Finland Emigration and Immigration: Difference between revisions

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==How to Find the Records==
===Online Resources===
*'''1850-1934''' [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/43289 Auswandererlisten, 1850-1934] (Hamburg passenger lists) at FamilySearch, images.
*'''1850-1934''' [https://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=1068 Hamburg Passenger Lists, 1850-1934] at Ancestry ($) index and images.
*'''1855-1924''' [https://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=1166 Hamburg Passenger Lists, Handwritten Indexes, 1855-1934] at Ancestry ($) images.
*[https://search.findmypast.com/search-world-Records/hamburg-germany-emigrants Hamburg, Germany Emigrants] at Findmypast ($) index.
*'''1869-1951''' [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/339891?availability=Family%20History%20Library Emigrantlistor : inkomna uppgifter om utvandrade personer 1869-1920, med personregister 1869-1951 (Emigrant lists: information received about emigrants 1869-1920, with personal register 1869-1951)] (Police Department emigration lists)
:*'''1869-1884''' [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QHK-Q3T3-NKG4?mode=g&cat=339891 Personregister till emigrantlistor, 1869-1884, emigranter från Finland (emigrants from Finland)], images (Separate index for Finland emigrants)
*'''1874-1939''' [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/339475?availability=Family%20History%20Library Emigrantlistor, 1874-1939], at FamilySearch Catalog; images only, Index and emigration lists of persons from Sweden and Finland who emigrated via the port of Malmö.
*'''1878-1960''' [https://www.ancestry.co.uk/search/collections/1518/ UK and Ireland, Incoming Passenger Lists, 1878-1960] at Ancestry - index & images ($)
:*'''1879-1916''' [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSGD-PSWR-N?i=7&cat=339475 Finländsker Emigrantlistor, Index 1879-1916] (Separate index for Finland emigrants)
*'''1890-1960''' [https://www.findmypast.com/search/results?sourcecategory=travel+%26+migration&sid=101&destinationcountry=finland Passenger Lists Leaving UK 1890-1960] at Findmypast - index & images ($); includes those with Destination of Finland
*'''1892-1960''' [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/33982?availability=Family%20History%20Library Matkustajaluettelot Suomen Höyrylaiva Osakeyhtiö (Passenger lists Finland Steamship Company) 1892-1960]
*'''1892-1924''' [https://www.familysearch.org/search/record/results?q.anyPlace=finland&q.anyPlace.exact=on&f.collectionId=1368704&count=20&offset=0&m.defaultFacets=on&m.queryRequireDefault=on&m.facetNestCollectionInCategory=on New York Passenger Arrival Lists (Ellis Island), 1892-1924] Search results for Finland
*'''1900-1920''' {{RecordSearch|4139415|Finland, Passport Registers, 1900-1920}} at FamilySearch - [[Finland, Passport Registers - FamilySearch Historical Records|How to Use this Collection]]; index & images
*'''1904-1914''' [https://www.myheritage.com/research/collection-30240/germany-bremen-passenger-departure-lists-1904-1914?s=252295941 Germany, Bremen Passenger Departure Lists, 1904-1914] at MyHeritage - index & images ($); includes those with Destination of Finland
*'''1934-1952''' [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/1949740?availability=Family%20History%20Library Registros de la Embajada de España en Helsinki, Finlandia], Finnush Embassy, Madrid, Nationality Cards
*'''1946-1971''' [https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/61704/ Free Access: Africa, Asia and Europe, Passenger Lists of Displaced Persons, 1946-1971] Ancestry, free. Index and images. Passenger lists of immigrants leaving Germany and other European ports and airports between 1946-1971. The majority of the immigrants listed in this collection are displaced persons - Holocaust survivors, former concentration camp inmates and Nazi forced laborers, as well as refugees from Central and Eastern European countries and some non-European countries.
*[https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/results?count=20&query=%2Bkeywords%3APassiluettelot Finnish Passport lists, by county] Must be viewed at a [[FamilySearch Centers|FamilySearch Center]] or a [[FamilySearch Affiliate Libraries|FamilySearch affiliate library.]]
*[https://siirtolaisrekisteri.siirtolaisuusinstituutti.fi/ Migrant Register]($)  at Siirtolaisuusinstituutti (Migration Institute) [https://siirtolaisuusinstituutti.fi/aineistot/sukututkimus/ Information on contents]
*[https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/95750?availability=Family%20History%20Library Siirtokarjalaisten tie (The road to migrant Karelians)] Contents: I. Migrant Karelians living in the territory of Western Finland. - II. Migrant Karelians living on the south coast. - III. Covers a narrow strip from the height of Lahti to the eastern border. - IV. The rest of Finland. - (Index) Migrant Karelian Road: Address Directory.
*[https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/62195/ Free Access: USC Shoah Foundation, Holocaust – Jewish Survivor Interviews]<br>
<span style="color:DarkViolet"> '''Additional online sources unique to each country of destination are listed below.'''</span>
{| style="width:60%; vertical-align:top;"
|-
|
<ul class="column-spacing-fullscreen" style="padding-right:5px;">
    <li>[[Finland Emigration and Immigration#Australia|Australia]]</li>   
    <li>[[Finland Emigration and Immigration#Canada|Canada]]</li>
    <li>[[Finland Emigration and Immigration#Norway|Norway]]</li>
    <li>[[Finland Emigration and Immigration#Russia|Russia]]</li>
    <li>[[Finland Emigration and Immigration#Sweden|Sweden]]</li>
    <li>[[Finland Emigration and Immigration#United States|United States]]</li>
</ul>
|}


Emigration and immigration sources list the names of people leaving (emigrating) or coming into (immigrating) a country. For Finland, emigration information is usually found in passport records and passenger lists. The information in these records generally includes the emigrants’ names, ages, occupations, and destinations and their places of origin.
=== Institute of Migration/Emigrant Register  ===


In addition to determining where an emigrant came from, emigration and immigration records can help you construct family groups. If you do not find your ancestor, you may find emigration information about your ancestor’s neighbors. People who lived near each other in Finland often settled together in their new country.  
Siirtolaisuusinstituutti<br>Eerikinkatu 34<br>20100 Turku<br>FINLAND<br>Phone no.: Emigrant Register: 011-358-2-284-0471 <br>Fax: 011-358-2-233 3460
*[https://siirtolaisrekisteri.siirtolaisuusinstituutti.fi/ Migrant Register]($)  at Siirtolaisuusinstituutti (Migration Institute) [https://siirtolaisuusinstituutti.fi/aineistot/sukututkimus/ Information on contents]
<br>
The Library of the Migration Institute has more than 8,000 cataloged publications related to migration and ethnicity. In addition to books, the collections include periodicals published by expatriate Finns around the world, periodicals on migration or migration in general, and a large number of small prints. The library also has fiction and genealogy publications written by Finns abroad. An increasing proportion of new material deals with immigration.


