Moreover, twice as many passengers departed from Bremen as from Germany's second busiest port for emigration, Hamburg. from 1920-1939. Bashan 3 November Devonshire 18 November Rainbow 26 August Louise 9 September Philadelphia 10 October Bark Ella 26 November, 1852 Bremen 4 December This page was last edited on 5 December 2022, at 21:20. Philadelphia 4 January Telumah 12 November Vesper 17 September Paoli 9 August Kepler 17 December Johannes 7 November Pay special attention to how the name should have been pronounced and try variations on the pronunciation. This page has been viewed 197,393 times (0 via redirect). Ship Itzstein & Welcker 6 January Caspar 21 August They are transcribed also. Inez 2 December If you would like to change your settings or withdraw consent at any time, the link to do so is in our privacy policy accessible from our home page.. Howard 6 September Constitution 23 June Namenskartei aus den Bremer Schiffslisten (Bremen Ship Passengers 1904-1914) Article by John Movius with David Dreyer. Sir Isaac Newton 19 June Apollo 7 July Republic 13 June Diana 24 November Charlotte 20 September This database also includes transcriptions of card indexes for Bremen passenger lists from 1907-1908 and 1913-1914 (also see . Current database may be searched at the museum in Bremerhaven or by mail for a fee. Pioneer 21 September Any description of the development or present status of Hamburg lines must center in the Hamburg-American Line. Immigration & Steamships - Collections & Research Immigration & Steamships Tap or click on a column heading to sort by that column. President 17 July General Veazie 8 November Johannes 7 June Diana 3 June Bremen 21 November Mauran 11 November I Found the Person I Was Looking For, What Now? Bremen 9 August Howard 22 October Phoenix 10 September Goethe 7 July Washington 25 February Martha 1 September Bark Edmund 3 November United States 12 November Ship D.H. Watjen 25 November, 1862 Not only is it the largest steamship company in any country, but it comprises half the ocean shipping of Hamburg, affords a far larger proportion of her connections with oversea and is actively interested in all the other larger lines excepting the German Australian Steamship Company. Ship O. Thijen 23 June After WWII some of these lists and a card index were archived at the "Bundesarchiv Koblenz" as Bremen Shiplists. Bark Jubilaum 6 May Bark Industrie 31 October Hunter in New York 1710-1714, Emigrants from West-German Fuerstenberg Territories (Baden and the Palatinate) to America and Central Europe, List of Pfalz Immigrants to America, 1724-1749, Ships carrying Palatines from Germany to Philadelphia from 1727 to 1808, Pennsylvania German Pioneers Passenger Lists, Palatine German Immigrant Ships to Philadelphia 1727-1808, The Book of Names, Especially Relating to The Early Palatines and the First Settlers in the Mohawk Valley, Coleo da Sociedade Histo-lgica Cruzeiro do Sul, Auswanderung nach Brasilien und Venezuela, 1890-1901, Auswandererkartei von Rulanddeutschen nach Argentinien, 1870-1945, From the steppes to the prairies: the story of the Germans settling in Russia on the Volga and Ukraine, also the Germans settling in the Banat, and the Bohemians in Crimea: their resettlement in the Americas, North and South America and in Canada, Namenskartei von Siedlern in Russland und Rcksiedler nach Deutschland, 1750-1943, Bestandskartei der Rulanddeutschen, 1750-1943, Kartei der Auswanderer aus Elsa und Baden nach Ruland, 1807-1810, Auswandererkartei der Rulanddeutschen nach Brasilien, 1870-1940, Auswandererkartei von Rulanddeutschen nach Kanada, 1870-1940, United States, Obituaries, American Historical Society of Germans from Russia, 1899-2012, Helpful websites for 19th Century German Emigration. Bremen 21 November Maria Francisca 10 December Antilope 13 August Cordova 24 November Margaretha 1 September Ship Aurora 19 September Favorite 18 June Bark Leocadia 23 May Kammonham Roy 18 August Pilot 6 July Luntine 23 June N W Stevens 23 October Ann 1 September Elise 8 September The GG Archives is the work and passion of two people, Paul Gjenvick, a professional archivist, and Evelyne Gjenvick, a curator. Starting in 1895, emigrants were segregated based on wealth. Astracan 23 December This page has been viewed 44,539 times (3,302 via redirect). She was launched on 21 April 1886 and made her maiden voyage on 18 August 1886. Garonne 21 August Martha 1 September Ship Olbers 21 January Copernicus 18 December It was created by the Deutsches Ausland-Institut, who was interested in documenting German groups outside of Germany. 1832 Brig Forest 13 February. Caspar 22 September Isabella 28 August Howard 22 October F H Adami 25 October The ships will exchange oil, tobacco, flour, machinery, cotton goods and food productspractically every ship will be a department store afloatfor mahogany, palm oil, rubber, ivory, cacao, and copper. 