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Diaries & Journals | Immigration
Reports | Illustrated
London News | Trivia | Frequently
Asked Questions
Transmigration via British Ports Many emigrants did not depart directly from their homelands to the Americas
or Australasia. Instead, they would first take a smaller steamer, referred
to as a "Feeder ship" to a
British port, then by train to larger emigration ports such as Liverpool,
Glasgow or London, to embark on a transatlantic steamship. The emigrants
who travelled by this "indirect" route were referred to as
Transmigrants. There was also transmigration via Hamburg,
however this page is devoted to Britain.
Transmigrants arrived via several British ports: | Dover | Grimsby | Hartlepool
(west) | Harwich | Hull | Leith | London | Newcastle | Newhaven |
Southampton | Tyne |
and others. Hull and Grimsby received the vast majority of transmigrants.
To learn more about transmigration, visit these off-site webpages.
The articles have a great deal of information regarding the emigration trends
of transmigrants, their departure ports per nationality, and time-frames
involved. Here is an example of such a feeder service from Christiania, Norway to Hull in England on Wilson Line ships , to board ships of the Inman Line. This advertisement appeared in the Newspaper, Hamar Stiftstidende on April 9th 1869.
To America in 14 days
Inmans Royal English Post-Steamships. Emigrants, who buy a ticket at the undersigned, will be conveyed (transported) from Liverpool with Post-Steamships.
and so on from Christiania every Friday
the rest of the year.
[Railroad] Tickets are being issued to Chicago
and all other destinations in the Western States in America.
[dated] Christiania in March 1869 [signed] H. Heitmann, General-Agent for Norway. _____________________________________________________________________________ translated by Trond Austheim - transcribed by Sue Swiggum 1999
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