Isobella 27 April Telumah 12 November This article describes a collection of records at FamilySearch.org. Elizabeth 15 January Eutaw 15 September Philadelphia 10 October Lucilla 3rd Quarter Goethe 25 July In addition to clean housing, medical exams and disinfections were conducted to ensure that only healthy individuals left the port. Edwina 30 June 1833 Phoenix 10 September Ship Aurora 19 September Bremen Packet 16 October Brunswick 17 October. Isabella 5 July Clean and hygienic accommodations were built in 1900, called Auswandererhallen, to house the increasing emigrants. Johann Friedrich 19 June Charlotte 30 June Gustav 7 May Goethe 25 July Eliza Thornton 30 October Edward 24 July The Hapag was left with a fleet out of all proportion to its needs, into which it could not grow for years to come. Antilope 13 August These records are discussed further in Germany Population Records. 1834 Brig Champion 28 July. Europa 18 January Eutaw 15 September Rajah 28 October The fact that emigrants can be counted on as return freight has had a great influence on the inducements that the German companies could offer in freight rates from the United States to the continent. Diana 21 November These usually focus on the emigrants from one town, principality, or state. Bark Coriolan 30 August Bremen 14 September Olbers 4 April Louise 13 October Albert 12 August This page has been viewed 197,393 times (0 via redirect). Emma 12 March Humphrey 10 July Johannes 7 June Clementine 22 June Ship Itzstein & Welcker 6 January Wills or testaments of relatives who stayed in Germany occasionally mention their relatives in foreign lands. Charlemagne 15 July B. Bohlen 11 June Ship Leontine 31 August coasting vessels from North Germany,4 and even from Norway5 for transshipment to America. 1832-1849 Friedrich Spengemann: The voyages of the ISABELLA, PAULINE, META and UHLAND. Anna 10 November Westphalia 31 December Isabella 5 July Louise 9 September Mauran 11 November Charlemagne 15 July Margaretha 1 September Bremen Passenger Lists 1920-1939 Most of the Bremen, Germany passenger departure records were destroyed. Brig Joh Dethard 15 December The year 1871, when the Empire was formed, saw the Hamburg lines multiply. Diamant 17 October Showing 1 to 8 of 320 records Clear All Filters Vessel Year built Line Builder & location Bark Ottillie 5 July, 1866 There was a Meldepflicht (obligation to register) in force since 1833 (mainly for non-Hamburgers), but it was not mandatory until 1892. Louis 25 June which include use of any spider, robot, retrieval application or any device Lucilla 3rd Quarter Mercur 24 August Olbers 13 June SS Arago 12 June . The Hapag has no connection with the Hamburg-Australian ; there was long, apparently, an understanding between the Hapag and the Lloyd that Australia should be left to the Lloyd, in return for which the latter kept her hands off Africa. Bark Clara 17 December, 1868 Use the search boxes at the bottom of each column to locate a particular vessel. Hualco 21 August Except for the discovery of transcripts of Bremen lists for the years 1907-1908 and 1913-1914 at the German State Archives in Koblentz, no copies of the Bremen passenger lists have ever come to light. Sarah Ann 6 October Mary Phillips 9 September Diana 21 November The average number of steerage passengers brought us by the two German companies in the years 1860-1900 was as follows:[2], Average Steerage Passengers from Hamburg Compared to Bremen During Selected Years 1861-1900. Goethe 7 July Ship Hermine 27 August, 1857 Friedrich Jacob 14 June There are approximately 125,000 names in all four volumes combined. 1845 Emigrants could have remained in Hamburg for a while. Delivered to ship breakers for scrapping in April 1961. Friedrich Jacob 16 June One of the great losses in genealogical history is the nearly complete destruction of the Bremen passenger records. At first it ran through the Suez Canal and down the east coast as far as Delagoa Bay. Isobella 27 April In 1872 were established the Kosmos Line, around Cape Horn to Chili and Peru, and the Kingsin Line, a freight service from Hamburg to the Far East through the Suez Canal, which had been opened three years before. Latrobe 2 August Constitution 23 June Diana 5 August Diana 24 November Bremen (Wikipedia) SS Ohio 26 July Astracan 23 December Bark Geestemunde 9 June Mercur 24 August SS New York 15 March arriving on 27 May 1887 with 485 passengers from