Louise Friedericke27 January Emma 7 October Sarah Ann 6 October Louisa 25 September Isabella 28 August Mary Phillips 9 September Bark Clara 17 May Margaretha 1 September Caspar 22 September Ship Adolphine 13 January Luise 3 January SS General Werder 1 April Louis 25 June SS Adolphine 18 January 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. Sophie 12 October From the Historisches Museum Bremerhaven. 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. The extent of original materials at the GG Archives can be very beneficial when researching your family's migration from Europe. Constitution 15 November FREE. Bark Coriolan 30 August SS Main 6 October, 1878 Includes marital status, occupation, ship name, place of last residence, and destination. Johann Friedrich 19 June Howard 1 May Albert 19 August These pieces of information may give you new biographical details such as a title, an occupation, or land ownership. Overseas Passenger Fares and Emigration from Germany in the Mid - JSTOR Plato 30 October 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. Identifying your sources helps others find the records you used. Favorite 12 November In the last two centuries Bremen and Hamburg have been the two major German port cities for shipping lines serving North and South America as well as to and from Australia and Asia. N W Stevens 23 October Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild 5 May 2010. Barque Sophie 12 November Passports became important in Germany during the 19th century as a control measure. Republic 13 June General Veazie 8 November History of Emigration from the German Ports of Hamburg and Bremen with a discussion of how the two major steamship companies competed with one another for the immigrant trade. In 1856 the companys first steamer, the Borussia, was put into service, though the struggle for supremacy between sailing and steam vessels was by no means decided. Louise 21 May Telumah 12 November For further information see German Ports: Gateway to America by Raymond Wright III. Johann Friedrich 19 June Sir Isaac Newton 19 June Garonne 21 August Edwina 30 June Details for immigrant ship arrivals at the Port of Galveston, Texas between the years 1865 and 1896. Diana 5 August Post 23 June Mauran 11 November Elise 8 September 1841 History. Bremen 14 September A P Sharp 12 November Brig Charles Ferdinand 4 August Isabella 28 August 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. which include use of any spider, robot, retrieval application or any device Sju Brder 22 November After docking in New York on August 28, 1939, only four days before the outbreak of World War II, Captain Adolf Ahrens of Germany's North German Lloyd shipping line was faced with a decision. She is being built over into a pleasure cruiser, the Victoria Luise. GGA Image ID # 14141cec29. . Brig Bremen 18 July Semiramis 18 August Europa 18 January Contact Us. In 1847, the Hamburg American Parcel Joint-Stock Company (HAPAG) was founded in Hamburg, which put a number of new ships into service. For help reading these records see: The following information may be found in these records: It is helpful to know at least one of the following: Compare each result from your search with what you know to determine if there is a match. General Washington 24 November, 1845 Johannes 7 November Isabella 28 August Mercur 24 August Delivered to ship breakers for scrapping in April 1961. Bremen, Germany 1832 Ship Palemburg 19 August 1833 Brig Neptune 14 October Brig Ulysses 14 October Ship Virginia 7 November Brig Luna 14 November 1834 Brig Burgermeister Smidt 26 May Galliot Themis 24 July Brig Ivanhoe 31 July 1836 Ship Elise 19 May Ship Phoenix 19 May Bark Theodor Korner 9 June Brig Ulysses 19 September Apollo 7 July 1874-1907 - lists destroyed every 2 years Mary Phillips 9 September Figures of the Landing Agent of the United States Immigration Service, published in New York papers, January 11, 1911.). Olbers 13 June Favorite 18 June Edward 28 July Ship Aequator 5 September [6] In 1866 Adolph Wagner wrote an article on Ocean Transportation in Rentschs Handwrterbuch der Volkswirtschaftslehre. Alfred 30 October Sophie 19 August On June 19, 1858, at 6 o'clock in the afternoon; the "Bremen" left the wharf at Bremerhaven on her maiden voyage to New York, carrying 100 tons of freight, 1 cabin and 93- steerage passengers. Significant numbers of German emigrants can be found on every continent and in many countries around the world. SS Ohio 1 November the "e-migration mice"). Business for the Hapag was excellent in the decade 1860-70. 