Records were created when individuals emigrated from or immigrated to Finland. Other records document an ancestor’s arrival in the destination country. This section discusses:
The library serves as a source of information for the Institute's own researchers and assists in obtaining information on the institute's various activities. The library is also open to outsiders and the IT specialist guides you in information retrieval if necessary.
 
*Finding the emigrant’s town of origin.
*Emigration from Finland.
*Immigration to Finland.
*Finnish passport lists.
*Passenger lists (departures).
*The Institute of Migration.
*Records of Finnish emigrants in their destination countries.
 
=== Finding the Emigrant’s Town of Origin  ===
 
Once you have traced your family back to an emigrant ancestor, you must determine the city or town where he or she was from. Finland has no nationwide index prior to 1970. Birth, marriage, and death records were kept locally and chronologically.
 
Several sources may give your ancestor’s place of origin. You may be able to learn the town your ancestor came from by talking to older family members. Members of your family or a library may have documents that name the city or town such as:
 
*Birth, marriage, and death certificates.
*Obituaries.
*Journals.
*Photographs.
*Letters.
*Family Bibles.
*Church certificates or records.
*Naturalization applications and petitions.
*Passenger lists.
*Passports.
*Family heirlooms.
 
=== Emigration from Finland  ===
 
Through the years, many Finns have immigrated to many places—mostly Sweden, Norway, North America, Russia, and Australia.
 
*[http://www.theshipslist.com/ '''The Ships List''']
 
=== North America  ===
 
As early as 1638 Finns and Swedes colonized New Sweden, which was located around the Delaware River. Many of these Finns had been living in central Sweden, and their ancestors had left Finland during the 1500's.
 
Finnish Immigration Records : 1834 - 1897 - This site contains an extensive searchable database of records on 26,337 passengers who arrived at the United States between 1834 through 1897 and identified their country of origin or nationality as Finland or Finnish.
 
From the 1860's onward, an estimated 316,000 Finns, primarily from Ostrobothnia, immigrated to the United States. Most settled in Michigan, especially in the upper peninsula. Many Finns also settled in Minnesota, Massachusetts, New York, Ohio, Wisconsin, Illinois, Montana, Washington, Oregon, and California.
 
[http://inktank.fi/china-swedes-forest-finns-and-the-great-migration-how-finnish-immigrants-helped-build-america/ China Swedes, Forest Finns and The Great Migration: How Finnish immigrants helped build America]
 
From 1860 to 1996 about 92,000 Finns immigrated to Canada, especially Toronto. Finnish immigration to Canada peaked in the 1920s.


==Finding the Town of Origin in Finland==
If you are using emigration/immigration records to find the name of your ancestors' town in Finland, see [[Finland Finding Town of Origin|'''Finland Finding Town of Origin''']] for additional research strategies.
==Finland Emigration and Immigration==
<span style="color:DarkViolet">'''"Emigration"''' means moving out of a country. '''"Immigration"''' means moving into a country. (See [[Italy Emigration and Immigration#Immigration into Finland|'''Immigration into Finland.''']]) </span><br>
Emigration and immigration sources list the names of people leaving (emigrating) or coming into (immigrating) a country. For Finland, emigration information is usually found in passport records and passenger lists. The information in these records generally includes the emigrants’ names, ages, occupations, and destinations and their places of origin.
[[Category:Emigration and Immigration Records]]
==Records of Finnish Emigrants in Their Destination Nations==
{|
|-
|[[File:Dark thin font green pin Version 4.png|150px]]
|<span style="color:DarkViolet">One option is to look for records about the ancestor in the '''country of destination, the country they immigrated into'''. See links to Wiki articles about immigration records for '''major''' destination countries below. Additional Wiki articles for other destinations can be found at [https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/Category:Emigration_and_Immigration_Records '''Category:Emigration and Immigration Records'''.]  </span>
|}
{| style="width:60%; vertical-align:top;"
|-
|
<ul class="column-spacing-fullscreen" style="padding-right:5px;">
    <li>[[Finland Emigration and Immigration#Australia|Australia]]</li>   
    <li>[[Finland Emigration and Immigration#Canada|Canada]]</li>
    <li>[[Finland Emigration and Immigration#Norway|Norway]]</li>
    <li>[[Finland Emigration and Immigration#Russia|Russia]]</li>
    <li>[[Finland Emigration and Immigration#Sweden|Sweden]]</li>
    <li>[[Finland Emigration and Immigration#United States|United States]]</li>
</ul>
|}
=== Australia  ===
=== Australia  ===
====Australia Online Sources====
*[https://siirtolaisrekisteri.siirtolaisuusinstituutti.fi/ Migrant Register]($)  at Siirtolaisuusinstituutti (Migration Institute) [https://siirtolaisuusinstituutti.fi/aineistot/sukututkimus/ Information on contents]
:*Includes Database of Australian Finns (3,800 records)
:::This database contains information on Finns who lived in Australia before the Second World War. It is based on a file compiled by Olavi Koivukangas, Director of the Migration Institute, for his research on Australian Finns in Australia. It also includes some information extracted from Finnish passport and passenger lists.
*[[Australia Emigration and Immigration]] – Wiki page with databases which also include Italians


About 10,000 Finns have immigrated to Australia since World War II.  
====Australia Background====
*The first group of Finnish immigrants who arrived in Australia came to work in the '''gold mines of Victoria''' in the 1850s.
*Many Finnish immigrants began arriving in Australia between 1947 and 1971. When these new immigrants came to Australia, they were taken to refugee camps and given free room and board until the head of the family was assigned his first job. The largest and best-known of these camps was '''Bonegilla'''. Most of these Finns began their new lives in Bonegilla during this period.
*Finns were particularly attracted by the income from the sugar cane fields and mining in '''Mount Isa, in north Queensland'''. As a result, Mount Isa has one of the largest Finnish communities in Australia.<ref>"Finnish Australians",  in Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finnish_Australians, 27 April 2021.</ref>
===Canada===
====Canada Online Sources====
*'''1898-1922''' [https://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/fra/decouvrez/immigration/documents-immigration/immigrants-empire-russe/Pages/recherche.aspx Immigrants from the Russian Empire, 1898-1922]
*[[Canada Emigration and Immigration]] – Wiki page with large databases which also include Finns