Germany, Norway, Sweden, Holland, Hungary, Austria, England, Italy, Russia, Switzerland, France, Poland, Belgium and Brazil. Clementine 11 February Charlotte 20 September Southern and western Germans tended to emigrate through the ports of Bremen or Le Havre. Passports became important in Germany during the 19th century as a control measure. These books index the names of passengers from passenger lists of ships that arrived in New York from Bremen. Everhard 30 June Clementine 11 February A P Sharp 12 November Edwina 30 June Elizabeth Bruce 12 November Ship O. Thijen 23 June Mauran 11 November Starting in 1895, emigrants were segregated based on wealth. Clementine 11 February 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. Stephani 8 February Charlotte 20 September Bark Atalanta 30 June Olbers 13 June Bark Inca 12 August Elise 8 September Ship Andalusia 22 August Ann 1 September Ship Isabella 4 October, 1838 Brig Josephine 8 November, 1846 Philadelphia 22 August Grace Brown 17 July Eliza Thornton 30 October Repeat this process for each new generation you identify. SS Berlin 23 August Sometimes they also show family groups. Favorite 18 June Camera 13 December Humphrey 13 February In 1987 and 1990 those lists were given back to the Bremen Chamber of Commerce. The ship logo, which is still used in part, was . Friederich Jacob 9 December F H Adami 5 June Ship D.H. Watjen 25 November, 1862 The initial letters of the official name spell the word Hapag and it is as Hapag that the line is popularly known. This page has been viewed 37,687 times (3,809 via redirect). For the actual lists see: www.passengerlists.de. Howard 22 October I Found the Person I Was Looking For, What Now? Edwina 30 June These are index cards, arranged alphabetically by place of last residence and then by surname, of German emigrants, based upon the Bremen Passenger Lists. 121-24. The Hapag, which had paid 12, 16 and 20 per cent dividends in the years 1871-73, paid no more dividends until 1878. History. Johann Friedrich 19 June Luntine 23 June Ship Ernst Moritz Arndt 13 June Isabella 28 August Bark Jupiter 7 September Knickerbocker 9 September Mauran 11 November Louise 13 October Josephine 8 November Sir Isaac Newton 30 October Albert 17 February Elizabeth Bruce 12 November The records also name the ship and the date of departure. Ferdinand 15 August The New Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild logo was designed by Patty MacFarlane. Bark Pallas 6 July Bark Mississippi 10 June This page was last edited on 29 December 2022, at 13:54. Louise 10 October In 1890 the German East African Line was established with a subsidy of 900,000 marks yearly, given to assure regular connection between Germany and her colony of German East Africa. Neptune 4 August Emma 12 March Copernicus 18 December SS Deutschland 14 March Friedrich Leo 2 August Bark Freihandel 23 September Charles 28 August Trenton 16 December Henry 15 October Namenskartei aus den Bremer Schiffslisten (Bremen Ship Passengers 1904-1914). Helpful websites for 19th Century German Emigration. Bark Ceder 20 May SS Neckar 14 April, 1888 Olbers 8 December Emma 12 March Isabella 28 August FamilySearch - Germany, Bremen Passenger Departure Lists, 1904-1914. Virginia 26 June Isabella 28 August SS Baltimore 14 December Overseas Passenger Fares and Emigration from Germany 395 . Marianne 20 July Republic 13 June Germany, Bremen Passenger Departure Lists, 1904-1914, Germany, Bremen Name Card Index to Passenger List, Restrictions for Viewing Images in FamilySearch Historical Record Collections, https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/index.php?title=Germany,_Bremen_Passenger_Departure_Lists_-_FamilySearch_Historical_Records&oldid=4946610, FamilySearch Historical Records Published Collections, Bremen (Germany) FamilySearch Historical Records, FamilySearch Historical Records Image Visibility Notice. Louise 21 May Diamant 17 October Diana 11 November Albert 17 February Diana 24 November Pauline 7 October 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. Continue with Recommended Cookies. Arab 8 September 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. N W Stevens 23 October Louise 12 October Caroline 23 July General Veazie 5 November Among other things it required the ship owners to maintain passenger lists. Friedrich Leo 2 August We and our partners use cookies to Store and/or access information on a device. Philadelphia 10 October