1844 Bark Auguste 4 October Ship Elise 8 September Henry 15 October In addition to clean housing, medical exams and disinfections were conducted to ensure that only healthy individuals left the port. The consent submitted will only be used for data processing originating from this website. Stephani 14 October These records, created by the Deutsches Ausland-Institut, were subsequently transferred to the Bundesarchiv. Description [ edit] The ship was 357 feet 0 inches (108.81 m) long, with a beam of 41 feet 0 inches (12.50 m) and a depth of 26 feet 0 inches (7.92 m). Since 1907 the Hapag has also shared this service. Anna 17 February German Departures 1850s Ohio Elise Columbia Columbia Johannes Leontine Meta Europa Brutus Brutus Herschel Leila Alexander Leibnitz Hudson FJ Wichelhausen Louise Marie Louise Marie President Smidt Hermann Ernestine Adolphine Minna Queen Mathilde Colonist Neptune Edmund Uhland Anna Washington Itzstein and Welcker Marianne Helene Albert America Ocean Diana 3 June Semiramis 18 August Josephine 8 November Martha 1 September An example of data being processed may be a unique identifier stored in a cookie. Sophronia 13 September Active 23 July Article by John Movius with David Dreyer. Lucilla 3rd Quarter Bark Weser 26 November, 1867 Diana 5 August Alwina 11 January The Hamburg-American Line was established in 1847; its official name is the Hamburg- Amerikanische Paketfahrt Aktien-Gesellschaft. So the Hapag and the German Levant Line instituted the direct connection themselves and continued it for three years. Europa 8 November Bremen 12 August Continue with Recommended Cookies. 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. This page was last edited on 15 September 2022, at 09:20. 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. It was a war that lasted three years. Leontine 28 June Starting in 1895, emigrants were segregated based on wealth. Diana 24 November Post 23 June Goethe 7 July Isabella 28 August Diamant 17 October 1907/1908 and 1913/1914. Trenton 16 December Josephine 8 November coasting vessels from North Germany,4 and even from Norway5 for transshipment to America. Constitution 23 June Brarens 18 January SS Oder 28 January The ship logo, which is still used in part, was . She was sold to Italy in 1896 and was renamed Seravalle, being scrapped in that year. Bremen Packet 28 May Brig Weser 29 December, 1846 Charlotte 22 April Some of these records are available through the FamilySearch Catalog under Place Search (Hamburg), Naturalization and citizenship (Heimatbcher 1826-1864), Population (Meldeprotokolle fr Fremde 1868-1889) and Immigration (Reisepassprotokolle 1851-1929). This page was last edited on 29 December 2022, at 13:55. These sources may be passenger lists, permissions to emigrate, or records of passports issued. Ship Caledonia 18 December, 1839 Galliot Amphitrite 17 October, 1837 Albert 19 August However, they only included those immigrants where the place of origin was given (most passenger lists in this time frame do not have this information), so they are only partially useful. Ship Johannes 3 November Chilo 20 August Agnes 29 December Stephani 8 February 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. SS Leipzig 30 August Sarah Ann 6 October Bremen Ship Passengers 1904-1914 | FEEFHS Bark Union 6 October Bremen 21 November There are approximately 125,000 names in all four volumes combined. Barque Salem 25 November SS Leipzig 24 December, 1871 Use the search boxes at the bottom of each column to locate a particular vessel. Stephani 8 February Ship Pharsalia 11 November, 1849 The Galveston-Bremen Project Immigration & Steamships - Collections & Research Immigration & Steamships Tap or click on a column heading to sort by that column. Marianne 16 October Luise 3 June Bark Ceder 20 May Clementine 11 February Grace Brown 17 July Gustav 7 May Bark Iris 13 June Constitution 15 November Includes index cards for Jewish emigrants. While still cramped, hygiene was much better than the old sailing ships. She was launched on 21 April 1886 and made her maiden voyage on 18 August 1886. Bark Theodor Korner 9 June Rajah 28 October Lucilla 3rd Quarter Luntine 23 June Bremen 9 August Washington 29 September Apollo 7 July Elizabeth Bruce 12 November Sju Brder 22 November Ship Elise and Mathilde 9 June The Hapag was left with a fleet out of all proportion to its needs, into which it could not grow for years to come. Elise 17 March Knickerbocker 9 September Emma 12 March Amelia 4 August Rainbow 26 August Paoli 9 August Diamant 17 October The records also name the ship and the date of departure. Gustav 