|
|||
|
Diaries & Journals | Immigration
Reports | Illustrated
London News | Trivia | Frequently
Asked Questions
pre-1865 | 1865-1919 | 1919-1924 | 1925-1935 |
post-1935 | US via Canada ![]() "St. Lawrence River in Winter," by Millicent Mary Chaplin Feb. 1842 Although passenger lists, or lists of passengers, were created for most ships arriving at Canadian ports, there was no formal archiving of these lists until 1865, for the port of Quebec. Few lists created prior to 1865 survive. From 1865, the vast majority of immigrants to Canada arrived via the port of Quebec, and during the winter months, via the ports of New York, NY, Boston, MA, Portland, ME and later to Halifax, NS and Saint John, NB. Although steam ships began to carry passengers to Canada as early as 1840, there were still many sailing ships in 1865. Sailing vessels would carry Emigrants westbound, and timber eastbound, and were able to offer cheap affordable fares. By the1870s, most passengers were carried by steam ships. Westbound vessels sailed from numerous ports in Britain and Europe, and from the 1860s, many European and Scandinavian emigrants traveled first by Feeder ship to England, or another European emigration port. These emigrants were referred to as transmigrants, and they embarked on transatlantic steam ships at major emigration ports such as Liverpool, Glasgow, Hamburg, Rotterdam or Havre, to North America. In 1865, because there were excellent rail connections and/or inward passage on Lake and River Steamers from Quebec (later from Canadian east coast ports), many thousands of immigrants destined to the US Mid-West and elsewhere in North America also arrived via Canada. DISCUSSION The passenger lists for the sailing ships may contain either a little, or quite a lot of information. The least to expect is the name of "head of household" only, with check marks indicating the numbers and sex, and age grouping of the other members of the party. The most you may expect to find is the full names and ages of all family and/or group members, their place of origin, and in a few cases, their destination. You may also find notes about the birth or death (and date) of an individual. Most lists do have the names of everyone recorded. You will not find these lists to be uniform in their content. Passenger lists for steam ships were mostly created by British pursers, and their knowledge of foreign naming practices may have been limited. For this reason, eg. in the case of Norwegians, you may only find all family members listed with the patronymic name of the "head of household." Until approximately mid-1890's, all passengers who were not of "British birth" are found designated as "Foreign." For the passengers planning to remain in Canada, you will find more information than for those proceeding directly to the United States. The records for US bound passengers may only include, name and age and occasionally occupation and/or destination. IMMIGRATION RECORDS CREATED 1865-1919 The port of Quebec was the first Canadian port to archive passenger lists. With few exceptions for ships which called at both Halifax, then Quebec, there are only Quebec arrivals available until the beginning of archiving at Halifax, 1881. Annually, Quebec had a shipping season of approximately 24 weeks, as the St. Lawrence River was closed to shipping during the winter months. The available records are fairly complete, with a few documented omissions of passenger lists which did not survive. None of these records were microfilmed until 1949, and were filmed by contractors, and not to the archival standards of today. The result is that some records which were already in a faded condition, are therefore difficult to read, but others are wonderful. The microfilm reels 1865-1919 contain all ships, from all ports in chronological order of their arrival. They vary in the information recorded, depending upon the Canadian immigration requirements currently in force. You will find passengers destined to the United States in these reels, but sometimes the information recorded for those passengers can be minimal, compared to those who were bound to Canadian destinations. These records are generally unindexed at the National Library & Archives of Canada. There is an old nominal card index, of questionable accuracy, for Quebec arrivals 1865-1869 and Halifax arrivals 1881-1882.. Each index card provides name, sometimes age, name of ship, date of arrival and the reel number on which that list appears. When consulting the index, beware of spelling variations and mis-filings. return to contents. FORM 30A IMMIGRATION RECORDS CREATED 1919-1924 Form 30A Immigration records were kept during the period 1919-1924 and the alphabetical microfilm reels contain all Canadian bound passengers to all ports in Canada and to Canada via US ports. They are in the form of a single manifest sheet for each passenger. In 1925, Canada returned to a standard "big sheet" passenger manifest. Be aware, that the Form 30A alphabetical reels are not in strict alphabetical order, with records sometimes inter-filed. Click here to see a facsimile of a blank Form 30A record and the type of information they can contain.. For a short time, some ports during this period also filed big sheet manifests, so check the list below. Go to The National Library & Archives of Canada website for details of the Form 30A holdings, and how to consult the records. Passengers proceeding directly to US destinations from Canadian ports during 1919-1924, will not appear on a Form 30A record. As some ports also continued to keep the big sheet manifest for a short time during the Form 30A period, (those lists did include all passengers, regardless of destination) you may find US destined passengers, but the St. Albans Lists would be a better source of information.