=== Sweden and Norway ===
====Canada Background====
*It is difficult to determine the exact date of arrival of the first Finnish settler in Canada. However, Finns began to settle in large numbers in the 1880s.
*During this period, several Finns who had arrived in the United States in the 1860s crossed the border into Canada.
*By 1890, several communities of Canadians of Finnish origin had formed. The largest of these communities were '''Nanaimo (British Columbia), New Finland (Saskatchewan), Port Arthur, Toronto and Sault Ste-Marie (Ontario)'''. Many of these early settlers were pious individuals and therefore churches of various denominations played an important role in cultural and social regrouping.
*The first great wave of Finnish immigration to Canada occurred in the early 20th century, just before the First World War. Approximately one third of all Finnish immigrants to Canada arrived between 1900 and 1914.
*A civil war broke out in Finland during World War I and one faction received support from Germany to defeat the other. As a result, the Government of Canada declared Finland an “enemy country”.
*It was not until the end of the war that Finnish immigration to Canada resumed. During this period in the United States, quotas were put in place for immigration from Finland; as a result, many Finns choose to settle in Canada. The number of Finnish speaking Swedish also increased during this same period.
*During World War II, Finland was once again declared an enemy country due to its participation with Germany in an attack on the Soviet Union. This declaration was repealed after the end of the war.
*The last great wave of immigration from Finland to Canada took place between 1948 and 1961. Since then, Finnish immigration has declined significantly.<ref>"Finnish Genealogy and Family history", in Wikipedia, https://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/fra/decouvrez/immigration/histoire-ethniques-culturels/Pages/finlandais.aspx, 27 Apri 2021.</ref>
===Norway===


Throughout the years, many Finns, including colonists, refugees, and laborers, have immigrated to Sweden. Many Swedes, especially during the Swedish Era, have emigrated to Finland as well. Some localities in northern and central Sweden have had a Finnish population for several centuries. Since World War II, about half a million Finns have moved to Sweden. An authoritative history of the Finns in Sweden is:
====Norway Online Sources====
 
Finns also traveled through the ports of other countries, primarily Göteborg, Malmö, and Stockholm in Sweden, and Trondheim in Norway.  
Tarkiainen, Kari. Finnarnas Historia i Sverige (The History of the Finns in Sweden). 2 vols. Helsinki: SHS, 1990. (FHL book 948.97 W2t).  
*[[Norway Emigration and Immigration]] – Wiki page with large databases which also include Finns
 
Many Finns have also moved to northern and east-central Norway. From Norway, many of them have immigrated to the United States.


====Norway Background====
*Many Finns have also moved to northern and east-central Norway. From Norway, many of them have immigrated to the United States.
*However, some Finnish people emigrated through Norwegian ports.
=== Russia  ===
=== Russia  ===
====Russia Online Sources====
====Russia Background====
*Russia, especially its former capital, St. Petersburg, was a destination for Finnish laborers, officials, and military personnel serving both the Russian Empire and the Grand Duchy of Finland. At the turn of the century, 36,000 Finns lived in Russia, and 83 percent of them were in the St. Petersburg region.


Russia, especially its former capital, St. Petersburg, was a destination for Finnish laborers, officials, and military personnel serving both the Russian Empire and the Grand Duchy of Finland. At the turn of the century, 36,000 Finns lived in Russia, and 83 percent of them were in the St. Petersburg region.
=== Sweden===
 
====Sweden Online Sources====
Finns living in St. Petersburg were a mobile group, and many of them later returned to Finland. A history of St. Petersburg and the Finns that lived there is:
Finns also traveled through the ports of other countries, primarily Göteborg, Malmö, and Stockholm in Sweden.
 
*[[Sweden Emigration and Immigration]] – Wiki page with large databases which also include Finns
Engman, Max. St. Petersburg och Finland, Migration och influens 1702–1917 (St. Petersburg and Finland, Migration and Influence 1702–1917). Helsingfors: Societas Scientiarum Fennica, 1983. (FHL book 948.97 W2en).
 
From the 1820's on, long before the general wave of Finnish immigration to the United States, hundreds of Finns came to Alaska as representatives of the Russian Empire, making up about one-third of the Russian population there. Among them were the families of government officials, Lutheran clergymen, and many seamen. After 1867 many of these Finns became early settlers in California.  
 
=== Immigration into Finland  ===
 
After World War I, about 30,000 Russian subjects immigrated to Finland, many of whom were Karelian or Finnish.
 
In World War II, Finland lost its eastern regions to the Soviet Union. Nearly half a million people were evacuated from the areas.
 
The following five-volume set lists most of the evacuated Karelians who resettled in post-war Finland:


Siirtokarjalaisten tie (The Path of the Evacuated Karelians). 4 vols. Turku: Nyky-Karjala Oy, 1970–71. (FHL book 948.97 W2si; films 1124548–1124549). This work indexes the evacuees by their home parishes and indicates the place to where they moved. The index is on film 1124579, item 2.  
====Sweden Background====
*Throughout the years, many Finns, including colonists, refugees, and laborers, have immigrated to Sweden. Many Swedes, especially during the Swedish Era, have emigrated to Finland as well. Some localities in northern and central Sweden have had a Finnish population for several centuries. Since World War II, about half a million Finns have moved to Sweden.
*In the 1940s, 70,000 young Finnish children were evacuated from Finland. Most of them came to Sweden during the Winter War and the Continuation War, and around 20% remained after the war.
*Helped by the Nordic Passport Union, Finnish immigration to Sweden was considerable during the 1950s and 1960s.
*The city of '''Eskilstuna, Södermanland''', is one of the most heavily populated Sweden Finnish cities of Sweden, due to migration from Finland, during the 1950s until the 1970s, due to Eskilstuna's '''large number of industries'''. In Eskilstuna, the Finnish-speaking minority have both a private school and only one magazine in Finnish. Some of the municipal administration is also available in Finnish. In the Finnish mindset, the term "Sweden Finns" (ruotsinsuomalaiset) is first and foremost directed at these immigrants and their offspring, who at the end of the 20th century numbered almost 200,000 first-generation immigrants, and about 250,000 second-generation immigrants. Of these some 250,000 are estimated to use Finnish in their daily lives, and 100,000 remain citizens of Finland.
*People with Finnish heritage comprise a relatively large share of the population of Sweden. In addition to a smaller part of Sweden Finns historically residing in Sweden, there were about 426,000 people in Sweden (4.46% of the total population in 2012) who were either born in Finland or had at least one parent who was born in Finland.<ref>'"Sweden Finns", in Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sweden_Finns, accessed 27 April 2021.</ref>


