FG-036 - German Service State Flag (Schneider Nossen, ca. late 1930s)

FG-036 – German Service State Flag (Schneider Nossen, ca. late 1930s)
Full view of FG-036 German Service State Flag
Full view of FG-036 – German service state flag (100×170 cm)

Flag ID: FG-036

Material and Construction

This flag is made from coarse-woven wool. The hoist features a reinforced white cotton tape stitched over a braided hemp rope loop. The stitching includes 5-fold corner reinforcement and zig-zag securing patterns. A clear stamp on the hoist indicates manufacture by Schneider Nossen, a Saxon flagmaker active in the 1930s.

Dimensions and Form

Official dimensions are 100 × 170 cm, matching the printed mark. The flag is rectangular with sharp corners and no major form distortion.

Dating and Origin

There is no precise date stamp, but the maker, material, and emblem style indicate production in the late 1930s. The flag predates wartime simplifications and is consistent with civil/state usage in the pre-war period.

During the Nazi era, this style of service flag was typically used by state authorities such as customs offices (Zollbehörden), railway administrations (Reichsbahnämter), state police (Landespolizei), and administrative ministries (Reichsministerien). It was not affiliated with NSDAP units but was part of the formal government flag inventory under ministerial oversight.

This type was officially referred to as the „Dienstflagge der Reichsbehörden“ (Reichsdienstflagge).

The Schneider Nossen Factory

The flagmaker Schneider, based in Nossen (Saxony), was active from the early 1930s. The facility originated as part of Simon-AG and was formalized into Fahnenfabrik Schneider before WWII. It continued producing flags until 1972, when it was absorbed into East Germany’s VEB system. Production quality from this period is high, with consistent finishing and standardized measurements.

Symbolism and Emblem Variants

The eagle motif is a right-facing Hoheitsadler, used by government institutions. This differs from the left-facing Parteiadler employed by NSDAP branches. The directionality of the eagle was deliberately codified to distinguish official state flags from party insignia. This flag’s design confirms state administrative use rather than party affiliation.

Analysis

Construction methods, eagle orientation, and dimensions suggest a formal use within a German administrative context—possibly customs, police, or infrastructure services. The textile quality and preserved stamp enhance its provenance. There are visible fold marks and minor age fading and a couple of moth holes scattered.

Additional Images

Close-up of eagle emblem on FG-036
Detail of the eagle emblem (Hoheitsadler, state variant)
Hoist stamp showing 100x170 and Schneider Nossen
Hoist stamp: 100x170 with Schneider Nossen marking
Hoist loop construction with rope and zigzag stitch
Braided rope loop sewn into hoist ribbon (zigzag construction)
Inner hoist stitching on white tape
Classic Third Reich hoist "ribbon" (at the top)
Bottom corner seam with 5-fold stitching
Five-fold stitching pattern at lower fly corner

Sources and References

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