Bark Auguste 4 October 1842 Brig Luna 14 November, 1834 SS Baltimore 30 January reproduced in whole or part in any format for presentation, distribution or profit by Ship Julius & Eduard Passenger List - Bremen to Baltimore 1834 . General Washington 24 November, 1843 The ship logo, which is still used in part, was . Manage Settings Louise 21 May Bashan 3 November Brig Constitution 19 October Eutaw 15 September Bremen 9 August As passenger traffic increased, Dutch, Belgian, French, and Danish ports were used. Goethe 7 July Borgstede 22 May Sophronia 13 September Bremen 21 November Sophie 12 October Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild. Charlotte 22 April Bark Inca 12 August Northern and eastern Germans tended to leave through Hamburg. Bark Ceder 20 May Clarissa Perkins 11 July Marianne 16 October Bremen 14 September Ship Caledonia 18 December, 1839 Gustav 7 May Ship D.H. Watjen 25 November, 1862 Telegraph 25 April Marianne 20 September 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. Diana 24 November Timoleon 22 November North 14 September Sometimes they also show family groups. Bark Atlantic 10 June, 1866 Antilope 13 August Amelia 4 August Kammonham Roy 18 August Virginia 26 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. Devonshire 18 November Created & Maintained by the ISTGImmigrant Ships Transcribers Guild LLC The New Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild logo was designed by Patty MacFarlane. Louisa 23 May They are transcribed also. Lucilla 3rd Quarter Diana 5 August Jaroschewski, Tuila. Bremen 14 September You should also look for leads to other records about your ancestors, Switch to a different record collection. Inez 2 December Edwina 30 June Humphrey 13 February 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. Content: Passenger lists. Humphrey 10 July 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 Louis 25 June which include use of any spider, robot, retrieval application or any device SS Leipzig 30 August Online searchable database of passenger lists. The part the German lines play in the transportation of these hordes is exceptionally large. Sarah Ann 6 October Republic 13 June Emma 7 October One of the great losses in genealogical history is the nearly complete destruction of the Bremen passenger records. Alwina 11 January Mary Phillips 9 September Europa 23 June Emigrant letters could be examined but any sample of fares that could be obtained would be small and of unclear accuracy. 1945 - records of 1907-1945 destroyed in bombing raid, Between 1875 to 1908, the staff of the "Nachweisungsbureau", who lacked office space, decided to destroy all passenger lists older than 3 years. Charlemagne 15 July Emma 7 October Marianne 16 October
Ship H. von Gagern 12 October Bark Laura 25 November Diana 5 August Louise 24 October Albert 17 February Many cards are not in sequence. Friederich Jacob 9 December Friedrich Leo 2 August Louisa 23 May SS Baltimore 9 August Antilope 13 August Sophronia 13 September to retrieve any portion of the site. Louise 13 October Republic 13 June Schooner Leo 25 June 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. Sir Isaac Newton 30 October Elise 19 July Ajax 11 September Ship Sirius 23 September Elizabeth 15 January Ajax 11 September Philadelphia 21 September World War II [ edit] SS Mosel 17 March Marianne 20 July Other European emigrants sailed from Le Havre, France; Bremen and Hamburg, Germany; and Antwerp, in Belgium. Identifying your sources helps others find the records you used. Knickerbocker 9 September Favorite 12 November However, about 3000 lists survived for the period from 1920-1939. SS Lahn 22 December. Grace Brown 17 July The improved conditions of the ships also improved the port's reputation. Semiramis 18 August Ellen Brooks 28 October the "e-migration mice"). Luise 22 May Since 1907 the Hapag has also shared this service. Repeat this process for each new generation you identify. Elise 17 March Hualco 21 August General Veazie 5 November SS Aller 01 December The cards appear to have been in good condition when they were microfilmed in 1988. Josephine 8 November Pioneer 21 September Minerva 18 September Brig Bremen 18 July F H Adami 25 October Vesper 17 September Bashan 3 November Inez 2 December 1843 Friedrich Leo 2 August Constitution 23 June Camera 13 December But, as the German emigration died down, the Hapag and Lloyd concluded a treaty with the other continental transatlantic lines, whereby the German lines were to have the transportation of East European emigrants to the United States. For additional information about image restrictions see Restrictions for Viewing Images in FamilySearch Historical Record Collections. Stephani 14 October Isabella 5 July Washington 29 September Diana 5 August Brig Charles Ferdinand 4 August Philadelphia 22 August Post 23 June General Washington 24 November. Bark Meridian 16 September Moreover, Hamburg was learning from Bremen how to and attract emigrants. 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. Bremen 12 August Pauline 9 October Includes "Ship Lists of Passengers Leaving France for Louisiana" (1718-1724) originally published in the Louisiana Historical Society Quarterly Website: New Orleans Passenger Arrival Lists 1813 Mauran 11 November 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. German towns began keeping records of each person's residence in the 1840s. Stephanie 26 July Brig Neptune 14 October The Lloyd and the Hamburg- Bremen Africa Line had formed a similar partnership. A P Sharp 12 November Olbers 13 June General Washington 24 November, 1845 Bremen became part of the North German Confederation in 1867 and became an autonomous component state of the new-founded German Empire in 1871. Contact Us. Paoli 9 August 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. President 17 July 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. Louise 17 June This page has been viewed 197,393 times (0 via redirect). Article by John Movius with David Dreyer. Isabella 28 August Sophie 12 October The consent submitted will only be used for data processing originating from this website. Meta 4 January Devonshire 18 November General Veazie 8 November Sophie 19 August from 1920-1939. In 1888 the Hamburg-Australian Steamship Company came into life. SS Donau 29 April, 1879 Eutaw 15 September Eliza Thornton 30 October SS Baltimore 20 March Gustav 23 October Friederich Jacob 9 December Stephani 14 October Trenton 16 December Louise 17 June This database also includes transcriptions of card indexes for Bremen passenger lists from 1907-1908 and 1913-1914 (also see . [6] In 1866 Adolph Wagner wrote an article on Ocean Transportation in Rentschs Handwrterbuch der Volkswirtschaftslehre. To view the purposes they believe they have legitimate interest for, or to object to this data processing use the vendor list link below. Friedrich Jacob 16 June Goethe 7 July Bark Josephine 10 November Isabella 28 August During the 19th century mass immigration to the west was occurring. Albert 19 August Washington 29 September As many as one-fifth of the passengers did not survive the crossing to America. Knickerbocker 9 September Philadelphia 4 January SS Hermann 5 October, 1883 FREE. 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). Olbers 12 December [5] 1907 Report of the United States Commissioner of Navigation, pages 146-7. SS Main 6 October, 1878 Bremen 21 November There are approximately 125,000 names in all four volumes combined. Louise 24 October These have been transcribed and put online here. Ship Europa 5 June, 1867 Semiramis 18 August Figures of the Landing Agent of the United States Immigration Service, published in New York papers, January 11, 1911.). Sarah Ann 6 October 1845 The New Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild logo was designed by Patty MacFarlane. Luise 3 January These pieces of information may give you new biographical details such as a title, an occupation, or land ownership. 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 Theodor Korner 9 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. Any description of the development or present status of Hamburg lines must center in the Hamburg-American Line. The contest ended in 1875, when the Hapag unwillingly purchased the Adler steamers. Olbers 4 January Dozens of German colonies were established and grew until World War I. What motive may influence the Hapag in a move of this sort is indicated by the rise and fall of the line from New York to the Levant (through to Constantinople and Odessa), maintained by the Hapag and the German Levant Line in common, 1901-04.