FG-035 - British White Ensign (1942-1944)

Flag ID: FG-035
Material and Construction
FG‑035 is a British White Ensign, printed in wool bunting with horizontal ribbed weave typical of British naval flags. It measures approximately 90 × 180 cm (≈ 3 × 6 ft) and features the red St. George’s Cross on a white field with the Union Flag in the canton (en.wikipedia.org). It is double-sided (not sewn), with a cotton hoist bearing two brass grommets and three brass lacing eyelets. Excellent condition with minimal wear. No label present.
Technical Specifications
Parameter | Detail |
---|---|
Flag ID (FG) | FG-035 |
Country | United Kingdom |
Type | White Ensign (Royal Navy) |
Estimated period | 1942–1944 (WWII) |
Dimensions | 90 × 180 cm (~3 × 6 ft) |
Material | Printed wool bunting |
Finish | Cotton hoist with 2 brass grommets + 3 lacing eyelets |
Double-sided (not sewn) | |
Weave | Horizontal ribbed weave typical of British naval flags |
Label | None present |
Condition | Excellent, minimal wear |
Historical Context & Use
- The White Ensign is exclusively a Royal Navy ensign, in use since early 18th century, and still worn today by commissioned warships and shore establishments (wrens.org.uk).
- FNFO at Imperial War Museum (IWM Object 30018030): identical printed ensign flown at first British-held station in Algiers, 8 Nov 1942, and later again on D-Day, Normandy 1944 (iwm.org.uk).
- Another IWM instance flown at beach landings during Sicily/Reggio operations on 3 Sept 1943, widely considered first British flag ashore at Reggio di Calabria (iwm.org.uk).
Operational Use & Size Context
- Large battle ensigns were traditionally flown on capital ships to signal identification during combat; typical sizes ranged up to 6 × 12 ft for battleships (en.wikipedia.org).
- Smaller or mid-size ensigns (~3 × 6 ft) would be typical for smaller warships, coastal craft, shore installations, or ceremonial land uses (iwm.org.uk, ima-usa.com).
- The 90 × 180 cm example matches known standard for reserve / display use at naval stations or shore-based establishments during WWII.
Estimated Chronology
Based on IWM reference and similarities in size and construction, the ensign likely dates from late 1942 to 1944, coinciding with North African landings and Normandy operations. New printed wool and lack of field wear suggests it is a circulated shore/logistics piece, not a battle-damaged ship flag. Absence of maker’s label not unusual for naval-produced ensigns at that time (many were government-issued without commercial tags).
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