Yet the cloud had a silver lining. . Galliot Themis 24 July reproduced in whole or part in any format for presentation, distribution or profit by Diamant 17 October SS Berlin 11 April, 1882 The "Ordinance Concerning the Emigration Traveling on Domestic or Foreign Ships" of 1832 in Bremen was the first state law to protect emigrants. [1] It is a convenient abbreviation to employ, just as the Lloyd is a convenient abbreviation for the great Bremen company, the North German Lloyd. SS Baltimore 9 August Philadelphia 10 October Bark Adonis 1 June Clean and hygienic accommodations were built in 1900, called Auswandererhallen, to house the increasing emigrants. Bark Eduard 13 August Brig Joh Dethard 15 December Favorite 12 November From the Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild and Die Maus Genealogical Society of Bremen Germany. Ellen Brooks 28 October AlexanderFebruary Cordova 24 November From 1850 to 1891, 41 percent of German and east European emigrants left via the port of Bremen (Germany), 30 percent via Hamburg (Germany), 16 percent via Le Havre (France), 8 percent via Antwerp (Belgium), and 5 percent via several ports in the Netherlands. Philadelphia 21 September Friederich Jacob 9 December Among other things it required the ship owners to maintain passenger lists. Grace Brown 17 July In 1873 the Hapag fell into a rate war with the newly founded Adler Line, established to partake in the profits of the transatlantic trade. For additional information about image restrictions see Restrictions for Viewing Images in FamilySearch Historical Record Collections. Philadelphia 4 January Elise 8 September Immigration records, also known as "passenger arrival records," can provide genealogical information including: a person's nationality, place of birth ship name and date of entry to the United States age, height, eye and hair color profession place of last residence name and address of relatives they are joining in the U.S. Isabella 28 August Neptune 4 August Goethe 25 July Isabella 28 August Ship Hermine 27 August, 1857 Cordova 24 November Charlemagne 15 July Ferdinand 15 August Emma 7 October Louise 13 October Pilot 6 July Sophronia 13 September Overseas Passenger Fares and Emigration from Germany 395 . Previous to this, barracks were constructed to house the emigrants but the conditions were deplorable and disease spread quickly. SS Main 6 October, 1878 For more information, see Germany Probate Records. Hamburg clippers like the Donau have made the trip from New York to Cuxhaven in 18 days, while good steamers do not get under 13 1/2 to 14 days and ordinary sailing vessels take 5 or 6 weeks. Wagner thought that the steamers would eventually have the transportation of persons and package freight, while the sailing vessels retained bulk freight. Citations help you keep track of places you have searched and sources you have found. Caspar 22 September Stern 25 June Gustav 25 May Emma 7 October The initial letters of the official name spell the word Hapag and it is as Hapag that the line is popularly known. Luise 22 May In 1907 they landed in New York from their German and Italian services the following number of emigrants: Emigrants Landed in New York by the German Steamship Companies. Bark Edmund 23 June The Canary Islands will be the first port of the service. Bark Geestemunde 9 June Bremen 21 November Jaroschewski, Tuila. Pioneer 21 September Active 23 July Condor 9 August Bremen 9 August This website requires a paid subscription for full access. In 1882 the Woermann Line, originally a branch of the famous Hamburg mercantile house of Woermann, was established to West Africa. In the early days of the Hapag there was little return freight to America to exchange for the bulk products we sent Germany. She was launched on 21 April 1886 and made her maiden voyage on 18 August 1886. Friedrich Leo 2 August Timoleon 22 November Olbers 4 January We and our partners use cookies to Store and/or access information on a device. Stephani 30 December Citizens were required to tell the police or the Einwohnermeldeamt [resident registration office] when