • Haws, Duncan (1990). Elder Dempster Lines. Merchant Fleets. Vol. 20. TCL Publications. ISBN 0946378177.
  • Hochschild, Adam (1999). King Leopold's Ghost. London: Pan Books. ISBN 0-330-49233-0.
  • Peel, Edwin (2011). Treitel's The Law of Contract (13th ed.). London: Sweet and Maxwell. ISBN 978-1847039217.
  • Sauvant, Karl Peter; Mallampally, Padma; Dunning, John H, eds. (1993). Transnational corporations in services. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-08559-4.

External links

elder, dempster, lines, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, dec. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Elder Dempster Lines news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Elder Dempster Lines was a UK shipping company that traded from 1932 to 2000 but had its origins in the mid 19th century Elder Dempster LinesHouse flagIndustryShippingPredecessorAfrican Steamship Co LtdFoundedLiverpool England 1932 Defunct2000FateWound upHeadquartersLiverpool EnglandKey peopleSir Geoffrey Ellerton Kt CMG MBE Chairman 1972 74 ParentOcean Group plcSubsidiariesSeaway Car Transporters LtdAbosso 7 782 GRT built in 1912 and sunk by enemy action in 1917 killing 65 people Contents 1 Founders 1 1 Alexander Elder 1 2 John Dempster 2 History 2 1 Elder Dempster and Company 2 2 Elder Dempster Shipping Limited 2 3 Elder Dempster Lines 2 4 Ocean Fleets 2 5 Delmas Vieljeux 2 6 Non shipping interests 3 Involvement in the Belgian Congo 4 Notable litigation 5 Legacy 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksFounders EditAlexander Elder Edit Alexander Elder was born in Glasgow in 1834 He was the son of David Elder who for many years was manager of Robert Napier and Sons the engine and shipbuilders and the brother of John Elder citation needed Alexander Elder was chief engineer of Columbian citation needed a 2 180 GRT iron hulled barque with a 2 116 ihp engine She was built for the Australian run and was chartered by France in 1855 as a troop ship for the Crimean War 1 In 1856 Alexander Elder joined W and H Laird as superintendent engineer for the African Steamship Company citation needed John Dempster Edit John Dempster was born in 1837 in Penport Thornhill Dumfriesshire where his father William Dempster was builder to the Duke of Buccleuch The Dempster family moved to Birkenhead in the 1840s and John joined W and H Laird as a clerk in 1851 when he was aged 14 citation needed History EditElder Dempster and Company Edit Share of the Elder Dempster and Company Ltd issued 5 May 1916 Mendi 4 222 GRT built in 1905 and sunk in a wartime collision in 1917 killing 646 people Elder Dempster and Company began its commercial activities on 1 October 1868 2 when John Dempster made it his business to circularise all potential customers I beg to inform you that this Company intend to dispatch early in January next the first of their line of Steamers at present being constructed on the Clyde for trading between Glasgow Liverpool and the West Coast of Africa The Steamers are to sail monthly and the ports which it is intended shall be called at are Sierra Leone Cape Palmas Cape Coast Castle Accra Lagos Benin Bonny Old Calabar and Fernando Po but should sufficient inducement offer arrangements will be made for their calling at other ports either on the outward or homeward voyages The Steamers are being specially built for the African Trade and besides being comfortably fitted up for passengers they will have extensive cargo space which will enable them to carry rough goods at moderate rates 1 Elder Dempster Shipping Limited Edit Elder Dempster Shipping Limited was formed in 1899 Among their ships were the liner SS Monterey and the steamer SS Montezuma which in early 1900 were both chartered as transport ships for British troops destined for South Africa during the Second Boer War 3 In 1900 they established a direct steamship service between the United Kingdom and the West Indies Elder Dempster Lines Edit In 1932 Elder Dempster Shipping Ltd together with the African Steamship Company and the British amp African Steam Navigation Company came under the Elder Dempster Lines name 4 The company operated from British ports mainly Liverpool where it was based to West African destinations It ran numerous cargo ships and a small number of passenger liners Before the Second World War its passengers liners were Accra and Apapa built in 1926 and 1927 plus its flagship Abosso 11 330 GRT which was launched in 1935 5 In the Second World War the company lost a number of ships to enemy action including both Accra 6 and Apapa 7 in 1940 and Abosso 8 in 1942 However during the war its passenger services continued to run between Liverpool and West Africa escorted by British submarines citation needed Among its passengers were students from British colonies such as the Gold Coast and Nigeria awarded imperial scholarships to study at Oxford and Cambridge universities such as the Gold Coast student PK Owusu on his way to study English literature at Queens College Cambridge in 1944 9 Apapa 11 651 GRT built in 1948 to replace an earlier Apapa sunk in 1940 After the war a new Accra and Apapa were launched in 1947 10 and 1948 11 followed by a new flagship Aureol 14 083 GRT in 1951 12 for the company s services to Ghana and Nigeria The company expanded taking over a number of other shipping companies between 1951 and 1965 4 one of which was British amp Burmese Steam Navigation Co Ltd which was purchased in 1952 The chartered ships were retained on the West Africa routes while P Henderson amp Co continued to manage the Burma traders In 1967 the six day war closed the Suez Canal causing Henderson s service to Burma ceased and their last three ships transferred to Elder Dempster routes When the Nigerian National Shipping Line was