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. Hamburg was the transitional stop for emigrants from the Northern German coastal countries as well as from Eastern European countries. Pioneer 2 September Kepler 17 December Bark Stella 15 October, 1869 Timoleon 22 November Bark Pallas 6 July Copernicus 18 December Apollo 7 July The Hapag and Woermann are now financially interested in the line. Devonshire 18 November Stephani 3 June Camera 13 December To attract immigrants, the HAPAG set up shipping companies throughout Germany and neighboring countries to entice immigrants to come through the port of Hamburg. Newspaper Announcements. Grace Brown 17 July Edwina 30 June Diana 3 June Howard 1 May 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. Keep track of your research in a research log. Hualco 21 August 1841 Elizabeth 15 January Cordova 24 November Antilope 13 August Ajax 11 September Isabella 5 July Constitution 23 June In 1935, Bremen became a regular city at the de facto abolition of statehood of all component German states within the Third Reich. Sophie 19 August General Washington 24 November, 1843 Manage Settings Margaretha 1 September F H Adami 25 October Isabella 28 August Save a copy of the image or transcribe the information. Copyright 1996-2023 Cyndi Ingle, CyndisList.com. In the early 1830s, Bremen was doing well in its trade with America, while Hamburg trade was mostly with the West Indies and Latin America. Ship Elise 19 May See Germany Newspapers for more information. Bark Constitution 19 October Bark Freihandel 1 June We and our partners use cookies to Store and/or access information on a device. Leo 31 August Garonne 21 August Many records consist of applications and accompanying documents that were collected by district offices. Humphrey 10 July Louisa 25 September Ship Uhland 16 June Condor 9 August Bark Freihandel 23 September Ship Ernst Moritz Arndt 13 June Hamburg became a port of emigration because of its competition with Bremen as a seaport for trade. SS Leipzig 30 August . Rainbow 26 August Isabella 28 August SS Baltimore 10 October Stern 9 July Louise 24 October Margaretha 1 September Southern and western Germans tended to emigrate through the ports of Bremen or Le Havre. Mercur 24 August Sources are passenger lists. Washington 26 October Their nearest rival was the Cunard Line, which in 1906 landed in New York from its British and its Mediterranean services 107,790 steerage passengers.In 1906-07 the two German lines handled approximately one fourth the total American immigration. Josephine 8 November Philadelphia 10 October In 1895 the German emigration dropped to 82,000 and has never since reached 50,000. Louise 17 June Albert 19 August Sophronia 13 September Elise 17 March In 1575 a great number of people from the Netherlands immigrated to Hamburg and brought much prosperity to the city. Ship Marianne 20 September Brunswick 17 October, 1836 Passports became important in Germany during the 19th century as a control measure. Bark E. Beaulien 6 January Leontine 28 June AlexanderFebruary Diana 11 November Barque Eberhard 8 November This was the first transatlantic sailing of a Norddeutscher Lloyd steamer. Ernst and Gustav 30 June Brig Apollo 13 August Ship Louise Marie 24 May Kepler 17 December 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. Stephani 30 December Iris 24 December Stephani 8 February FamilySearch - Germany, Bremen Passenger Departure Lists, 1904-1914. Philadelphia 4 January N W Stevens 23 October Knickerbocker 9 September Ship Rebecca 4 November Elise 8 September 1845 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. Clementine 28 July Westphalia 31 December Pauline 9 October Timoleon 22 November Ajax 11 September Clarissa Perkins 11 July Charlotte 22 April Gustav 23 October Diana 21 November Lists of emigrants are often published. SS Maer 27 January Galliott Flora 21 May Bashan 3 November Margaretha 1 September Mauran 11 November Johann Friedrich 19 June Alfred 30 October Westphalia 31 December Garonne 21 August Telumah 12 November SS Arago 12 June reproduced in whole or part in any format for presentation, distribution or profit by Elizabeth Hall of Dighton 1 September Clementine 18 January 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 Friedrich Leo 2 August Edwina 30 June Europa 18 January Stephani 12 July Ship O. Thijen 8 November, 1856 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. Apollo 13 August Caspar 22 September In 1910, emigration had about regained its normal status. Albert 19 August Philadelphia 4 January Post 23 June Favorite 18 June Bremen 14 September Louise Friedericke27 January Sophie 19 August Mandatory passports were required only in times of crises, when there were epidemics and political or military conflicts. Telumah 12 November Goethe 7 July This page was last edited on 29 December 2022, at 13:55. In 1881 the Kosmos Line (to Chili and Peru) extended its service up the coast of South America to Mexico, in 1899 it went to San Francisco. Olbers 12 December Meta 4 January [5] 1907 Report of the United States Commissioner of Navigation, pages 146-7. Sometimes they also show family groups. Edward 24 July She is being built over into a pleasure cruiser, the Victoria Luise. GGA Image ID # 14141cec29. She arrived in New York on July 4, at 7 o'clock in the morning. Brig Stern 7 September Howard 1 May Everhard 25 May The struggle was terminated in 1886, when the Hapag and the Union companies combined their schedules. Luise 22 May Washington 25 February Neptune 4 August Kepler 17 December Sju Brder 22 November SS Main 8 March This was true not only for German nationals, but also millions of inhabitants in Austria, Hungary, and other Central European nations seeking opportunities or refuge in the New World. 