they moved. Until 1850, Bremen was a more popular port than Hamburg. Sir Isaac Newton 19 June Diana 3 June Brig Weser 29 December, 1846 This was the first transatlantic sailing of a Norddeutscher Lloyd steamer. Eutaw 15 September Johann Friedrich 19 June Steamer Ohio 31 July Bark Eduard 22 October She started her maiden voyage on 5 June 1897, traveling from Bremen to New York with a stopover at Southampton.In addition to the transatlantic run she also sailed from Bremen to Australia via the Suez Canal.. On 30 June 1900, she was badly damaged in a dockside fire at the NDL pier in Hoboken, New Jersey. The following articles will help you research your family in Germany. There were enacted in Bremen severe regulations against ill-housing, underfeeding, swindling or otherwise maltreating emigrants, matters to which Hamborg was too long indifferent. SS Leipzig 4 August Virginia 26 June Isabella 5 July SS Braunschweig 17 November This collection includes records from 1904 to 1914 of handwritten cards, covering the information of approximately 8,800 passengers. Louis 25 June Semiramis 18 August SS Mosel 17 March It was a war that lasted three years. Goethe 25 July Plato 30 October Garonne 21 August Bark Adonis 22 May But, as we have seen, the North Atlantic trade was preeminently a passenger trade. Emma 12 March Caspar 22 September Rebecca 2 January Mary Phillips 9 September Charlotte 20 September Camera 13 December Given the loss of Bremen departure lists, researches in search of embarkees from that port must fall back on arrival lists. There are approximately 125,000 names in all four volumes combined. These books index the names of passengers from passenger lists of ships that arrived in New York from Bremen. Philadelphia 4 January This list was derived from National Archives records, then compared with Germans to America, and in some cases, microfilm of the passenger lists. SS Baltimore 30 January Goethe 25 July Freight could not be profitably transported by steamers until the introduction of the compound engine, which greatly reduced the quantity of fuel to be carried; before this time so much of the carrying capacity of the ship had to be devoted to coal-bunkers that freight had to pay rates which could not compare with those offered by the sailing vessels.[6]. Bremen 9 August F H Adami 25 October Howard 22 October Copernicus 18 December Rainbow 26 August Ship Aurora 19 September Mauran 11 November Timoleon 22 November Johann Friedrich 19 June Isabella 28 August 1844 1874-1907 - lists destroyed every 2 years Josephine 8 November Pauline 7 October reproduced in whole or part in any format for presentation, distribution or profit by Mads Weil 1 October Bark Industrie 30 November Washington 29 September Bremen, Germany Ships Crew Lists (Bremer Musterungslisten der Schiffe), Bremen, Germany Sailors Registry (Bremer Seeleuteregister), Bremen, German Desertions of Sailors, 1855-1874 (Seemansamt Bremen, Deserteurlisten, 1855-1874, Germany, Bremen, Select Passenger Departure Lists (Deutschland, Bremen, ausgewhlte Namenskartei aus den Bremer Schiffslisten), Germany, Bremen Passenger Departure Lists (Deutschland, Bremen, Namenskartei aus den Bremer Schiffslisten), The Hamburg Passenger Departure Lists 1850-1934. Washington 26 October Sophie 19 August FREE. Arab 8 September Howard 6 September Margaretha 1 September The Lloyd and the Hamburg- Bremen Africa Line had formed a similar partnership. Stern 9 July Timoleon 22 November Diana 5 August Constitution 23 June SS Main (1927) was a 7,624-ton passenger/cargo ship completed in January 1927 by Bremer Vulkan in Bremen-Vegesack, Germany, for Norddeutscher Lloyd. However, about 3000 lists survived for the period from 1920-1939. Friedrich Jacob 16 June Edwina 30 June Manage Settings Until well into the nineties the transportation of steerage passengers played the chief role in the New York business of the Hapag and the Lloyd and its profits enabled those companies to build up their fleets. Diana 21 November Bremen had had a packet sailing line to New York since 1826. Ajax 11 September The ships will call at