The evacuees brought most of their church records with them. These records are available at the Family History Library and at the Mikkeli Provincial Archives (for the address of the Mikkeli Archives, see [[Finland Archives and Libraries]]).
=== United States  ===
====United States Online Sources====
*'''1834-1897''' [https://aad.archives.gov/aad/display-partial-records.jsp?f=4437&mtch=26895&q=finland&cat=all&dt=2126&tf=F Russians to America Passenger Data File, 1834 - 1897] Sorted for keyword Finland, includes passengers who identified country of origin as Finland. To see full passenger list, [https://aad.archives.gov/aad/fielded-search.jsp?dt=2126&cat=GP44&tf=F&bc=,sl search in Advanced Fielded Search by Manifest Number.]
*[https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/oclc/866544909?availability=Family%20History%20Library The history of Finnish Americans: Finnish settlements in the United States and Canada (v. 3) ( Amerikan suomalaisten historia : Yhdysvalloissa ja Canadassa olevat suomalaiset asutukset (v. 3)] e-book, Item 9 on film, Book lists the settlements in the United States and Canada giving some historical background and the names of immigrants and the places in Finland they came from.
*[[United States Emigration and Immigration]] – Wiki page with additional larger databases which also include Finns


A special project is in progress in the Mikkeli Provincial Archives to extract and alphabetize all persons listed in the Karelian church records from the time they begin until 1949. The archive staff does not perform genealogical research but can provide information, such as lists of surnames, from their database for a fee. You can write to the archives at:
====United States Background====
*As early as 1638, Finns and Swedes colonized New Sweden, which was located around the Delaware River. Many of these Finns had been living in central Sweden, and their ancestors had left Finland during the 1500's.
*From the 1820's on, long before the general wave of Finnish immigration to the United States, hundreds of Finns came to '''Alaska''' as representatives of the Russian Empire, making up about one-third of the Russian population there. Among them were the families of government officials, Lutheran clergymen, and many seamen. After 1867, many of these Finns became early settlers in '''California.'''
*From the 1860's onward, an estimated 316,000 Finns, primarily from Ostrobothnia, immigrated to the United States. Most settled in Michigan, especially in the upper peninsula. Many Finns also settled in Minnesota, Massachusetts, New York, Ohio, Wisconsin, Illinois, Montana, Washington, Oregon, and California.
*From the 1860's onward, an estimated 316,000 Finns, primarily from '''Ostrobothnia''', immigrated to the United States. Most settled in '''Michigan''', especially in the upper peninsula. Many Finns also settled in '''Minnesota, Massachusetts, New York, Ohio, Wisconsin, Illinois, Montana, Washington, Oregon, and California'''.


Karjalan tietokanta<br>PL 2 <br>50101 Mikkeli <br>Finland  
== Immigration into Finland  ==
For much more detail, read [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immigration_to_Finland '''Immigration into Finland'''] in Wikipedia
*After World War I, about 30,000 Russian subjects immigrated to Finland, many of whom were Karelian or Finnish.
*The Great Depression of the 1930s in the U.S. led to the emigration of many Finns from Canada. Many recent immigrants choose to leave for the United States or Finland instead of living in poverty in Canada. In addition, more than 2,000 Canadians of Finnish origin moved to Soviet Karelia between 1930 and 1935.
*In World War II, Finland lost its eastern regions (Karelia) to the Soviet Union. Nearly half a million people were evacuated from the areas.
*In 2018, 387,215 people in Finland  were born in another country, representing 7% of the population. The 10 largest foreign born groups are (in order) from '''[[Russia Emigration and Immigration|Russia]], [[Estonia Genealogy|Estonia]], [[Sweden Emigration and Immigration|Sweden]], [[Iraq Genealogy|Iraq]], [[Somalia Genealogy|Somalia]], [[China Emigration and Immigration|China]], [[Thailand Genealogy|Thailand]], [[Serbia Genealogy|Serbia]], [[Vietnam Emigration and Immigration|Vietnam]] and [[Türkiye Genealogy|Türkiye]]'''.
*As of 2019, there were 423,494 people with a foreign background living in Finland (7.7% of the population), most of whom are from the former '''Soviet Union, Estonia, Somalia, Iraq and former Yugoslavia'''.<ref>"Finland: Demographics", in Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finland#Demographics, accessed 27 April 2021.</ref>
====Finnish Russians and Russian Finns====
*Russians in Finland or Russian Finns constitute a linguistic and ethnic minority in Finland. About 30,000 people have citizenship of the Russian Federation, and Russian is the mother language of about 70,000 people in Finland, which represents about 1.3% of the population.
*The first migratory wave of Russians began in the early 18th century, when Finland was part of the Swedish Empire.  About 40,000 Russian soldiers, civilian workers, and about 600 businessmen moved to the Grand Duchy of Finland, which became part of the Russian Empire in 1809. When Finland became independent in 1917, many soldiers returned to Russia. Many businessmen stayed.
*During the '''Russian Revolution''' many '''aristocrats and officers''' fled to Finland as refugees. The biggest refugee wave was in 1922 when about 33,500 people came to Finland.
*During the '''Kronstadt Rebellion (1921)''', about 1,600 officers fled to Finland.
*Russian citizens who moved in these three waves are called "Old Russians", whose 3,000–5,000 descendants live in Finland today.
*During World War II, there were about 69,700 Soviet '''prisoners of war''' in Finland, and 200–300 children were born to them and Finnish women.
*A second major wave of immigration occurred after the '''fall of the Soviet Union'''. Many '''Russian guest workers''' came to Finland, working low-paying jobs.
*In the 1990s, immigration to Finland grew, and a Russian-speaking population descended from '''Ingrian Finns''' immigrated to Finland.  Ingrian Finns are the Finnish population of Ingria (now the central part of '''Leningrad Oblast in Russia''', descending from Lutheran Finnish immigrants introduced into the area in the 17th century, when Finland and Ingria were both parts of the Swedish Empire.
*In the 2000s, many '''nouveaux riches Russians''' have bought estates in '''Eastern Finland'''.<ref>"Russians in Finland", in Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russians_in_Finland, accessed 527 April 2021.</ref>


