Last modified: 2011-07-01 by rob raeside
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Theoretically Port Authorities should not have had a defaced ensign, but two were issued
with warrants in the 1880s, probably through confusion between Public Offices, which did
qualify, and Public Bodies, which did not. One was for the Humber Conservancy Board Red Ensign and the other for the MD&HB Red Ensign. More prestige was attached to a Blue Ensign than a Red Ensign and it so happened that in 1911 one of the members of the Board of Admiralty had an interest in the MD&HB. It was arranged that MD&HB would be issued with a warrant to replace its Red Ensign with a Blue Ensign, and to make the manoeuvre a little less obvious, a warrant for a Blue Ensign defaced with its badge was first issued to the Port of London Authority. The following
year the MD&HB warrant was changed, and the new Blue Ensign was first hoisted in a ship
named Prince Louis of Battenberg. The real Prince Louis of Battenberg was a senior naval
officer married to a grand-daughter of Queen Victoria.
[Public Record Office ADM 1/27926]
David Prothero, 3 June 2001
See also:
I have never seen a good picture of this ensign, but the badge seems quite simple;
a broad, slightly curved, upward pointing chevron.
Granted 4th July 1974. The ensign is worn at shore offices and by pilot boats and harbour
craft, but no longer by any named vessel. The chevron defacement was designed by Albert
Brebner of Edinburgh. The ensign is also part of the Board's achievement of arms (held by
the dexter supporter) matriculated by the Lord Lyon King of Arms in 1985.
Source: [Malcolm Farrow's "Colours of the Fleet"]
David Prothero, 3 June 2001