a hundred or more places on the west coast. Caroline 23 July Sir Isaac Newton 19 June German Departures - 1840s German Departures 1840s Elise Louise Friedericke Alexander Humphrey Anna Olbers Charlotte Gustav Europe Elise F H Adami Johann Georg Ferdinand Sophie Copernicus Louis Stern Charlotte Ernst and Gustav Everhard Pilot Neptune President President Johannes Active Alexander Humphrey Clementine Edward Virginia Lucilla Ann 1 September Bark Edward 5 September Germans had to apply for permission to emigrate from most areas. "Bremen Passenger Lists 1920-1939". Apollo 13 August The Hapag instituted a service to the West Indies; in the same year the Hamburg South American Steamship Company was founded to ply between Hamburg, Brazil and the la Plata. Olbers 4 January Ship Hermann 6 November FamilySearch - Germany, Bremen Passenger Departure Lists, 1904-1914. Charlotte 30 June Immigration & Steamships - Collections & Research Immigration & Steamships Tap or click on a column heading to sort by that column. Globe 17 September General Washington 24 November. Kepler 17 December Ship O. Thijen 23 June N W Stevens 23 October Bremen 14 September Clarissa Perkins 11 July 1842 Luise 3 January Heretofore all trade between the United States and the west coast has been carried by way of Hamburg and Liverpool. Ship Uhland 16 June In the year ending December 31, 1910, there were landed in New York, by the three leading companies in the passenger and emigrant business, the following number of persons: Cabin and Steerage Pastengert Landed in New York, 1910. Alfred 30 October Mercur 24 August Europa 23 June In the following year, the Hapag made the Kosmos Line let the Hapag share its extremely profitable service to West America under an agreement whereby either company supplies a certain proportion of the total number of steamers dispatched per year. Isabella 28 August This article describes a collection of records at FamilySearch.org. Lucilla 3 August Ship D.H. Watjen 25 November, 1862 Cordova 24 November Bremen 14 September . General Veazie 8 November Ship Olbers 8 November Bark Johanna 18 May, 1876 Edwina 30 June Autoleon 3 September Ernst and Gustav 30 June Diamant 17 October Elise 19 July Isobella 27 April The records are found in the State Archive Hamburg. This is a list of ships which sailed from Bremen, Germany to New York City in 1866. Clementine 11 February All content on these electronic pages may NOT be obtained by unacceptable means Edward 24 July Contact Us. ", Hamburg Passenger Lists, Handwritten Indexes, 1855-1934, Germans to America and the Hamburg Passenger Lists: Coordinated Schedules, The Hamburg Passenger Departure Lists 1850-1934. Louise 21 May Elise 6 December Kammonham Roy 18 August Latrobe 2 August Brunswick 17 October, 1836 Study how to use this resource by clicking here: Hamburg Passenger Lists. N W Stevens 23 October Paoli 9 August SS Berlin 10 February Diana 5 August Washington 26 October Stephani 3 June The records of departures from these ports are called passenger lists. Includes index cards for Jewish emigrants. Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild 5 May 2010. These records are written in German. These saved lists had been stowed away in a salt mine at Bernburg an der Saale in 1942 together with other archives for the purpose of protection, and were transferred into the custody of Moscow Archives at the end of WWII. Elise 17 March Brig Telegraph 25 April Stephani 12 July Friedrich Jacob 16 June There are additional sources listed in the FamilySearch Catalog: These links lead to listings of emigration records for several provinces/states of the German Empire: This website requires a paid subscription for full access. Ann 1 September This second rate-war gave the Hapag its present brilliant manager, Albert Ballin, who was taken over from the Carr line; and it taught the company the raine of timely compromise in ocean warfare. General Veazie 5 November Elise 6 December Bashan 3 November Isabella 28 August Herschel 15 August To view the purposes they believe they have legitimate interest for, or to object to this data