=== Finnish Passport Lists ===
==Police Department Emigration Lists==
These are specific registrations of persons emigrating to various countries, especially the United States of America listing names, ages, places of birth, destinations and dates of debarkation.
==Port Emigration Lists==
These list the persons name, age, place they resided at time for emigration, and when known, place of destination, and date of departure.
==Finland Steamship Company Records==
Lists include information on emigrant's age, port of departure and place of destination


== Finnish Passport Lists  ==
*[https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/results?count=20&query=%2Bkeywords%3APassiluettelot Finnish Passport lists, by county] Must be viewed at a [[FamilySearch Centers|FamilySearch Center]] or a [[FamilySearch Affiliate Libraries|FamilySearch affiliate library.]]<br>
The Finnish passport lists are the primary source for obtaining the immigrants’ places of origin. The lists began around 1820 and are available on microfilm through 1920. The early lists are not as informative as the ones from the mid 1800's on. These lists record the passport recipients in chronological order and contain:  
The Finnish passport lists are the primary source for obtaining the immigrants’ places of origin. The lists began around 1820 and are available on microfilm through 1920. The early lists are not as informative as the ones from the mid 1800's on. These lists record the passport recipients in chronological order and contain:  


Line 105: Line 180:
*The number of children included in the passport.
*The number of children included in the passport.


Immigrants could receive a passport in any county. Many received them in the county from which they embarked, not from their home county.  
Immigrants could receive a passport in any county. Many received them in the county from which they embarked, not from their home county.
 
===Passport Lists in the Migration Register===
To find the passport lists in the FamilySearch Catalog, look in the Locality Search under:
As of 27 April 2021, 285,000 records from Passport lists have been added saved and indexed in the [https://siirtolaisrekisteri.siirtolaisuusinstituutti.fi/ Migrant Register]($at Siirtolaisuusinstituutti (Migration Institute) [https://siirtolaisuusinstituutti.fi/aineistot/sukututkimus/ Information on contents]
 
The passport list database is based on the passport lists of county governments and city registries from the late 19th century to 1920. This is an incomplete, continuing project. At this writing, there were more than 100,000 records still unsaved.
FINLAND, [COUNTY] - EMIGRATION AND IMMIGRATION
 
Both county offices [lääninkanslia] and city offices [maistraatti] issued passports. The catalog lists the county offices first and the city offices second.
 
It is useful to know that in these records the city of Vaasa is often called Nikolainkaupunki/ Nikolaistad and abbreviated as N:stad.
 
=== Passenger Lists (Departures)  ===
 
''The Finnish Steamship Company [Suomen Höyrylaiva Osakeyhtiö/Finska Ångfartygs Aktiebolaget]''
 
In 1892 the Finnish Steamship Company [Suomen Höyrylaiva Osakeyhtiö/Finska Ångfartygs Aktiebolaget] began to coordinate the travel of emigrants on several ship lines that left from the port of Hanko/Hangö.
 
The passenger lists of the Finnish Steamship Company are arranged by ship line and year and include the following information about emigrants:
 
*Names
*Ages
*Port of departure
*Destinations
 
The records seldom indicate the emigrant’s last residence in Finland. However, they do use the farm name as a surname, which can be a clue to the home parish.
 
*[http://www.theshipslist.com/ '''The Ships List''']
The passenger lists of the Finnish Steamship Company have been microfilmed through 1960. To find them, look in the Locality Search of the FamilySearch Catalog under:
 
FINLAND - EMIGRATION AND IMMIGRATION
 
=== Emigration through Other Countries  ===
 
Finns also traveled through the ports of other countries, primarily Göteborg, Malmö, and Stockholm in Sweden, and Trondheim in Norway.
 
The Swedish and Norwegian passenger lists were actually lists kept by the local police of people leaving the country. These lists generally include:
 
*Name.
*Age.
*Destination.
*Last residence (the specific place of residence is given about half the time; otherwise, it lists only Finland).
 
Below is a list of the ports and their records available through the Family History Library. For complete bibliographic information and film numbers, please search the FamilySearch Catalog.
 
*Göteborg - Original records 1869–1920
*Index 1869–1951
*Index of Finns 1869–84 (FHL film 1043046)  
*Malmö - Original records 1874–80
*Index 1874–1939
*Index of Finns 1879–1916 (FHL film 1613007)
*Stockholm - Original records 1869–1904
 
=== Index 1869–1920 ===
 
Index of Finns 1880–1932 (FHL films 1613015–18)
 
Trondheim - Original records 1867–1926
 
Index 1867–1925
 
Index of Swedes and Finns 1867–90 (FHL film 1282961 item 3)
 
=== The Institute of Migration ===
 
The Institute of Migration in Turku, Finland, is preparing indexes to the following types of records:
 
*Passport record
*Passenger lists of the Finnish Steamship Company
*Emigrant letters
*Death notices of Finns who died abroad
 
The institute will search the databases for a moderate fee. You can contact the institute at:
 
=== Institute of Migration/Emigrant Register  ===
 
Siirtolaisuusinstituutti<br>Eerikinkatu 34<br>20100 Turku<br>FINLAND<br>Phone no.: Emigrant Register: 011-358-2-284-0471 <br>Fax: 011-358-2-233 3460
 
To find a summary of the types of records in the collection and to check the progress of the database, check the institute’s Web site at:
 
http://www.utu.fi/erill/instmigr/index_e.htm
 
The Institute of Migration publishes a quarterly journal, Siirtolaisuus (Migration). (FHL book 948.97 W2s).  
 
