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eLearning Series: Geneology
My Family Tree is Important to Me
( 50 articles in this series )
How
to Search Ship Manifests
for a Family’s History
Before the days of airplane travel, emigrants
typically left their countries of origin on ships and braved
long and difficult journeys across the ocean. Finding
evidence of an ancestor’s journey to a new world through passenger
lists
and ship manifests can be a thrilling experience for anyone
who is interested in their family history. Such valuable documents,
kept by most shipping companies across the world, can be incredibly
difficult to search, however, leading genealogists to spend
countless hours in fruitless inquiry. Many of the lists, for
instance, have not been put into indexes and lay moldering
in some obscure or unreachable archive. At other times, even
when genealogists do find their ancestors on a ship manifest,
only their name and country of departure are listed; no other
exciting information, such as birth date, country of origin,
or occupation, is included. Such warnings aside, however, there
are ways genealogists can increase their chance of success
in finding their ancestors on passenger lists.
First, remember that your
ancestors may have been included on a number of lists, not just the ones made upon arrival in
their new country. Lists were made when they first got on the
ship and whenever they stopped along the way. Newspapers and
organizations that may have paid for their journey, such as
aid societies, would also have kept lists. Even passport applications
and naturalization papers can provide valuable clues to your
ancestor’s journey.
After becoming aware of the variety of places in which you
can look for your ancestors, try and keep the time
period in
which they arrived in consideration. Passenger lists made for
immigrants arriving in America before 1820, for example, are
particularly difficult to search for because they were not
standardized or carefully preserved and either do not exist
anymore or are extremely difficult to find. The search for
immigrants arriving between 1820 and 1891 is slightly less
difficult but information is still limited. Finally, in 1891,
the Immigration and Naturalization Service came into existence
in the United States, and passenger lists were greatly improved,
becoming more reliable, informative and well-preserved.
Before you begin searching passenger lists, you need to know
your ancestor’s complete and original name, the date of his
arrival in America, and the port at which he arrived. It is
also helpful to know his age; the port from which he departed;
his country of origin; his ultimate destination in the United
States; and the names of his ship or of any fellow travelers.
You can find this information through a piece memorabilia,
such as a letter or ticket; through previously researched family
history; through census records, which are available on the
internet and on purchasable computer programs; through naturalization
records, which are actually more informative than passenger
lists for immigrants arriving after 1906; and through passport
records, if your ancestor applied for one to visit his country
of origin.
If you discover that your ancestor arrived
before 1820, there
is no centralized place to search for passenger lists. Many
ships did keep lists, which they left at the ports of arrival,
but since the government did not require these lists to be
kept or saved, they were lost, destroyed, or scattered in different
libraries or private collections. Many of the surviving lists
have been published on the web or in books, so these are the
best places to search. Newspapers from the time which have
been microfilmed are also valuable resources. Finally, the
government does have records in the national archives for arrivals
in New York from 1789 to 1919, in New Orleans from 1813 to
1819, and in Philadelphia from 1800 to 1819.
If your ancestor arrived
after 1820, then your main job will
be in consulting the variety of resources available. Customs
Passenger Lists, compiled by ship captains from 1820 to around
1891 and indexes for these lists can be found at the National
Archives; in libraries, including the comprehensive genealogical
archives of the Church of Latter Day Saints; online in images,
transcripts, and indexes; on purchasable CD-ROMs; and in books.
The archives and other resources contain notable gaps in information
and errors, so it is best to search in a variety of indexes.
Beginning around 1891, Immigration Passenger Lists replaced
Customs Passenger Lists due to the flood of immigrants to the
United States and the establishment of a Superintendent of
Immigration. Immigration Passenger Lists are much more detailed
and two pages long by 1906. They can be found in the National
Archives, in the Latter Day Saints library, on the Ellis Island
on-line database, and on other on-line sites. Once again, errors
were made in microfilming lists and a variety of resources
should be consulted. In the end, genealogy is like a scavenger
hunt where you must use the clues provided to you and search
in a variety of places before you find what you are looking
for. # # # # #
SolveYourProblem.com
: 2006
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