Germany, Bremen Emigration Lists, 1920-1939
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Germany, Bremen Emigration Lists, 1920-1939
732,373记录
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These lists generally provide information about a passenger that includes the given name and the surname, gender, age at departure, family status, place of residence, nationality, destination place, ship name with picture and vita, date of departure, occupation, and port of arrival. The port of Bremen, Germany, was a major point of embarkation for emigrations during the 19th and 20th centuries. 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. Moreover, 7.5 million passengers departed from Bremen and more than 5 million from Hamburg, Germany's second busiest port for emigration.<br><br>The original source are the <a href="http://www.passengerlists.de" target="blank">http://www.passengerlists.de</a><br><p>Bremen Passenger Lists, the original documents are in the possession of the Bremen Chamber of Commerce (95%); State Archive Bremen (5%)</p><br><p>One of the great losses in genealogical history is the nearly complete destruction of the Bremen passenger records. From 1832, Bremen port officials kept meticulous records on their ships' passengers. Among other things ship owners had to maintain passenger lists. In 1851 the Bremen Chamber of Commerce established the "Nachweisungsbureau für Auswanderer" (Information Office for Emigrants), to which the ship captains had to deliver their lists. The rules and regulations of the Nachweisungsbureau considerably improved the quality of both the stay at Bremen prior to the sailing plus the seaworthiness of the ships. In 1875, the authorities, citing a lack of space in their archives, destroyed all Bremen passenger records from 1832-1872, yearly continuing till 1907. With the exception of 3,000 passenger lists out of 4,500 for the years 1920-1939, almost all other lists were destroyed in an Allied bombing raid on October 6, 1944 or did not come back in 1987 from russian archives where they had been brought from the sowjets in 1945. The transcription of these lists was done from 1999-2006 by members of the Bremen Society for Genealogical Research, the MAUS (the mouse). They all were native German speakers with special consideration for the place of residence and called themselves "Aus-Wanderer-Mäuse", "e-migration-mice", a play on words.</p>
Sample record
Selwyn Cornelius-WheelerDeparture: Aug 23 1927
Selwyn Cornelius-Wheeler was a British journalist and broadcaster. Having joined the BBC in 1947, he became the corporation's longest-serving foreign correspondent, remaining in the role until his death.