Among the institute’s other publications is a bibliography of sources about Finnish emigration:
 
Koivukangas, Olavi, and Simo Toivonen. Suomen Siirtolaisuuden ja Maassamuuton Bibliografia: A Bibliography of Finnish Emigration and Internal Migration. Turku: Siirtolaisuusinstituutti, 1978. (FHL book 948.97 W23k).
 
=== National Archives  ===
 
The National Archives of Finland has the emigration lists that were kept by parish ministers for statistical purposes for 1882 to 1924. These are not available at the Family History Library, but you can obtain the information from them by writing to the National Archives (see [[Finland Archives and Libraries]] for the address).  
 
=== Records of Finnish Emigrants in Their Destination Countries  ===


Sometimes the best sources for information about your ancestor are found in the country to which he or she immigrated. These sources sometimes provide the town of origin and other information. To learn about these records, use handbooks, manuals, and Wiki articles for that country.
==Moving Records (''Muuttaneet/Muuttokirjat; Flyttningslängder/Flyttningsbetyg'')==


In U.S. records, especially passenger arrival records, Finns are often listed as being Russian or Swedish because Finland for a time was part of the Russian Empire or because many emigrants were Swedish-speaking Finns.  
Moving records can help you trace a family as they moved around Finland. You can find moving records in several sources.  


The following book gives a history of Finnish immigration to the United States and Canada and the names of many early Finnish immigrants:
===Communion Books===


Ilmonen, S. Amerikan suomalaisten historia (The History of Finnish Americans). 3 vols. Hancock, Mich.: by author, 1919, 1923, and 1926. (FHL book 973 W2i).
*'''1670-1917:''' [https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/61627/ Finland, Communion Books, 1670-1917] at Ancestry ($), index and images


A translation to the third volume of this work, along with a comprehensive surname index to the names mentioned in the volume has also been made:
<br>
Ministers used the communion books to note individuals and families who moved into or out of the parish.


Ilmonen, S. The History of Finnish Americans. Vol. 3 of Finnish and Scandinavian Migration Series. Translated, edited, and indexed by Timothy Laitila Vincent. Salt Lake City: Family Sleuths, 1998. (FHL book 973 W2i vol. 3).  
===Moving Certificates===
By the late 1700s some parishes began to issue moving certificates [muuttokirjat/flyttningsbetyg] to persons leaving the parish. These certificates identified the persons to their new minister and were chronologically archived in the new parish.  


Another book listing the places of origin of many Finns is:  
The certificates usually included the following information about a person:  


Vincent, Timothy Laitila. Journal of Pastor Johan Wilhelm Eloheimo from the Evangelical Lutheran Parishes from Calmut, Michigan and Ironwood, Michigan. Salt Lake City: Family Sleuths, 1998. (FHL book 977.49 K2or).
*Name
*Birth date and birthplace
*Occupation
*Marital status
*Reading ability
*Knowledge of religion
*Worthiness to partake of the communion
*Character reference
*Vaccination information
*Place where the person was registered for taxation


The following record might also be helpful:
If a whole family moved, the certificate generally contained at least the name of each family member.


The Records of the Russian Consular Offices in the United States, 1862–1928. Salt Lake City: Filmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah, 1986. (On 169 FHL films beginning with film 1463389). These records contain data on subjects of the Russian Empire, including Finns.  
===Arrival and Removal Records===
In the 1800s parishes began using special [[Scandinavia Moving In and Moving Out|arrival and removal records]] (sisään- ja ulosmuuttaneet; seurakuntaan ja seurakunnasta muuttaneet/in- och utflyttningslängder). These records, which are frequently essential to family history research, chronologically list the people who moved into or out of the parish.  


These records are indexed in:  
The records give the following information about a person:  


Sack, Sallyann Amdur. The Russian Consular Records Index and Catalog. New York: Garland Publishing, 1987. (FHL book 973 D22s; film 1605681).
*Name
*Occupation
*Parish moved to or from
*Previous or subsequent residence in the parish. In more recent records, the residence is indicated by the page number in the communion book.
*The records sometimes list:
*Age or date of birth
*Religious knowledge
*Character reference
*Gender


You can also find more information about finding the origins of immigrant ancestors in [[Tracing Immigrant Origins]].  
Wives and children may not be mentioned by name, only as numbers in a separate column.
===The HisKi Project===
*'''1860-1900:''' [http://hiski.genealogia.fi/historia/indexe.htm HisKi Project, The Genealogical Society of Finland] - index, incomplete<br>
The database includes indexes and extracts to many Finnish parish records. Records from additional parishes are added to the database as they become available. It includes christenings, marriages, burials, and '''moving records'''.


===Additional Resources===
==For Further Reading==
Many additional sources are listed in the FamilySearch catalog:
*{{FSC|392290|subject_id|disp=Finland - Emigration and immigration}}


*[http://maine.utu.fi/emregfree/nimihaku_e.php Emigration Record: Finland's Institute of Migration: Index of passenger lists and passport lists]
==References==
<references/>


{{Place|Finland}}
{{Place|Finland}}


[[Category:Finland]]
[[Category:Finland]]
[[Category:Emigration and Immigration Records]]

Latest revision as of 12:21, 20 March 2024


Finland Wiki Topics
Flag of Finland
Finland Beginning Research
Record Types
Finland Background
Finland Genealogical Word Lists
Cultural Groups
Local Research Resources

How to Find the Records

Online Resources

Additional online sources unique to each country of destination are listed below.

Institute of Migration/Emigrant Register

Siirtolaisuusinstituutti
Eerikinkatu 34
20100 Turku
FINLAND
Phone no.: Emigrant Register: 011-358-2-284-0471
Fax: 011-358-2-233 3460


The Library of the Migration Institute has more than 8,000 cataloged publications related to migration and ethnicity. In addition to books, the collections include periodicals published by expatriate Finns around the world, periodicals on migration or migration in general, and a large number of small prints. The library also has fiction and genealogy publications written by Finns abroad. An increasing proportion of new material deals with immigration.

The library serves as a source of information for the Institute's own researchers and assists in obtaining information on the institute's various activities. The library is also open to outsiders and the IT specialist guides you in information retrieval if necessary.

Finding the Town of Origin in Finland

If you are using emigration/immigration records to find the name of your ancestors' town in Finland, see Finland Finding Town of Origin for additional research strategies.

