House flag | |
Industry | Shipping |
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Founded | 1887; 137 years ago (1887) |
Founder | Frank Clarke Strick |
Defunct | 1976 (1976) |
Successor | P&O |
Headquarters | UK |
The Strick Line was a British shipping company. Strick Line operated mainly in the Persian Gulf region, but was also supposed to have a tramping fleet trading in the Mediterranean Sea. Frank Clarke Strick (1849–1943) purchased a small steamer to raise the capital of an Anglo-Algerian Steamship Company Limited to operate the vessel. For the first years, the trade model included the transport of coal from Great Britain to ports in western Italy and iron ore from Béni Saf in North Africa to Great Britain or to the mainland. In 1892, the company began trading between Great Britain and the Persian Gulf. In the early 1900s, Strick had 15 ships. From 1903, the company operated in conjunction with the Bucknall Steamship Line to transport equipment, supplies and oil prospecting personnel to the Persian Gulf. In 1923, the company was bought by P&O.
References
- Menachof, David; Damian, Anthony (1998). "Mergers and alliances in the liner shipping industry: an historical perspective". Journal of Transportation Management. 10 (2): 44–56. doi:10.22237/jotm/901929900. ISSN 1058-6199.
- S., H. (1939). "Review of The Golden Milestone: Reminiscences of Pioneer Days Fifty Years Ago in Arabia". The Geographical Journal. 94 (3): 243. doi:10.2307/1788335. ISSN 0016-7398. JSTOR 1788335.
- Morton, Fiona Scott (1997). "Entry and Predation: British Shipping Cartels 1879–1929". Journal of Economics & Management Strategy. 6 (4): 679–724. doi:10.1111/j.1430-9134.1997.00679.x. ISSN 1058-6407.
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