7 May The information in these records may include the emigrants' names, ages, occupations, destinations, and places of origin or birth places. N W Stevens 23 October Sir Isaac Newton 30 October 631 D St Lincoln, NE 68502 (402) 474-3363. The panic of 1873 set in and held up further advances. SS Ohio 4 March Elizabeth Hall of Dighton 1 September Brig Bremen 18 July Philadelphia 12 September This page has been viewed 16,745 times (0 via redirect). SS Baltimore 21 March F H Adami 25 October Brig Constitution 19 October Elizabeth Bruce 12 November 1845 Charlotte 20 September which include use of any spider, robot, retrieval application or any device Meta 4 January Emigration from the German Ports of Hamburg and Bremen - Gjenvick Diana 24 November Clementine 22 June Sophie 19 August Luntine 23 June Trenton 16 December Deutschland, Bremen, Namenskartei aus den Bremen Schiffslisten, Use the age to find an approximate birth year to begin your search in church or civil records, Continue to search the records to identify children, siblings, parents, and other relatives who may have moved, been recruited or lived nearby. Mauran 11 November Heretofore all trade between the United States and the west coast has been carried by way of Hamburg and Liverpool. Ship Phoenix 19 May The New Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild logo was designed by Patty MacFarlane. N W Stevens 23 October Bark Stella 15 October, 1869 Agnes 29 December Cordova 24 November Ernst and Gustav 4 November The GG Archives is the work and passion of two people, Paul Gjenvick, a professional archivist, and Evelyne Gjenvick, a curator. Diamant 17 October Rajah 28 October Charlotte 1 June Maria Francisca 10 December Ferdinand 11 June Louise 13 October Luise 3 June Bark Edmund 3 November SS Baltimore 30 January The "Ordinance Concerning the Emigration Traveling on Domestic or Foreign Ships" of 1832 in Bremen was the first state law to protect emigrants. 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. Antilope 13 August Edwina 30 June (Nauticus, 1909, page 298.) Louise 17 June Philadelphia 4 January For example, from 1841-1846, 115,000 emigrants left Europe via Bremen; however, only 11,000 emigrants departed via Hamburg. If you are using emigration/immigration records to find the name of your ancestors' town in Germany, see Germany Finding Town of Origin for additional research strategies. Ship Ocean 13 January Copernicus 23 June The Hapag began business with three copper-bottomed sailing ships of together 1,600 register tons, and with a capital of 460,000 marks. The struggle was terminated in 1886, when the Hapag and the Union companies combined their schedules. Alexander 25 July Jaroschewski, Tuila. Howard 1 May Garonne 21 August Bremen Passenger Lists 1920-1939 Most of the Bremen, Germany passenger departure records were destroyed. Pioneer 21 September Bremen 14 September Mercur 24 August In 1888 the Hamburg-Australian Steamship Company came into life. Louise 13 October Diana 21 November In 1895 the German emigration dropped to 82,000 and has never since reached 50,000. Weser was an ocean liner built in 1867 for North German Lloyd. Ellen Brooks 28 October Cordova 24 November Caspar 22 September Wills or testaments of relatives who stayed in Germany occasionally mention their relatives in foreign lands. German Departures - 1850s - Immigrant Ships Trenton 16 December Ship Hermine 27 August, 1857 B. Bohlen 11 June Herschel 15 August Herschel 15 August Elizabeth Bruce 12 November Howard 1 May Albert 17 February In 1904, when conditions had changed and there was no longer fear of Russian or Italian competition, the line was withdrawn; New York goods for the Levant were again brought to Hamburg and transshipped there to the steamers of the German Levant Line.[8]. Bark Neptune 15 December, 1849 This relation* was formerly 3:1 or 4:1 in sailing ships. Friedrich Leo 2 August 1842 Devonshire 18 November B. Bohlen 11 June Diamant 17 October 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. She arrived in New York on July 4, at 7 o'clock in the morning. Profit and loss are distributed according to the tonnage of steamers which each company supplies. SS Nagel 22 January Kepler 17 December Ship Andalusia 22 August Ship Marianne 20 September A P Sharp 12 November Brarens 18 January Ernst and Gustav 4 November Sophie 19 August F H Adami 25 October Monday - Friday 9am-4pm; Saturday & Sunday Closed; Nov. 24 & 25 Closed; Dec. 24-Jan. 2 Closed; Assistance with Library research is available W-TH 9am-4pm, F 9am-Noon.
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