Finland Emigration and Immigration

"Emigration" means moving out of a country. "Immigration" means moving into a country. (See Immigration into Finland.)
Emigration and immigration sources list the names of people leaving (emigrating) or coming into (immigrating) a country. For Finland, emigration information is usually found in passport records and passenger lists. The information in these records generally includes the emigrants’ names, ages, occupations, and destinations and their places of origin.

Records of Finnish Emigrants in Their Destination Nations

Dark thin font green pin Version 4.png One option is to look for records about the ancestor in the country of destination, the country they immigrated into. See links to Wiki articles about immigration records for major destination countries below. Additional Wiki articles for other destinations can be found at Category:Emigration and Immigration Records.

Australia

Australia Online Sources

  • Includes Database of Australian Finns (3,800 records)
This database contains information on Finns who lived in Australia before the Second World War. It is based on a file compiled by Olavi Koivukangas, Director of the Migration Institute, for his research on Australian Finns in Australia. It also includes some information extracted from Finnish passport and passenger lists.

Australia Background

  • The first group of Finnish immigrants who arrived in Australia came to work in the gold mines of Victoria in the 1850s.
  • Many Finnish immigrants began arriving in Australia between 1947 and 1971. When these new immigrants came to Australia, they were taken to refugee camps and given free room and board until the head of the family was assigned his first job. The largest and best-known of these camps was Bonegilla. Most of these Finns began their new lives in Bonegilla during this period.
  • Finns were particularly attracted by the income from the sugar cane fields and mining in Mount Isa, in north Queensland. As a result, Mount Isa has one of the largest Finnish communities in Australia.[1]

Canada

Canada Online Sources

Canada Background

  • It is difficult to determine the exact date of arrival of the first Finnish settler in Canada. However, Finns began to settle in large numbers in the 1880s.
  • During this period, several Finns who had arrived in the United States in the 1860s crossed the border into Canada.
  • By 1890, several communities of Canadians of Finnish origin had formed. The largest of these communities were Nanaimo (British Columbia), New Finland (Saskatchewan), Port Arthur, Toronto and Sault Ste-Marie (Ontario). Many of these early settlers were pious individuals and therefore churches of various denominations played an important role in cultural and social regrouping.
  • The first great wave of Finnish immigration to Canada occurred in the early 20th century, just before the First World War. Approximately one third of all Finnish immigrants to Canada arrived between 1900 and 1914.
  • A civil war broke out in Finland during World War I and one faction received support from Germany to defeat the other. As a result, the Government of Canada declared Finland an “enemy country”.
  • It was not until the end of the war that Finnish immigration to Canada resumed. During this period in the United States, quotas were put in place for immigration from Finland; as a result, many Finns choose to settle in Canada. The number of Finnish speaking Swedish also increased during this same period.
  • During World War II, Finland was once again declared an enemy country due to its participation with Germany in an attack on the Soviet Union. This declaration was repealed after the end of the war.
  • The last great wave of immigration from Finland to Canada took place between 1948 and 1961. Since then, Finnish immigration has declined significantly.[2]

Norway

Norway Online Sources

Finns also traveled through the ports of other countries, primarily Göteborg, Malmö, and Stockholm in Sweden, and Trondheim in Norway.

Norway Background

  • Many Finns have also moved to northern and east-central Norway. From Norway, many of them have immigrated to the United States.
  • However, some Finnish people emigrated through Norwegian ports.

Russia

Russia Online Sources

Russia Background

  • Russia, especially its former capital, St. Petersburg, was a destination for Finnish laborers, officials, and military personnel serving both the Russian Empire and the Grand Duchy of Finland. At the turn of the century, 36,000 Finns lived in Russia, and 83 percent of them were in the St. Petersburg region.

Sweden

Sweden Online Sources

Finns also traveled through the ports of other countries, primarily Göteborg, Malmö, and Stockholm in Sweden.

Sweden Background

  • Throughout the years, many Finns, including colonists, refugees, and laborers, have immigrated to Sweden. Many Swedes, especially during the Swedish Era, have emigrated to Finland as well. Some localities in northern and central Sweden have had a Finnish population for several centuries. Since World War II, about half a million Finns have moved to Sweden.
  • In the 1940s, 70,000 young Finnish children were evacuated from Finland. Most of them came to Sweden during the Winter War and the Continuation War, and around 20% remained after the war.
  • Helped by the Nordic Passport Union, Finnish immigration to Sweden was considerable during the 1950s and 1960s.
  • The city of Eskilstuna, Södermanland, is one of the most heavily populated Sweden Finnish cities of Sweden, due to migration from Finland, during the 1950s until the 1970s, due to Eskilstuna's large number of industries. In Eskilstuna, the Finnish-speaking minority have both a private school and only one magazine in Finnish. Some of the municipal administration is also available in Finnish. In the Finnish mindset, the term "Sweden Finns" (ruotsinsuomalaiset) is first and foremost directed at these immigrants and their offspring, who at the end of the 20th century numbered almost 200,000 first-generation immigrants, and about 250,000 second-generation immigrants. Of these some 250,000 are estimated to use Finnish in their daily lives, and 100,000 remain citizens of Finland.
  • People with Finnish heritage comprise a relatively large share of the population of Sweden. In addition to a smaller part of Sweden Finns historically residing in Sweden, there were about 426,000 people in Sweden (4.46% of the total population in 2012) who were either born in Finland or had at least one parent who was born in Finland.[3]

United States

United States Online Sources

United States Background

  • As early as 1638, Finns and Swedes colonized New Sweden, which was located around the Delaware River. Many of these Finns had been living in central Sweden, and their ancestors had left Finland during the 1500's.
  • From the 1820's on, long before the general wave of Finnish immigration to the United States, hundreds of Finns came to Alaska as representatives of the Russian Empire, making up about one-third of the Russian population there. Among them were the families of government officials, Lutheran clergymen, and many seamen. After 1867, many of these Finns became early settlers in California.
  • From the 1860's onward, an estimated 316,000 Finns, primarily from Ostrobothnia, immigrated to the United States. Most settled in Michigan, especially in the upper peninsula. Many Finns also settled in Minnesota, Massachusetts, New York, Ohio, Wisconsin, Illinois, Montana, Washington, Oregon, and California.
  • From the 1860's onward, an estimated 316,000 Finns, primarily from Ostrobothnia, immigrated to the United States. Most settled in Michigan, especially in the upper peninsula. Many Finns also settled in Minnesota, Massachusetts, New York, Ohio, Wisconsin, Illinois, Montana, Washington, Oregon, and California.

