Japan Emigration and Immigration: Difference between revisions

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== What Can these Records Tell Me? ==
 
The following information may be found in these records:
=== Content  ===
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*Lists of emigrant travelers
'''Passenger lists'''
*Papers on emigration policies
*Full name of passenger
*Business activities and agents
*Address
*Lists of emigrants who died abroad
*Date of birth
*Passport applications
*Date of departure
*Emigrant travel permits
*Gender
*Passports issued
*Destination
*Lists of names of Japanese emigrants, as well as fields on foreigners in Japan
*Residence
 
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The kind of information varies. Most include:
'''Emigration'''
 
*Passport Number
*Emigrants’ names, ages, and places of origin
*Full Name
*Permanent domicile and temporary residence
*Prefecture
*Emigration dates, birth dates, and birth places
*Birth Date
*Destinations and passport numbers
*Gender
*Applications by Japanese abroad inquiring after the well-being of their families in Japan
*Residence before departure
*Many provide specific birth dates and even marriages or death dates.
*Date of Departure
 
*Departure Age
=== How to obtain them  ===
*Destination Place
 
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The Family History Library has all of these records on microfilm.
 
=== Immigration Records (Passenger Lists and Ship Manifests in the Language of the Port Where They Arrived)  ===
[[Image:75th anniv of Japanese emigration to Hawaii.JPG|thumb|right|250x220px]]
 
Immigration records must be searched by locality for lists. For example, search by California, San Francisco – Emigration and immigration records.
 
Most incoming passenger arrival lists for the United States have been indexed and are available online at [[http://tinyurl.com/q4maac5 FamilySearch Catalog]] and [http://www.ancestry.com/ Ancestry.com] ($), a subscription website, such as:<br>
 
*[http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=1502 Honolulu, Hawaii, Passenger Lists, 1900-1953] (a free index to these records is also available at {{RecordSearch|1913398|FamilySearch}})
*[http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=7949 California Passenger and Crew Lists, 1893-1957]


== References  ==
== References  ==

Revision as of 21:12, 3 July 2021

Japan Wiki Topics
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Beginning Research
Record Types
Japan Background
Local Research Resources

Online Records[edit | edit source]

Japanese Diaspora[edit | edit source]

Today, there are about 2.5 million Japanese emigrants and people of Japanese descent living in countries around the world. The modern waves of Japanese emigration began in 1868, when 153 Japanese journeyed to Hawaii to work on sugar plantations. But the Meiji government prohibited such emigration because these first Japanese migrants were treated like slaves. A new treaty with Hawaii in 1885 provided for better work conditions and three-year contracts and over the next nine years about 29,000 Japanese went to Hawaii to work on sugar plantations. In 1899, 790 people left for contract work in Peru, starting a wave of Japanese emigration to Latin America, particularly to Brazil. There are now roughly 1.5 million Latin Americans of Japanese ancestry, at least half of whom trace their ancestral origins to Okinawa prefecture. Brazil has the most: 1.3 million. Peru has about 100,000. Argentina has about 50,000. Mexico is estimated to have 30,000. Japanese emiigration to the United States and Canada was subject to severe restrictions until after the Second World War. North America today has nearly 1 million Japanese immigrants and people of Japanese descent.[1]

Japanese Passenger Lists[edit | edit source]

This collection contains a list of Japanese emigrants from the country as recorded by the Diplomatic Record Office of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan. The records are from an index of overseas travelers processed through Japanese emigration agents and related immigration papers for the years 1893-1941.

These records are used to identify the permanent domicile of the head of the household, which is helpful in obtaining the koseki, the Japanese word for a family registry. These records are good linkage records. They are particularly helpful for American researchers who are trying to determine where their Japanese ancestor came from.

Japanese emigration records were generated by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Japanese Diplomacy office at the time when people emigrated from Japan.

Japan_page19

What Can these Records Tell Me?[edit | edit source]

The following information may be found in these records:

Passenger lists

  • Full name of passenger
  • Address
  • Date of birth
  • Date of departure
  • Gender
  • Destination
  • Residence

Emigration

  • Passport Number
  • Full Name
  • Prefecture
  • Birth Date
  • Gender
  • Residence before departure
  • Date of Departure
  • Departure Age
  • Destination Place

References[edit | edit source]

  1. The Family History Department of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, “Family History Record Profile: Japan,” Word document, private files of the FamilySearch Content Strategy Team, 1986-2001.