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CD257 Passenger and Immigration Lists: Irish Immigrants to North America 1803-1871
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Passenger and Immigration Lists: Irish Immigrants to North America 1803-1871   CD257

With free Viewer.

Passenger lists are important primary sources of arrival data for the vast majority of immigrants to the United States in the nineteenth century. With the single exception of federal census records, passenger lists are the largest, most continuous, and the most uniform body of population records for the entire country.

While researching original passenger lists can often be tedious and difficult, this Family Archive makes finding your immigrant ancestors easier than ever. This Family Archive contains images of the pages of twelve volumes of compiled passenger lists. It was produced in collaboration with the Genealogical Publishing Company and includes lists of approximately 46,000 Irish passengers who arrived in the United States and Canada primarily in the nineteenth century.

The following works are included on this Family Archive:

  • Emigrants from Ireland to America, 1735-1743: A Transcription of the Report of the Irish House of Commons into Enforced Emigration to America, by Frances McDonnell. These lists of about 2,000 felons and vagabonds forcibly transported from Ireland between 1735 and 1743 constitute one of the few known sources of Irish emigration to the New World in the 18th century.
  • Irish Passenger Lists, 1803-1806: Lists of Passengers Sailing from Ireland to America, by Brian Mitchell. Altogether, some 4,500 passengers are identified in the 109 sailings recorded in this transcription of the Hardwicke Papers, a rare official register of passengers leaving Irish ports. Most individuals are cited with their all-important place of residence, departing from the ports of Dublin, Belfast, Londonderry, and Newry and destined mainly for New York and Philadelphia. The Hardwicke lists, only fragments of which have ever appeared in print, now fill a significant gap in the records, since in many cases they will prove to be the only record of an ancestor's emigration to the U.S.
  • An Alphabetical Index to Ulster Emigration to Philadelphia, 1803-1850, by Raymond D. Adams. Based on U.S. Customs Passenger Lists, the manifests of the Cunard and Cooke shipping lines and other sources, this work provides you with a list of 3,200 emigrants from Londonderry to Philadelphia between 1803 and 1850. Each entry typically furnishes the name of the emigrant, his/her age, town and country of origin (where given), year of emigration, and name of ship.
  • Passengers from Ireland: Lists of Passengers Arriving at American Ports Between 1811 and 1817 (Transcribed from The Shamrock or Hibernian Chronicle), by Donald M. Schlegel. The core of this work is a reproduction of about 5,150 Irish passenger listings that date from 1811 and 1815-1816 and were compiled by J. Dominick Hackett and Charles Montague Early for the 1930 and 1931 editions of The Journal of the American Irish Historical Society. Schlegel has corrected some errors and omissions that appeared in the original compilation, and has presented the lists in their original format so that family groupings are apparent. Grouped together following the passenger lists are a number of death notices and advertisements which may reference a person's place of origin in Ireland or date of immigration. In all, the names of 7,308 immigrants are included in this volume.
  • Irish Emigration Lists, 1833-1839: Lists of Emigrants Extracted from the Ordnance Survey Memoirs for Counties Londonderry and Antrim, by Brian Mitchell. These Antrim and Londonderry memoirs lists have been extracted, arranged under parish, and alphabetized. They identify the emigrant's destination and his place of origin in Ireland -- key pieces of information for anyone tracing his Irish ancestry. In addition, the age, town and address, year of emigration, and religious denomination are given for the approximately 3,000 emigrants identified in this book.
  • Irish Emigration to New England Through the Port of Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada, 1841-1849, by Daniel F. Johnson St. John's port was a magnet for Irish immigration during the decade that culminated in the Great Famine, although a majority of these Irish immigrants eventually relocated to Boston or elsewhere in New England in order to rejoin their families. Since many of them arrived in Canada in a destitute or infirm condition, however, they were required to take temporary refuge in the alms and work houses, hospitals, and asylums of St. John. Many of the records of these institutions have survived, and with their help the author has created a surrogate record for some 7,000 persons who never appeared in the official passenger lists.
  • A List of Alien Passengers, Bonded from January 1, 1847, to January 1, 1851, for the Use of the Overseers of the Poor, in the Commonwealth, by J.B. Munroe. Prepared by the Superintendent for the city of Boston in 1851 and covering a four-year period, this alphabetical list includes a bonded passenger's date of arrival in Boston, name, age, and birth place, along with the name of vessel on which he sailed.
  • Emigrants from Ireland, 1847-1852: State-Aided Emigration Schemes from Crown Estates in Ireland, by Eilish Ellis This work contains a history of the emigration scheme and a list of the emigrants from each estate with the following details: name, age, occupation, family relationships, date and place of departure, date and place of arrival in the U.S., and name of ship. Most of the emigrants arrived at the port of New York, while a handful disembarked in Quebec.
  • Irish Passenger Lists, 1847-1871: Lists of Passengers Sailing from Londonderry to America on Ships of the J. & J. Cooke Line and the McCorkell Line, compiled under the direction of Brian Mitchell. These passenger lists, which cover the period of the Great Famine and its aftermath, identify the emigrants' actual places of residence, as well as their port of departure and nationality. Essentially business records, the lists were developed from the order books of two main passenger lines operating out of Londonderry: J. & J. Cooke (1847-67) and William McCorkell & Co. (1863-71). Both sets of records provide the emigrant's name, age, and address, and the name of the ship. The Cooke lists provide the ship's destination and year of sailing, while the McCorkell lists provide the date engaged and the scheduled sailing date. Altogether 27,495 passengers are identified.
  • Irish Emigrants in North America (in three parts), by David Dobson. This work is a consolidated reprint of three pamphlets by David Dobson, and it endeavors to shed light on some 1,000 Irish men and women and their families who emigrated to North America between roughly 1775 and 1825. Each of the three groupings is arranged alphabetically by the emigrant's surname and, in the majority of cases, provides us with most of the following particulars: name, date of birth, name of ship, occupation in Ireland, reason for emigration, reason for emigration, place of disembarkation in North America, date of arrival, number of persons in the household, and the source of the information.

For each individual listed in this Family Archive, you will find the following information:

  • Name
  • Age
  • Country of origin
  • Date of arrival
  • Occupation

View this CD using the Search/View CD button in Family Tree Maker v3.02 or later, or ask us for a free copy of the Family Archive Viewer CD when you place your order.

Passenger and Immigration Lists: Irish Immigrants to North America 1803-1871 CD257 is £24.95.

Passenger and Immigration Lists: Irish Immigrants to North America Volume 2 1846-1886   CD264
With free Viewer.

This all-new volume of "Irish to America" contains completely new details for 550,000+ additional immigrants! Search this fully indexed data set, referencing arrivals in Boston between 1846 and 1851 and New York between 1866 and 1886.

A good deal of information in this data set was collected from immigrants to the United States during the Great Famine (1845-1849). Between 1847 and 1854, 1.6 million Irish immigrated to the U.S., mostly arriving in New York, marking the first voluntary mass migration to the United States. You can often learn the following by researching with this resource:

  • Name of immigrant
  • Immigrant's age, gender, and occupation
  • Name of the ship
  • Manifest ID number
  • Ports of origin and debarkation
  • Country, and village or town of origin
  • Ship's arrival date and destination
  • Purpose for and mode of travel

What are the data sources for this product?
You'll discover information taken from original ship manifest schedules - documents filed by all vessels entering United States. "Irish to America" was produced in collaboration with the Balch Institute Center for Immigration Research and the John F. Kennedy Trust.

View this CD using the Search/View CD button in Family Tree Maker v3.02 or later, or ask us for a free copy of the Family Archive Viewer CD when you place your order. £34.95

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