1874 - lists 1832-1872 burned Gustav 25 May Louise 17 June Washington 26 October When the allies occupied Germany at the end of WWII, the Institute was closed and later re-opened as the Institut fr Austlandsbeziehungen. Margaretha 1 September Copernicus 23 June Alwina 11 January Bark Adonis 22 May Sophronia 13 September Reform 4 September Louisa 23 May Reform 4 September Brarens 18 January Olbers 13 June Caspar 29 June Virginia 26 June Latrobe 2 August Emma 7 October 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. Constitution 23 June Paoli 9 August Eutaw 15 September The Hapag was founded in 1847 to prevent a further concentration in Bremen of the American mail service, as well as imports from America of cotton and tobacco and exports thither of German emigrants. Autoleon 3 September Herschel 15 August Hualco 21 August Steamer New York 13 May 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. Olbers 13 June Bark Geestemunde 9 June Before that a passport was a form of recommendation. Most emigrants left Germany during the following periods: The earliest German emigrants went down the Rhine River and left Europe from Rotterdam in the Netherlands. General Veazie 8 November Cordova 24 November Caspar 22 September Brarens 18 January Stephani 30 December Stephani 14 October Rajah 28 October Hardly had the Hapag recovered from its first rate-war when, m 188$, a second broke out. Bark Clara 23 December, 1873 1844 Bachus 12 September ", Hamburg Passenger Lists, Handwritten Indexes, 1855-1934, Germans to America and the Hamburg Passenger Lists: Coordinated Schedules, The Hamburg Passenger Departure Lists 1850-1934. Ship President Smidt 28 August Semiramis 18 August These usually focus on the emigrants from one town, principality, or state. Paoli 20 December Sophie 12 October Stephani 12 July Brig Reform 29 November, 1851 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. Europa 18 January Lucilla 3rd Quarter This is a list of ships which sailed from Bremen, Germany to New York City in 1866. Luntine 23 June Anna 10 November The initial letters of the official name spell the word Hapag and it is as Hapag that the line is popularly known. Brig President 26 August Brig Julia 30 November, 1842 SS Donau 31 March A directory of ship passenger lists & records on the Internet to help find your immigrant ancestors. Such documents were restricted to time and space. 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 N W Stevens 23 October Citations help you keep track of places you have searched and sources you have found. The records are found in the State Archive Hamburg. 1834 Brig Champion 28 July. Henry 15 October Apollo 7 July Marianne 20 July Charlotte 20 September In 1873 the Hapag fell into a rate war with the newly founded Adler Line, established to partake in the profits of the transatlantic trade. Post 23 June Albert 17 February North 14 September Hualco 21 August U.S. and German Passenger Lists and Indexes. Bark Gauss 5 December Passports were both status symbol for uninterrupted travel and legal documentation for members belonging to fringe groups. Goethe 25 July Alfred 30 October Given the loss of Bremen departure lists, researches in search of embarkees from that port must fall back on arrival lists. These have been transcribed and put online here. Bark Industrie 30 November Ajax 11 September Devonshire 18 November Europa 23 June 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. These sources may be passenger lists, permissions to emigrate, or records of passports issued. Copernicus 18 December The rates offered by the competing companies had drawn freight away from the sailers, and the Hapag did not let it return. which include use of any spider, robot, retrieval application or any device Herschel 15 August Paoli 20 December 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. Bark Neptune 6 November Mercur 24 August Stephanie 26 July Post 23 June Elise 1 June Marianne 16 October Ship Hermine 17 January SS Elbe 9 July With the exception of 2,953 passenger lists for the year 1920-1939 all other lists were lost in World War II. Many Russian Germans moved to the United States, Canada, or South America beginning in 1874. Rajah 28 October Overseas Passenger Fares and Emigration from Germany 395 . Jaroschewski, Tuila. 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.