processing use the vendor list link below. [1], Read all about emigrating through Hamburg by clicking on Germany Emigration and Immigration, A very important tool in tracing German immigrants can be the Hamburg Passenger Lists, which cover the years 1850-1934. Cordova 24 November Ship Johanne Wilhelmine 5 November Louise 10 October Paoli 20 December Louise Friedericke27 January In I854 the German emigration by way of Havre exceeded that from Bremen by twenty thousand; while Bremen was ahead of Hamburg by twenty-five thousand, and Hamburg in turn led Antwerp by a like number.6 The com- Bark Stella 15 October, 1869 to retrieve any portion of the site. Washington 29 September Elise 19 July With the exception of 2,953 passenger lists for the year 1920-1939 all other lists were lost in World War II. Luntine 23 June 1834 Bodo Heyne: Passengers of the FERDINAND and the WALLACE. SS Main 17 August Since then the Hapag has been the prime mover in many of the combinations that go to make up the complicated system of agreements, pools, defensive and offensive alliances, and fusions that prevail in ocean shipping today. Marianne 16 October Namenskartei aus den Bremer Schiffslisten (Bremen Ship Passengers 1904-1914) Article by John Movius with David Dreyer. Charlotte 20 September In 1851 the Bremen Chamber of Commerce established the "Nachweisungsbureau fr Auswanderer" (Information Office for Emigrants), to which the ship captains had to deliver their lists. are not known to have survived for sailing ships from Germany. Elizabeth 15 January Ellen Brooks 28 October General Veazie 5 November Devonshire 18 November DEUTSCHLAND. Goethe 7 July Pioneer 21 September The index was created to facilitate access to the information in the Bremen passenger lists. Post 23 June Repeat this process for each new generation you identify. Sophie 19 August Updates: 13 Janl 2021: Added 287,140 relative contact names. Latrobe 2 August Clarissa Perkins 11 July Apollo 7 July An example of data being processed may be a unique identifier stored in a cookie. SS Oder 30 September General Veazie 5 November SS Maer 27 January Albert 19 August Kepler 17 December SS Berlin 2 May This page was last edited on 5 December 2022, at 21:20. Bark Coriolan 30 August Elizabeth 15 January See Germany Newspapers for more information. Howard 22 October Telumah 12 November Emma 12 March As passenger traffic increased, Dutch, Belgian, French, and Danish ports were used. Mary Phillips 9 September Louise 10 October From the Historisches Museum Bremerhaven. Philadelphia 4 January Olbers 13 June Washington 26 October Telumah 12 November Favorite 12 November Bark Atlantic 10 June, 1866 Admiral Branning 1 November Ferdinand 11 June Albert 19 August Minerva 18 September Mercur 24 August 1832-1849 Friedrich Spengemann: The voyages of the ISABELLA, PAULINE, META and UHLAND. Westphalia 31 December This card file was created by the Deutsches Ausland-Institut from Bremen passenger ship lists sometime between WWI and WWII. SS Berlin 2 May Howard 6 September Stephanie 26 July Bark Atalanta 30 June Arab 8 September Constitution 15 November The Hapags three sailing vessels of 1848 maintained a monthly service with New York, averaging forty-one days on the ocean west-bound, twenty-nine days east-bound. Diana 11 November Elise 17 March Johann Georg 5 June Everhard 30 December Galliott Flora 21 May Ship Andalusia 22 August Vesper 13 September Louise 17 May On 22 August 1939, she began her last voyage to New York. Early in the century Bremen had recognized the future of the emigrant trade. Sju Brder 22 November The Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation, Inc. https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/index.php?title=Bremen_Emigration_and_Immigration&oldid=5187141. Reform 4 September Kepler 17 December Bark Clara 17 December, 1868 Sir Isaac Newton 19 June An agreement of July 1999 between the Bremen Chamber of Commerce and the Bremen Society for Genealogical Investigation, DIE MAUS ("The Mouse"), provides the basis for digitizing the passenger lists by members of DIE MAUS (i.e. Brig Luna 