Difference between revisions of "Emigration and Immigration"

From the Family Tree Forum Reference Library
Line 263: Line 263:
 
*[http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/WI/WI-idx?id=WI.DucPassBelg Belgian Passengers to America in 1856]
 
*[http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/WI/WI-idx?id=WI.DucPassBelg Belgian Passengers to America in 1856]
  
*[http://www.omii.org/tng/index.php The Swiss Anabaptic Genealogical Association]
+
*[http://www.omii.org/ The Swiss Anabaptic Genealogical Association]
  
 
*[http://abish.byui.edu/specialCollections/fhc/Japan/index.asp Japanese Immigrants to the USA]
 
*[http://abish.byui.edu/specialCollections/fhc/Japan/index.asp Japanese Immigrants to the USA]

Revision as of 22:16, 26 February 2009





Highland Clearances

For those interested in the Highland Clearances, information is available using the following example as a guide.

If you google "Metagama" you will get some ship passenger lists from 1920's. This is a small example - 404 names on this list mostly from Scotland. Departed Glasgow, Scotland on Friday, June 22, 1923 Departed Belfast, Ireland on Saturday, June 23, 1923


Trans-Atlantic Sailing to Quebec and Montreal, Canada, July 5, 1923

This was a C.P.R. liner, come to Lewis to take on those whom Manny Shinwell later described in Parliament as "the best of Scottish manhood".

The Metagama sailed on Saturday the 21st of April, 1923. From all over Lewis, they crowded into Stornoway on the Friday. Cromwell Street echoed with the banter and excited anticipation of those about to leave, mingling with the sadness of those who had come to say goodbye. (This is From West Side historical Society on Google - out of the 300 who sailed that day only 20 were NOT young men, the average age was 22.) It decimated the Island Communities and to this day they have not recovered.


Emigration/Immigration and Shipping and Passenger Lists including Convict Transportation

General

To Australia

NSW

Information from: Mary from Italy

What passenger lists contain This information applies to passenger lists obtained from the NSW state government.

If you find a passenger in the immigration indexes:


Some lists are more detailed than others, but the one I got, dating from 1857, contained the following information:


1. List of immigrants per ship (sorted by family groups) containing:

Name
Whether married or single
Age
Trade
Native place and county
Religion
Whether person can read and write
Remarks


2. List of immigrants per ship as inspected by the Immigration Board, containing:

Name
Whether married or single
Age
Trade
Native place and county
Parents' names and, if alive, their residence
Religion
Whether person can read and write
Relations in the colony
State of bodily health, strength and probable usefulness
Any complaints respecting treatment on board the ship
Remarks by Immigration Board


3. Particulars:

Number of births and deaths during the voyage
Date and place of departure and arrival
Number of days on voyage
Master's name

and one or two bits of technical information like tonnage.


The list I received was a photocopy of the pages which included the two families I wanted and the other names on the page, not all the passengers on the ship.

It cost AUS$25 (£10). If you have more than one person in a family, only give one name, and you'll get the whole family. If you have another person on the same ship but in a different family, it costs an extra $6.


Victoria


Queensland


Other


Convicts to Australia



To New Zealand


To The USA

  • California Bound Passenger lists for those arriving in California by ship and wagon train 1848-73


To Canada


To South Africa


To South America






Back to Main Page

Back to General History