formed in 1957 Elder Dempster took a 33 percent stake selling in 1961 to the Nigerian government 13 Ocean Fleets Edit In 1965 the company came under the ownership of the Ocean Steamship Company Blue Funnel Line By 1970 all stock in the former Shaw Savill amp Albion Line had been transferred to Elder Dempster Delmas Vieljeux Edit The end for the Elder Dempster Lines name came in 1989 when it was bought by the French firm Delmas Vieljeux although the company continued as a shipping agents until 2000 when it was wound up 4 Non shipping interests Edit At the end of the 19th century the company had been instrumental in forming the Bank of British West Africa 14 15 renamed the Bank of West Africa in the 1950s and subsequently acquired by the Standard Bank From 1935 to 1940 the company jointly operated Elders Colonial Airways 14 15 based in Nigeria together with Imperial Airways for passengers within West Africa The onset of WWII saw the end of this joint venture At the height of its power it controlled the lands from Ijora Olopa to Apapa in Nigeria s Lagos port area the Nigerian Ports Authority grew out of the structure created by Elder Dempster 16 British Railways Merchant Navy Class steam locomotive 35030 was named Elder Dempster Line after the company Involvement in the Belgian Congo EditIn the late 19th century Dempster held a shipping contract with King Leopold II to ship goods and supplies to and from the Congo Free State E D Morel the main activist in the movement to expose the abuses of Leopold in his private colony first realized the discrepancy in value trade goods being sent to the Congo while working for Dempster As much as 80 percent of the goods being shipped to the Congo on Dempster ships were ammunition and other weapons From this shipping information Morel deduced the extremely aggressive tactics being used by Leopold 17 Notable litigation EditElder Dempster have been party to numerous cases which have later become a significant part of English common law precedent particularly in contract law 18 and maritime law 19 Such cases include Elder Dempster v Paterson Zochonis 20 21 Elder Dempster v Dunn amp Co 22 Elder Dempster Lines v Zaki Ishag 23 and Rudd v Elder Dempster 24 Legacy EditThe Elder Museum of Science and Technology on Gran Canaria in the Canary Islands takes its name from a building once owned by Elder Dempster Lines 25 26 References Edit Columbian Scottish Built Ships Caledonian Maritime Research Trust Retrieved 28 December 2020 Swiggum S Kohli M 3 October 2016 Elder Dempster amp Company African Steam Ship Company The Fleets The Ships List Retrieved 28 December 2020 The War The Transports The Times No 36054 London 1 February 1900 p 10 a b c Ingham Mike 12 June 2016 An Introduction Elder Dempster Lines HFM Design Retrieved 28 December 2020 Harnack 1938 pp 466 467 Helgason Gudmundur Accra uboat net Retrieved 21 April 2018 Hague Arnold SS Apapa convoyweb org uk Don Kindell Retrieved 21 April 2018 Helgason Gudmundur Abosso uboat net Retrieved 21 April 2018 Hirsch Afua 1 February 2018 Brit ish On Race Identity and Belonging Random House p 209 ISBN 9781473546899 Retrieved 3 April 2022 P K boarded an Elder Dempster boat The Elder Dempster Lines Accra of 1947 www liverpoolships org Retrieved 21 April 2018 Liverpool based British Ocean Liners of the post World War 2 period from 1946 www liverpoolships org Retrieved 21 April 2018 Harnack 1964 p 496 Sauvant Mallampally amp Dunning 1993 p 171 a b Davies 1973 page needed a b Davies 2000 page needed Bolaji 2012 p 4 Hochschild 1999 page needed Peel 2011 page needed Dockray 2004 page needed Elder Dempster amp Co Ltd v Paterson Zochonis amp Co Ltd 1924 A C 522 cited in Scruttons Ltd v Midland Silicones Ltd 1961 1909 15 Com Cas 49 Elder Dempster Lines v Zaki Ishag 1982 2LLR 548 QBD Rudd v Elder Dempster amp Co Ltd 1932 44 Ll L Rep 356 i law Informa UK Ltd Retrieved 28 December 2020 Descripcion www museoelder org in Spanish Museo Elder Retrieved 1 February 2019 Museo Elder Las Palmas de Gran Canaria s Science Museum Spain Holiday com 30 August 2013 Retrieved 1 February 2019 Bibliography EditBolaji Akinola 2012 Arrested Development A journalist s account of how the growth of Nigeria s shipping sector is impaired by politics and inconsistent policies Bloomington Authorhouse ISBN 978 1477238202 Cowden James 1981 The Price of Peace Elder Dempster 1939 1945 Jocast ISBN 0950748005 Cowden James Duffy John 1986 The Elder Dempster Fleet History 1852 1985 Mallett and Bell ISBN 0950945315 Davies Peter N 1973 The Trade Makers Elder Dempster in West Africa 1872 1972 London George Allen and Unwin ISBN 0043870031 Davies Peter N 2000 The Trade Makers Elder Dempster in West Africa 1872 1972 1973 1989 International Maritime Economic History Association ISBN 0968128890 Dockray Martin 2004 Cases and Materials on the Carriage of Goods by Sea London Routledge Cavendish ISBN 978 1859417966 Harnack Edwin P 1938 1903 All About Ships amp Shipping 7th ed London Faber and Faber Harnack Edwin P 1964 1903 All About Ships amp Shipping 11th ed London Faber and Faber Haws Duncan 1990 Elder Dempster Lines Merchant Fleets Vol 20 TCL Publications ISBN 0946378177 Hochschild Adam 1999 King Leopold s Ghost London Pan Books ISBN 0 330 49233 0 Peel Edwin 2011 Treitel s The Law of Contract 13th ed London Sweet and Maxwell ISBN 978 1847039217 Sauvant Karl Peter Mallampally Padma Dunning John H eds 1993 Transnational corporations in services London Routledge ISBN 0 415 08559 4 External links EditIngham Mike Elder Dempster Lines HFM Design Documents and clippings about Elder Dempster Lines in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Elder Dempster Lines amp oldid 1142952116, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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