The Isthmian Shipping Line 1910-1974 – monthly sailing from Hong Kong to New York 1950s

Isthmian Line US Steel News Mag Jan 1937 Isthmian Website

January 1937 US Steel News magazine featuring Isthmian Lines on the cover Courtesy: isthmianlines.com

Stephen Davies: The Isthmian Shipping Line (1910-1974) was initially a strange, hybrid beast – American but set up in London with a British management agency, the Federal Steam Navigation Co (ex-the famed Money & Wigram, itself an offshoot of the EIC when that lost its monopoly in 1833). I think the key point is its connection with US Steel – in effect an at-one-remove house line.

Fans of the company have a wonderful site, linked below, with an excellent and well-informed timeline and all the known images of its ships. One thing that stands out is the sheer amount of litigation in which the company was involved!

The line has its first mention, in HK, on 11.1.1912 about a failure to organize finance for the new line, However, that must have been soon sorted out because on 24.1.1912 there is a notice to consignees in the SCMP by the line advertising for cargo, so at least initially it clearly operated to HK. However, there was possibly an hiatus for after that first consignment note, with agents Shewan, Tomes & Co., there is a gap (though frequent stories about the line) and an SCMP story 31.7.1939 suggests its main route was US to the Philippines. The next consignment advertisement doesn’t appear until 1931 when the agents are the Bank Line.

Postwar the first mention seems to be in 1948 when there is a consignment advertisement with local agents Gilman & Co., who remain the agents (with Chinese agents Kwan Ip Hong) through the advent of containerization in 1969, although advertisements for consignments to the line’s ships seem to end in c.1962…maybe something to do with the line having been bought by States Marine Corp

HF: It would be of interest to have further information about the company in Hong Kong. Office location, people involved, shipping routes operated to and from HK?

“The Isthmian Steamship Company was a shipping company founded by US Steel in 1910.

Isthmian Steamship was the brainchild of US Steel President James A. Farrell, who had connections with the maritime industry through his father’s trade as a ship’s master. Farrell realized that US Steel could save substantial sums of money by owning its own fleet of freighters, rather than chartering cargo space from other companies. Farrell named the company after the Isthmus of Panama,  in honour of America’s recent construction achievement, the Panama Canal.

Farrell headquartered Isthmian Steamship in London, partly in order to take advantage of Great Britain’s  respected name in the industry, and partly to benefit from Britain’s long history of maritime experience. Management of the company was assigned to the British Federal Steam Navigation Co Ltd, a company which traced its own origins back as far as 1782 with the British East India Company. The US end of Farrell’s new company was managed by the Norton Lilly Agency.

The company’s first ship was the SS Bantu, a British vessel launched in 1902 and purchased by US Steel in 1907 for a reputed £24,000. By 1914, the company had purchased six additional ships – KentraBuenaventuraSanta RosaliaCharleton HallCraston Hall and the sleek cargo liner Crofton Hall – all sturdy British steamships. With the outbreak of World War 1 however, Farrell brought the company back under the protective cover of the flag of America, which was not at the time a belligerent.

Isthmian Line Shipping Advert HK Sunday Herald 29.10.1950

HK Sunday Herald 29.10.1950

The company would continue to expand its operations in the ensuing decades. In 1956 however, the by then highly lucrative company was sold to States Marine Lines. US Steel justified the sale on the grounds that Isthmian’s overall usefulness had diminished, as it now carried only a fraction of the corporation’s exports.

It continued to operate as a property of States Marine until the early 1970s. Its last list of corporate officers is dated 1974.”(1)

Isthmian Line SS Steel Seafarer Isthmian LInes WebsIte

SS Steel Seafarer mentioned in the advert above Courtesy: Isthmian Lines website

Sources: The Isthmian Steamship Company – wikipedia

See:

  1. Isthmian Lines website 

This article was first posted on 8th February 2018.

Related Indhhk articles:

  1. Messrs. Shewan, Tomes & Co
  2. Gibb, Livingston & Company Ltd, established in HK 1841, shipping lines and insurance
  3. Andrew Weir Shipping and Trading Co.Ltd (Bank Line) – connection to Sha Lo Wan Mine, Lantau
  4. Ben Line, Ben Line Steamers Limited, originally based in Leith, Scotland
  5. Kung Lee Steam Ship Company Ltd – Harry Long’s personal experience
  6. Shipping, Ben Line, Ben Line Steamers Limited, originally based in Leith, Scotland
  7. Shipping, The Hongkong and Yaumati Ferry Company Ltd, 1923-1973
  8. Shipping, Hongkong Lightering and Storage Company, 1867
  9. Shipping, J S Hook, Son & Company, shipping and commission agents, 1867

4 Comments

  • I came to United States [NEW YORK] 1959 from Cochin, India on Isthmian Cargo Ship , the name of the ship being STEEL RECORDER , I think. The ship arrived in Brooklin, New York Aug 23, 1959.
    Can you send me or show me the picture of this ship./ I am making a short documentary for my family.

    • Hello Mohammed

      Many thanks for leaving your comment. I’m afraid I can’t find a specific image of the Steel Recorder. However, there’s lots of information on the internet about the Isthmian Shipping Line so I’m sure you’ll find what you are looking for.

      Your mention of Cochin took me back around 40 years when I was travelling around India and spent 2 or 3 wonderful weeks staying in Cochin. A beautiful city with great charm and character.

      Good luck with your search for the ship image and with your documentary.

      Best wishes
      Hugh Farmer

  • Liz Bradley

    Hello, my great uncle was, according to his wedding announcement to my great aunt, “chief engineer on the steel exporter for Isthmian Steamship Company” in 1939, and the couple lived in Jackson Heights. Wondering if there are any lists of employees or company histories out there…somewhere?

    Thanks in advance!

  • Keith McGeorge

    My father Kenneth I McGeorge boarded the Frederick Jackson Turner merchant marine ship, as a crew member, operated by Isthmian S.S. Co in New York on 10 November 1944. I’ve been looking for an image of this specific ship for some time. Would you by chance have access to such an image?

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