Immigration into Finland

For much more detail, read Immigration into Finland in Wikipedia

  • After World War I, about 30,000 Russian subjects immigrated to Finland, many of whom were Karelian or Finnish.
  • The Great Depression of the 1930s in the U.S. led to the emigration of many Finns from Canada. Many recent immigrants choose to leave for the United States or Finland instead of living in poverty in Canada. In addition, more than 2,000 Canadians of Finnish origin moved to Soviet Karelia between 1930 and 1935.
  • In World War II, Finland lost its eastern regions (Karelia) to the Soviet Union. Nearly half a million people were evacuated from the areas.
  • In 2018, 387,215 people in Finland were born in another country, representing 7% of the population. The 10 largest foreign born groups are (in order) from Russia, Estonia, Sweden, Iraq, Somalia, China, Thailand, Serbia, Vietnam and Türkiye.
  • As of 2019, there were 423,494 people with a foreign background living in Finland (7.7% of the population), most of whom are from the former Soviet Union, Estonia, Somalia, Iraq and former Yugoslavia.[4]

Finnish Russians and Russian Finns

  • Russians in Finland or Russian Finns constitute a linguistic and ethnic minority in Finland. About 30,000 people have citizenship of the Russian Federation, and Russian is the mother language of about 70,000 people in Finland, which represents about 1.3% of the population.
  • The first migratory wave of Russians began in the early 18th century, when Finland was part of the Swedish Empire. About 40,000 Russian soldiers, civilian workers, and about 600 businessmen moved to the Grand Duchy of Finland, which became part of the Russian Empire in 1809. When Finland became independent in 1917, many soldiers returned to Russia. Many businessmen stayed.
  • During the Russian Revolution many aristocrats and officers fled to Finland as refugees. The biggest refugee wave was in 1922 when about 33,500 people came to Finland.
  • During the Kronstadt Rebellion (1921), about 1,600 officers fled to Finland.
  • Russian citizens who moved in these three waves are called "Old Russians", whose 3,000–5,000 descendants live in Finland today.
  • During World War II, there were about 69,700 Soviet prisoners of war in Finland, and 200–300 children were born to them and Finnish women.
  • A second major wave of immigration occurred after the fall of the Soviet Union. Many Russian guest workers came to Finland, working low-paying jobs.
  • In the 1990s, immigration to Finland grew, and a Russian-speaking population descended from Ingrian Finns immigrated to Finland. Ingrian Finns are the Finnish population of Ingria (now the central part of Leningrad Oblast in Russia, descending from Lutheran Finnish immigrants introduced into the area in the 17th century, when Finland and Ingria were both parts of the Swedish Empire.
  • In the 2000s, many nouveaux riches Russians have bought estates in Eastern Finland.[5]

Police Department Emigration Lists

These are specific registrations of persons emigrating to various countries, especially the United States of America listing names, ages, places of birth, destinations and dates of debarkation.

Port Emigration Lists

These list the persons name, age, place they resided at time for emigration, and when known, place of destination, and date of departure.

Finland Steamship Company Records

Lists include information on emigrant's age, port of departure and place of destination

Finnish Passport Lists

The Finnish passport lists are the primary source for obtaining the immigrants’ places of origin. The lists began around 1820 and are available on microfilm through 1920. The early lists are not as informative as the ones from the mid 1800's on. These lists record the passport recipients in chronological order and contain:

  • Names.
  • Occupations.
  • Home parishes.
  • Destination countries.
  • The number of children included in the passport.

Immigrants could receive a passport in any county. Many received them in the county from which they embarked, not from their home county.

Passport Lists in the Migration Register

As of 27 April 2021, 285,000 records from Passport lists have been added saved and indexed in the Migrant Register($) at Siirtolaisuusinstituutti (Migration Institute) Information on contents The passport list database is based on the passport lists of county governments and city registries from the late 19th century to 1920. This is an incomplete, continuing project. At this writing, there were more than 100,000 records still unsaved.

Moving Records (Muuttaneet/Muuttokirjat; Flyttningslängder/Flyttningsbetyg)

Moving records can help you trace a family as they moved around Finland. You can find moving records in several sources.

Communion Books


Ministers used the communion books to note individuals and families who moved into or out of the parish.

Moving Certificates

By the late 1700s some parishes began to issue moving certificates [muuttokirjat/flyttningsbetyg] to persons leaving the parish. These certificates identified the persons to their new minister and were chronologically archived in the new parish.

The certificates usually included the following information about a person:

  • Name
  • Birth date and birthplace
  • Occupation
  • Marital status
  • Reading ability
  • Knowledge of religion
  • Worthiness to partake of the communion
  • Character reference
  • Vaccination information
  • Place where the person was registered for taxation

If a whole family moved, the certificate generally contained at least the name of each family member.

Arrival and Removal Records

In the 1800s parishes began using special arrival and removal records (sisään- ja ulosmuuttaneet; seurakuntaan ja seurakunnasta muuttaneet/in- och utflyttningslängder). These records, which are frequently essential to family history research, chronologically list the people who moved into or out of the parish.

The records give the following information about a person:

  • Name
  • Occupation
  • Parish moved to or from
  • Previous or subsequent residence in the parish. In more recent records, the residence is indicated by the page number in the communion book.
  • The records sometimes list:
  • Age or date of birth
  • Religious knowledge
  • Character reference
  • Gender

Wives and children may not be mentioned by name, only as numbers in a separate column.

The HisKi Project

The database includes indexes and extracts to many Finnish parish records. Records from additional parishes are added to the database as they become available. It includes christenings, marriages, burials, and moving records.

For Further Reading

Many additional sources are listed in the FamilySearch catalog:

References

  1. "Finnish Australians", in Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finnish_Australians, 27 April 2021.
  2. "Finnish Genealogy and Family history", in Wikipedia, https://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/fra/decouvrez/immigration/histoire-ethniques-culturels/Pages/finlandais.aspx, 27 Apri 2021.
  3. '"Sweden Finns", in Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sweden_Finns, accessed 27 April 2021.
  4. "Finland: Demographics", in Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finland#Demographics, accessed 27 April 2021.
  5. "Russians in Finland", in Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russians_in_Finland, accessed 527 April 2021.