1 / 29

IMMIGRATION RECORDS

IMMIGRATION RECORDS. Presented by DeAnne Shelley. E migration & I mmigration. E migration ( E xit). Schematic diagram of a country and its population centers. M igration. I mmigration (Come I n). GOALS.

Download Presentation

IMMIGRATION RECORDS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. IMMIGRATION RECORDS Presented by DeAnne Shelley

  2. Emigration & Immigration Emigration (Exit) Schematic diagram of a country and its population centers Migration Immigration (Come In)

  3. GOALS • Review some of the background and conditions under which immigration to the US took place. • Remind you of some of the records on immigration and emigration and where one finds information. • See/tell a little about the type of data one typically finds. • Review some methods/protocols for searching the sources.

  4. CONDITIONS • Why did they come? • Own land, religious freedom, adventure, avoid persecution, home country deported, better life. . . etc. • How did they come? • They came by ship. • What were conditions like? • Often crowded, unsanitary, disease ridden, inadequate provisions and potable water, poor ventilation, bad weather and poor navigation. »From one European port more than 700 of the 1,267 persons aboard one ship died from “Ship Fever”. • In 1818, out of 5,000 passengers who sailed from Antwerp to America, about 1,000 died.

  5. 1820 0.65 M 1565-1820 10 M 1820-1880 25 M 1880-1920 No US laws governing Laws passed governing E/I Gradual Improvement Greed subverted by laws By 1869 Steamers cut time More time to get knowledge preserve food and water Poor travel conditions Greed Long travel times Poor knowledge of food and water preservation. Problems with Records Not Uniform No Repository Bars, Attics, Basements, Museums,Scrapbooks, etc. Many Collected, Published INDEX - Filby Books Records required General Uniformity U.S. Archives, FHL FHLC - Indexes

  6. RECORDS THREE TYPES EMPHASIZED: • Pre-1820 • Many published sources - dedicated genealogists • Filby indexed these • Post-1820 • National Archives, FHL • FHL Catalog provides indexes • LDS Immigration Records • Mormon Immigration Index CD ($5)

  7. Filby’s Passenger List Index Books--FHL An excellent index of over 2,500,000 names found in more than 2,500 published sources is: Filby, P. W. , Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 18 vols. Sets must be searched separately

  8. LDS Emigration, CD 60; Mormon Immigration Index CD • Foreign Emigration Records - Hamburg SOURCES & HELPS • Research Outlines • Tracing Immigration Origins • United States, p. 24-28 • Ethnic Special Books • Germans, CD 356; Huguenots, CD 600; Irish, CD 257; Italian, CD 353

  9. SOURCES & HELPS (cont.) • WEB sites, • e.g. http://rootsweb.com • Filby - <1820 • FHLC - Archives, U.S. Passenger Lists • CDs for Boston and Philadelphia • CDs 590, 354, 350, 256, 170, and regular additions

  10. EMIGRATION/IMMIGRATION RECORDS1820 was an Important Transition Year • Refer to your United States Research Outline pages 24 ‑ 28 andread these few pages. They are valuable in getting started. • For Pre‑1820 immigration, the most convenient and widely used reference is the FILBY Index. William Filby has indexed over 2500 publication on books written to document the many passenger lists which were badly scattered in the early days. All the Filby sets must be searched. Remember, prior to 1820 there were no laws governing immigration, and no official records were required. His index (alphabetical) will refer you to a specific book where these lists were published or discussed..

  11. EMIGRATION/IMMIGRATION RECORDS (cont.) • For Post‑1820 immigration. there were now laws in place, and it was required to have official passenger lists. • The five major ports for the immigration during the post 1820 period were New York, Boston, Baltimore, Philadelphia. and New Orleans. There were about 150 ports total which were used. • The Family History Library Catalog can be used in Locality Search mode to search the various ports. Most have index films and then films containing the actual passenger lists. Many of the indexes are Soundexed. • Many foreign ports have quite good EMIGRATION passenger lists. Many of these are in the FHLC. e.g. the Hamburg lists are in printed form.

  12. USING THE FILBY INDEXES Filby sets must be searched independently. 1. Search alphabetically for ancestor. In addition to name, find date of immigration to help identify individual. 2. Record name, port of entry, immigration date, Filby reference number and page number. 3. Look up reference number in front of book, and find author and title.

  13. Review of Em & Immigration • 1. Check the FHLC for your locality • 2. Check the Web • 3. Check FILBY’s Index to Passenger Lists • Use the index on CD, and Ancestry.com

More Related