14 November, 1834 Bark Jubilaum 6 May Ship Louisiana 21 October [4] Report of the Commissioner of Immigration in the 1907 Report of the Department of Commerce and Labor. All content on these electronic pages may NOT be obtained by unacceptable means Constitution 7 April Stephani 12 July Current database may be searched at the museum in Bremerhaven or by mail for a fee. Knickerbocker 9 September Republic 13 June The Deutschland, which left on her first voyage to New York on October 15, 1848, was of 717 tons register and had room for 20 cabin and 200 steerage passengers. Isobella 27 April F H Adami 25 October Antilope 13 August Includes marital status, occupation, ship name, place of last residence, and destination. SS Baltimore 20 March Sometimes they also show family groups. Philadelphia 22 August The ship room occupied by American goods cannot be filled for the return voyage with German goods. From 1850 to 1891, 41 percent of German and east European emigrants left via the port of Bremen (Germany), 30 percent via Hamburg (Germany), 16 percent via Le Havre (France), 8 percent via Antwerp (Belgium), and 5 percent via several ports in the Netherlands. Brig Constitution 19 October Semiramis 18 August North 14 September Sophie 19 August Phoenix 10 September [1] In view of the luxury that prevails on the companys New York boats and the prices which passengers must pay for it, it is suggested that the initial letters mean, Haben alle Passagiere auch Geld? (Are all passengers well supplied with money?). Vesper 13 September The experiences on the ship (and the immigration process into the United States) depended on which class of passengers an emigrant was a part of: first, second, or steerage. Bark Inca 26 December Barque Eberhard 8 November Paoli 20 December Elizabeth Bruce 12 November Republic 13 June Diana 3 June Antilope 13 August N W Stevens 23 October Charlotte 22 April Pioneer 2 September Marianne 20 July Leo 31 August GGA Image ID # 1413c7c12c. Devonshire 18 November Ship Phoenix 19 May SS Aller 01 December SS Ohio 26 July Howard 1 May Ship Marianne 20 September Diana 24 November Bremen became part of the North German Confederation in 1867 and became an autonomous component state of the new-founded German Empire in 1871. For more details, see several Wikipedia articles: Records that document emigration from Germany include passenger lists, passports, permissions to emigrate, German and French emigration indexes, published emigration lists, police registration records, and other departure documents, as well as sources in the emigrant's new countries. In 1907 they entered into a community of interest (Interessengemeinschaft) with the Hapag and Woermann. Lucilla 3rd Quarter Ship O. Thijen 8 November, 1856 Ship Ernestine 4 June Olbers 8 December Paoli 20 December Semiramis 18 August Galliot Amphitrite 17 October, 1837 SS Ohio 4 March 1843 Bark Franziska 6 December, 1850 Post 23 June Johannes 18 July Weser was an ocean liner built in 1867 for North German Lloyd. Before that a passport was a form of recommendation. Details for immigrant ship arrivals at the Port of Galveston, Texas between the years 1865 and 1896. 1841 The Hapag began business with three copper-bottomed sailing ships of together 1,600 register tons, and with a capital of 460,000 marks. As passenger traffic increased, Dutch, Belgian, French, and Danish ports were used. Emma 7 October At the close of the Franco-Prussian war, French chauvinists had insulted German emigrants in Havre and permanently diverted to Hamburg and Bremen the stream that had flowed to the French port. Philadelphia 12 September Charlemagne 15 July Caspar 21 August Any description of the development or present status of Hamburg lines must center in the Hamburg-American Line. Bark Charlotte 17 December, 1848 Sir Isaac Newton 30 October which include use of any spider, robot, retrieval application or any device Paul earned a Masters of Archival Studies - a terminal degree from Clayton State University in Georgia, where he studied under renowned archivist Richard Pearce-Moses.
Macgregor Funeral Parlour, Articles I