P&O Building (5th generation) [c.1965-c.1980]

Submitted by Admin on Tue, 06/08/2010 - 15:32
Current condition
Demolished / No longer exists
Date completed
(Day, Month, & Year are approximate.)
Date closed / demolished
(Day, Month, & Year are approximate.)

Completion date is a guess, based on the photos we have of that area.

Demolition date also a guess, based on the completion date of the next building on the site.

Corrections welcome!

Previous place(s) at this location

Photos that show this Place

Comments

Submitted by
paul walk the talk (not verified)
on
Wed, 06/09/2010 - 21:18

The person who made P&O big was Thomas Sutherland, he joined as a clerk from a humble Aberdeen Scotland background, dead dad and grandparents sold salted fish and barrels raised him.

As Calvanists they wanted him to go into the kirk, (church) he had ideas of mammon so they wrote to a contact they half knew- he happened to own small P&O

Young Sutherland came to HK as a teenager or so and started expanding P&O. As a business whizz he founded HSBC practically overnight , and Hong Kong Whampoa Docks now Hutchison Whampoa. At the age of 30 he was on Legco. Sutherland Street in Western is named after him

P&O realised they had a genius and recalled him to London , at 50 he headed P&O, he was a Liberal mp for Greenock for 20 yrs.and was on the board of theSuez Canal and Midland Bank.

He lost his 2 sons in the Boer and WW1 only his daughter survived

The Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company (P&O) has a celebrated history dating back to the 1830s. It was incorporated by a Royal Charter in 1840, and its name therefore includes neither "PLC" nor "Limited". The initials "P&O" are among the most familiar anywhere, and its house flag, older even than the Company itself, is one of the best known. The history of its first century is encapsulated in the heraldry of its Coat of Arms, granted in 1937, while throughout well over 160 years it has been a premier British shipping company, and in its time the largest and most varied in the world.

The P&O house flag is the Company's oldest symbol, incorporating the Royal colours of Portugal and Spain, the countries of the Iberian Peninsula to which its earliest services ran in the 1830s. The flag is now familiar all over the world, flown on ships, offices and depots on six continents.

 The P&O logo ...lives on as the P&O brand while the Company is no more having merged into DP World and its parent company Dubai World (a holding company of the Dubai Government).

Full dedicated P&O website: http://www.poships.co.uk/index.html