This page is part of © FOTW Flags Of The World website
J. Jost (German Shipping Company)
Last modified: 2009-06-13 by jarig bakker
Keywords: jost | just jost |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
image by Jarig Bakker, 10 Feb 2005
See also:
Introduction
Reederei J. Jost - Hans Peter Jost was a merchant in shipping business.
After having bought a ship he founded his own company in Flensburg in 1874.
He died in 1887 and his brother, captain Jens Jost, became head of the
company. 1903 he chose his son-in-law, captain Jörgen Brink as his partner.
In 1908 Jens Jost died, aged 82 years. The company was renamed: J.Jost
(owner capt. Jörgen Brink). But also capt. Brink died a few years later,
in 1911, after having well ordered his company. Jenny Brink, his widow,
handed out the management of the company to Hans Wölffel, a former employee.
After the end of WWI the company could keep a few ships. Jost’s elder son
died in war, and his younger son Otto Jost, after having learned his fathers
business, entered the company, aged 20. The ships were used for cruises
across the North Sea and Baltic Sea. The economic crisis of 1923 heavily
struck the company.
When WWII broke out in 1939 the ships were confiscated by German navy
and they all got lost till the end of war. Meanwhile Otto Brink had overtaken
the company completely and quickly began to rebuild it, a real hard job.
He established a ship broker company and agency and made Kurt Wölffel,
son of former general manager Hans Wölffel, his partner.
In 1950 Brink established the Bremer Schiffahrtskontor Brink &
Co, located naturally in Bremen, using at first second hand ships, later
a few new built ships. Meanwhile Brink & Wölffel in Flensburg maintained
the cargo service for the new worldwide operating company. The new branch
was renamed as: Brink & Wölffel, located in Flensburg. The company
also was corresponding ship owner in service of the companies Amisia and
”HERA” Schiffahrts- und Transportgesellschaft mbH, both having only one
ship each since 1951.
In 1952 Jürgen Brink, Otto’s only son, entered the company, located
in Flensburg, after having been educated and prepared thoroughly for his
new job. Meanwhile his father led the company in Bremen.
In 1954 Kurt Wölffel died surprisingly, after having been operated
in hospital.
In 1961 the /Bremer Schiffahrtskontor/ was closed and the company in
Flensburg overtook all its activities.
In 1969 Jürgen Brink committed suicide and his father Otto, meanwhile
aged 70 had to face the new situation of not having any heir. In 1970 he
established an alliance with the Norwegian ship owner Atle Jebsen. In 1971
the shipping branch was outsourced reorganized as J.Jost GmbH. The Norwegian
company Kristian Jebsen became its partner. The company was transferred
to Hamburg in 1972 and Otto Brink sold his shares to Kristian Jebsen, the
company renamed again as: Jebsen Hamburg- J. Jost and later (1974) as Jebsen
Hamburg-Kristian Jebsen.
The company was completely moved to Hamburg in 1975. One year later
Otto Brink died.
Later the company was overtaken and renamed again as: Christian Jürgensen
und Brink & Wölffel & Co, located in Flensburg until today.
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 28 Apr 2009
J. Jost - main flag
J. Jost, Flensburg - blue flag; in top and bottom two white wedges
meeting in center.
Image after Brown's Flags and Funnels of British and Foreign Steamship
Companies, compiled by F.J.N. Wedge, Glasgow, 1926 [wed26]
Jarig Bakker, 10 Feb 2005
Description of flag of Reederei J.Jost:
It is a blue flag with two isosceles white triangles, forming an hour-glasss.
This flag was kept and survived every renaming of the company.
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 28 Apr 2009
J. Jost - variant
image by Jorge Candeias, 2 May 2004
A photo of a book page with a bunch of flags shows a flag with a caption
that, although not really readable, or at least, not readable in such a
manner that can give us a certainty about what's written there, seems to
be "J. Jost". The flag is blue with a device in the center composed of
two white triangles "facing each other".
Jorge Candeias, 2 May 2004
That's J. Jost, Flensburg. Source: "See und Seefahrt", by Gustav-Adolf
Wolter, 1968.
Jarig Bakker, 2 May 2004
Description of flag of Bremer Schiffahrtskontor Brink & Wölffel:
Nearly the same as the one of J.Jost, but the hour-glass is touching
the upper and lower edge of the flag.
Source: “Deutsche Reedereien und ihre Erkennungszeichen”; 2nd
ed.; Hamburg; 1956; p.13
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 28 Apr 2009
Kristian Jebsen
image by Klaus-Michael Schneider, 28 Apr 2009
Description of flag of Kristian Jebsen: It is a blue flag vertically
divided by a white dancetty line, containing a black inscription “K” over
“J”, both letters having a backslashy bar in common.
Source: www.marcollect.de; based on a photo of a table flag of Klaus-Peter
Bühne.
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 28 Apr 2009
Christian Jürgensen
image by Klaus-Michael Schneider, 28 Apr 2009
Description of flag of Christian Jürgensen: The flag is vertically divided
into yellow(like corn) and blue, having a blue “C” in the yellow filed
and a yellow “J” in the blue one.
Source: www.marcollect.de; based on a photo of a table flag of Klaus-Peter
Bühne.
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 28 Apr 2009
HERA
image by Klaus-Michael Schneider, 28 Apr 2009
Description of flag of “HERA” Schiffahrts- und Transportgesellschaft
mbH: It is a yellow over red over white horizontal tricolour with a white
inscription “HERA” in the middle of the red stripe.
Source: “Deutsche Reedereien und ihre Erkennungszeichen”; 2nd
ed.; Hamburg; 1956; p.13
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 28 Apr 2009