*note: the passengers included on the lists to the US ports noted, are only those who stated their intention to proceed directly to Canada. return to contents. IMMIGRATION RECORDS CREATED 1925-1935 On January 1st 1925, Canada suspended the use of Form 30A Immigration forms, and resumed the use of the big sheet manifest for all ports. At The National Library & Archives of Canada, an online index has been created in cooperation with the Pier 21 Society, for Passenger Arrivals to Canada, for the years 1925 to 1935. This index was created from a microfilmed Immigration index, and only represents those who intended to stay in Canada. When searching the online index, make use of the "wildcard" option to ensure you see possible spelling variations. The online index, is simply that, an index, and the microfilmed passenger list for the same arrival will include a lot more information. Be aware that the index will contain errors and/or omissions, as some of the microfilmed index was difficult to read or decipher. If you are searching for a US destined passenger who arrived via Canada during 1925-1935, there will be no Canadian record found. The only proof of the arrival for such passengers will be their US border entry record. These US border entry records (The St. Albans Lists) are named for the repository of the records ... St. Albans, Vermont, District. return to contents. IMMIGRATION RECORDS CREATED AFTER 1935 The records for immigration to Canada, which were created from January 1st 1936, are not yet available to the public. You are able to obtain an abstract from the landing certificate for your own arrival, but Citizenship and Immigration will not be able to copy the full passenger list for you because of Canadian privacy laws. You can read about post-1935 records on The National Archives of Canada website. You are also able to obtain an abstract for arrivals of others in the post-1935 period, however, certain conditions apply . . . see the post-1935 records link above. return to contents. UNITED STATES IMMIGRATION RECORDS St. Albans Lists: From 1895, in addition to the Canadian ship
list, there could also be a US record in the immigration records at
the
US National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) called the "St.
Albans Lists." The St. Albans lists are actually several publications.
To learn more about these records, consult the Prologue article at
NARA
"By
Way of Canada." The two of interest to you are given below
with the NARA publication number (i.e., M-1461). Not all border ports
began
recording immigrants in 1895. It is necessary to consult the index.
The same records are also available by the LDS Family History Centers,
but
they use a different publication number. You would want, first: You'll also want to see: return to contents. IMMIGRATION &c. RECORDS CREATED BEFORE 1865 Pre-Archiving: Many records for the pre-archiving period can
be found right here within the many many hundreds of pages on TheShipsList,
by using the navigation-bars at the top of each page . . eg. Passenger
Lists. Also, pay special attention to the newspaper accounts of Ships'
Arrivals at Quebec as quite often passengers were named, or an
incident caused their name to be mentioned . . . and . . . TheShipsList
new project of the St.
Lawrence Steamboat Co. Passenger Records 1819-1836,
offer a never before published record set of passenger lists of many
new immigrants arriving via the port of Quebec and embarking on a steamboat
for Montreal to begin the next leg of their inward journey to Canadian
or US destinations. return to contents. CANADIAN MICROFILM HOLDINGS & SOURCES Passenger
Lists, 1865-1922 LAC scanned passenger list images The National Archives of Canada (LAC) have copies of all the available manifests on microfilm, 1865-1935 (see the list of ports and years below). For the period 1919-1924, a different type of record was kept, Form 30A. Passengers destined to the United States can be found in Canadian records, from 1865 up to 1919, and in some instances up until 1921-22. See passenger lists by port of arrival at the National Achives of Canada. In Canada, the practice of archiving passenger manifests (passenger lists) began in different years for different ports. You are able to borrow these microfilms free of charge through your local Library by Inter Library Loan (ILL). You are also able to ILL free of charge, from Ottawa, to libraries in the US, and outside North America. You can find the details for this procedure here at LAC website. Terminology and Abbreviations used on Canadian Immigration Records Records are available for:
*note: the passengers included on the lists to the US ports noted, are only those who stated their intention to proceed directly to Canada. Canadian Sources: (other than the National Library & Archives)
return to contents. LATTER DAY SAINTS MICROFILM SOURCES (at Family History Centres) LDS records of Canadian Arrivals: The Latter Day Saints family
history centres also have copies of the earliest archived records for
the ports of Quebec and Halifax, which are listed just below. The LDS have
now also purchased and catalogued Ships'
passenger lists for Canada, 1900-1922,
1925-1935 and Immigration
Form 30A, ocean arrivals, 1919-1924 microfilms.
The 1900-1922 & 1925-1935 film notes also include the National
Library & Archives of Canada microfilm numbers, so if you have located
the LAC microfilm number here you
are able to easily locate the LDS film number.
return to contents. IMMIGRATION RECORDS CREATED FOR HOME CHILDREN The Library & Archives of Canada has an online database for British "Home Children." This database contains the names of child migrants, but is not yet complete. The index was compiled by the British Isles Family History Society of Greater Ottawa, (BIFHSGO) and we owe them our thanks for a job well done. You should check out Marj Kohli's wonderful site Young Immigrants to Canada for more detailed discussion and information of additional record sources for children. return to contents. IMMIGRATION LINKS FOR EARLY CANADIAN RECORDS
return to contents.
TheShipsList®™ - (Swiggum) All Rights Reserved - Copyright © 1997-present
|