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Discovering Your
German Roots at the National Archives
By
Jean Nudd, Archivist
Introduction
The National Archives and Records Administration office in
Pittsfield (NRAP) has microfilm publications where researchers can find their
German ancestors. These include census lists, passenger manifests,
naturalization indexes and World War I draft cards. Also available are several
book series dedicated to German immigration research such as Germans to
America and The Wuerttemberg Emigration Index. (These are also
available on CD-ROM).
Census, Immigration and Naturalization
Records
Census records begin with the 1790 schedules and currently go
to 1920. Pittsfield has the microfilm for the entire United States with indexes
available for most states for most years. Indexes from 1790 to 1870 are in book
or CD format. For 1880, 1900 and 1920, soundex indexes are available on
microfilm. The 1910 census was soundexed for 21 states. For information on using
these census records, see Archival Anecdotes, volume 5, number 4,
December, 2000.
Immigration records available at NRAP include passenger
arrivals at the ports of Baltimore, Boston, New Orleans, New York, and
Philadelphia, as well as Canadian border crossings. Smaller ports such as
Portland, Maine; Vanceboro, Maine; New Bedford, Massachusetts; and Providence,
Rhode Island, are also available. Most of these records begin in 1820. (Congress
passed the law requiring them in 1819.) Philadelphia begins in 1800 and the
Canadian border crossings don’t begin until 1895. Most of the ports have indexes
for some years. New York, for example, is indexed from 1820 to 1846 and then
from 1897-1948. New Orleans, on the other hand, is indexed from 1820 to 1906.
German researchers should also be aware that the Latter Day
Saints (Mormon) Family History Centers have access to the Hamburg Passenger
Lists, 1850-1934. These lists include nearly one-third of all the people who
emigrated from central and eastern Europe between 1850 and 1934. For information
on using immigration records, see Archival Anecdotes, volume 2, number 2,
December, 1997; volume 3, number 1, March, 1998; volume 3, number 2, June, 1998;
and volume 3, number 3, September, 1998.
Finding an ancestor’s naturalization papers can assist a
researcher in locating his or her arrival records. Prior to the standardization
of naturalization applications in 1906, some courts, such as those in
Massachusetts, asked for arrival information while others, such as New York and
Connecticut, required little information on arrival. Naturalization indexes for
New England, 1790-1906 (longer for Connecticut) and New York Federal District
Courts, beginning in 1824, can help locate the naturalization record for
ancestors by giving the court information as well as certificate and application
numbers. The New England index also includes date and place of birth (on some
cards; the boxes are there but not always filled in). NRAP also has applications
and declarations for the Federal District Court in Boston from 1906-1929 with an
index to 1966. For more information on using naturalization records, see
Archival Anecdotes, volume 4, number 4, December, 1999.
World War I Draft Cards
Draft cards for New England and New York are available in
Pittsfield. The cards are arranged alphabetically by state, then numerically by
draft board (which may be alphabetically by county), then by surname. The
researcher needs to know the town where the person lived or the county if the
town is in a rural area. For large cities, such as New York, the street address
is needed at the very least. A list of the addresses of each New York City draft
board is available. Information contained in the records includes name, address,
date of birth, race, citizenship status, birthplace, occupation and employer,
dependent relative, marital status, father’s birthplace, and name and address of
nearest relative. There are several good articles available on the World War I
draft registration process, including some on-line. At <www.jewishgen.org/infofile/wwidraft.txt>,
is an article by Warren Blatt which gives a good explanation of the three
registrations. Ray Banks is putting together a database of birthplaces from the
draft registration available at <www.members.aol.com/Rayhbanks/cos.html>.
Books Available
The Germans to America series, compiled by Ira A.
Glazier and P. William Filby, reproduces ship manifests for ships from the ports
of Hamburg and Bremen. Volume 1 begins with January, 1850. The latest volume
currently available ends with October, 1895. The CD-ROM volumes currently end in
1888. Each volume has an index in the back organized alphabetically by surname.
The Wuerttemberg Emigration Index, available in both
book and CD-ROM format, is compiled by Trudy Schenk and Ruth Froelke. These
books abstract information from the papers filed in Wuerttemberg by people
seeking permission to emigrate during the nineteenth century. The records are
not arranged in alphabetical order or numbered. Some files include supporting
documentation such as birth certificates, military releases, or renunciation of
citizenship. The record sometimes includes those persons who did not receive
prior permission to emigrate but who later sent documents back to Wuerttemberg
renouncing their citizenship rights. The originals are available in Ludwigsburg
as well as on microfilm through LDS Family History Centers.
As is often the case, it is vitally important that
researchers read the introduction to these volumes before they try using the
publications. Information on content of the abstracts, coding, and how to use
the books are all contained in the introductions. One researcher spent hours
reading the Germans to America volumes because she didn’t realize there
was an alphabetical index in the back of the book! ¨
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