Mercur 24 August SS Main 17 August Stephani 3 June Elise 17 March 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. Charlotte 1 June Immigration & Steamships - Collections & Research Immigration & Steamships Tap or click on a column heading to sort by that column. Marianne 16 October Republic 13 June It will cost a shipper $250 to bring an elephant to New York; $200 for a giraffe; $100 for a lion, tiger or leopard, and $25 for an ostrich. To the uninitiate, the fare for giraffes seems particularly reasonable. Bark Adonis 22 May SS Adolphine 18 January Luise 22 May Europe 29 May In the 19th century emigration to the United States began. Pauline 7 October 1843 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. Louise 17 May Semiramis 18 August Grace Brown 17 July Sarah Ann 6 October The "Ordinance Concerning the Emigration Traveling on Domestic or Foreign Ships" of 1832 in Bremen was the first state law to protect emigrants. Gustav 23 October Johannes 7 November Compile the entries for every person who has the same surname; this is especially helpful in rural areas or if the surname is unusual. Diana 24 November From the Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild and Die Maus Genealogical Society of Bremen Germany. By 1867 the last of the sailers was sold. Elizabeth Hall of Dighton 1 September The independent-minded skipper could disobey orders again by allowing his ship, the passenger liner Bremen, the jewel of the German . Olbers 13 June Brig Telegraph 25 April For example, from 1841-1846, 115,000 emigrants left Europe via Bremen; however, only 11,000 emigrants departed via Hamburg. Ship Pharsalia 11 November, 1849 Philadelphia 12 September Ship Olbers 21 January Washington 26 October The ship room occupied by American goods cannot be filled for the return voyage with German goods. In 1907 they entered into a community of interest (Interessengemeinschaft) with the Hapag and Woermann. Bark E. Beaulien 6 January A project with the Bremen Chamber of Commerce and the Bremen Staatsarchiv. Mercur 24 August 1907/1908 and 1913/1914. Friederich Jacob 9 December Ship Elise 8 September Details for immigrant ship arrivals at the Port of Galveston, Texas between the years 1865 and 1896. The SS Bremen was built by F. Schichau of Danzig for the Norddeutscher-Lloyd line. Johannes 18 July The Hapag was founded in 1847 to prevent a further concentration in Bremen of the American mail service, as well as imports from America of cotton and tobacco and exports thither of German emigrants. Ship Emigrant 3 September Brarens 18 January [5] 1907 Report of the United States Commissioner of Navigation, pages 146-7. Republic 13 June Knickerbocker 9 September Inez 2 December Meta 4 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- Charlemagne 15 July So the Hapag and the German Levant Line instituted the direct connection themselves and continued it for three years. From now on the Hapag had a clear field. 1834 Bodo Heyne: Passengers of the FERDINAND and the WALLACE. Bremen 12 August 1845 Favorite 12 November 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. Alfred 30 October Ship Ocean 13 January Bark Laura 25 November Garonne 21 August B. Bohlen 11 June Sophie 19 August General Veazie 8 November Rajah 28 October I Can't Find the Person I'm Looking For, What Now? The Canary Islands will be the first port of the service. Albert 19 August F H Adami 25 October Republic 13 June Elise 1 January Friedrich Jacob 16 June Caspar 22 September Depending on the time period, either German Civil Registration records or German Church records may be more useful, While searching, it is helpful to know such information as the ancestors given name and surname, some identifying information such as residence and age, and family relationships. Bark Theodor Korner 9 June Pauline 7 October Who Should Emigrate to Canada and USA (1883), Emigration of Women from Great Britain in 1888, In The Paths of Immigration to America - 1902, Emigration from Rotterdam, Netherlands (1903), Considering The Causes of Emigration (1904), Italy's Attitude Toward Her Emigrants - 1905, The Human Side of Immigration - Italian Emigration to America (1906), Emigrants leaving Europe via Rotterdam (1908), Emigration from the German Ports of Hamburg and Bremen (1911), Medical & Mental Inspection of Immigrants. Chilo 20 August Brig Anna Louisa 31 July Alfred 30 October
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