Hamburg Passenger Lists: Difference between revisions

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The Hamburg passenger lists contain the names of millions of Europeans who emigrated through Hamburg between 1850 and 1934 (except 1915–1919). Nearly one-third of the people who emigrated from central and eastern Europe during this time are included on these lists. If you have ancestors who emigrated from these areas, the Hamburg passenger lists could provide important genealogical information about them, including their hometowns. Extensive indexes make these records easier to use than most other passenger lists and emigration records.
{{Hamburg-sidebar}}{{breadcrumb
| link1=[[Germany Genealogy|Germany]]
| link2=[[Hamburg, German Empire Genealogy|Hamburg]]
| link3=
| link4=
| link5=[[Hamburg Passenger Lists|Passenger Lists]]
}} <br><br>
{| style="float:right; margin-right:200px"
|-
| style="padding-right:0px"|
|[[Image:{{Hamburg1900}}]]
|}


The records of Europeans who emigrated through other ports, such as Bremen, LeHavre, Amsterdam, Rotterdam, and Antwerp, have either been destroyed or are not available for research at the Family History Library.
== Online Resources ==
*[https://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=1068 Hamburg Passenger Lists, 1850-1934] ($) index and images
*[https://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=1166 Hamburg Passenger Lists, Handwritten Indexes, 1855-1934] ($) images
*[https://search.findmypast.com/search-world-Records/hamburg-germany-emigrants Hamburg, Germany Emigrants] ($) index
*[https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/43289 Auswandererlisten, 1850-1934] (Hamburg passenger lists) images


You may not need to look at the Hamburg passenger lists if you already know where your ancestor was born in Europe. Furthermore, you may be able to find your ancestor's birthplace in other sources, such as local records where the person resided.
== Using the Passenger Lists and Indexes  ==


The Hamburg passenger lists are made up of two sections. Both sections have an index.
The Hamburg passenger lists contain the names of millions of Europeans who departed Europe from Hamburg, Germany between 1850 and 1934 (except 1915–1919). Nearly one-third of Germans, and 90 percent of the people who emigrated from eastern Europe (Russia, Poland, Austria-Hungary, Romania) during this time are included on these lists. If you have ancestors who emigrated from these areas, the Hamburg passenger lists could provide important genealogical information about them, including their hometowns. Extensive indexes make these records easier to use than most other passenger lists and emigration records.  


The Direct Passenger Lists include passengers who left Hamburg, Germany, and sailed directly to their destination without stopping at other European ports.
The records of Europeans who emigrated through other ports, such as Bremen, LeHavre, Amsterdam, Rotterdam, and Antwerp, have either been destroyed or are not available for research at the FamilySearch Library.  


The Indirect Passenger Lists include passengers who stopped at another European port before sailing to their final destination. About 20 percent of the immigrants leaving Europe took indirect routes.
You may not need to look at the Hamburg passenger lists if you already know where your ancestor was born in Europe. Furthermore, you may be able to find your ancestor's birthplace in other sources, such as local records where the person resided.  


The Hamburg passenger lists and indexes are on 486 rolls of microfilm at the Family History Library plus an additional 48 rolls of microfilm for the Klüber Kartei, a newly acquired index for the Hamburg Passenger lists covering approximately 1850 to 1871. For film numbers, search the Locality section of the Family History Library Catalog under:
The Hamburg passenger lists are made up of two sections. Each section has its own separate handwritten index.  


GERMANY, HAMBURG, HAMBURG - EMIGRATION AND IMMIGRATION
*The '''Direct Passenger Lists''' include passengers who left Hamburg, Germany, and sailed directly to their destination without stopping at other European ports.
*The '''Indirect Passenger Lists''' include passengers who stopped at another European or British port before sailing to their final destination. About 20 percent of the immigrants leaving Europe took indirect routes.


=== USING THE PASSENGER LIST INDEXES ===
'''Internet Access.''' The partially completed (1877-1914) [https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/1068/ Internet index] and, on the right side of same screen, the "Browse this collection" option can be used to access the direct and indirect lists for all years 1850-1934. The separate [http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=1166 handwritten index images]; 1855-1934 [1850-1854 need no index] are available at Ancestry.com, a subscription site. The FamilySearch Library and many FamilySearch Centers have a subscription which includes the Ancestry images and indexes. Use these links when at one of these locations: [http://content.ancestry.com/iexec/?htx=List&dbid=1068&offerid=0%3a7858%3a0 Internet index] and the separate [http://content.ancestry.com/iexec/?htx=List&dbid=1166&offerid=0%3a7858%3a0 handwritten index images]; 1855-1934.


Four Steps to Follow
'''Microfilm Access.''' Also, the passenger lists, Fifteen-Year Direct Index, and handwritten indexes are on 486 rolls of microfilm at the FamilySearch Library, and can be accessed at various FamilySearch Centers and the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City. An additional 48 rolls of microfilm for the Klüber Indexes for the years 1850-1871, and one additional roll for the 1872 Direct and Indirect Index are also available.


* Select the best index to use.
For details and film numbers, use the '''''Place Search''''' of the FamilySearch Catalog under:
* Search the index.
* Obtain the passenger list.
* Search the passenger list.


=== STEP 1: SELECT THE BEST INDEX TO USE. ===
:[https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/102523 Germany, Hamburg, Hamburg - Emigration and Immigration]<br><br>


Before using the index, you need to know the year the emigrant left Germany. The 1900, 1910, and 1920 U.S. censuses are a good place to begin searching for this kind of information. The census provides the year a person arrived in the United States. If possible, find out whether the emigrant traveled directly to his or her destination or stopped at other ports along the way.
'''Ships arriving in America from Hamburg 1850 to 1934.''' If you know the name of the ship on which your ancestor arrived in the United States from Hamburg and the date that ship arrived, Roger P. Minert's, Kathryn Boeckel's, and Caren Winter's ''Germans to America and the Hamburg Passenger Lists: Coordinated Schedules'' ({{FSC|1318249|item|disp=FS Library International Ref Desk Book 973 W22m}}) can help you quickly access the Hamburg Passenger Lists microfilm departure record for your ancestor. This can be done without having to search the alphabetical name index for your ancestor's name. In this book each ship arrival in America from Hamburg is listed by arrival date and ship name. The FS Library film and page number of that ship's list in the Hamburg Passenger Lists is also given. The book's [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/62409447 WorldCat entry]. <br><br>
<center>
{| bgcolor="#ffff99" class="FCK__ShowTableBorders"
|-
| bgcolor="#ffff99" align="center" | '''Four Steps to Follow: '''
|-
| bgcolor="#ffff99" align="left" | STEP 1: Select the best index to use.
|-
| bgcolor="#ffff99" align="left" | STEP 2: Search the index.
|-
| bgcolor="#ffff99" align="left" | STEP 3: Obtain the passenger list.
|-
| bgcolor="#ffff99" align="left" | STEP 4: Search the passenger list.
|}
</center>


Most of the Hamburg passenger lists have been indexed. The only ones not indexed are those from 1850 to 1854. They are arranged alphabetically. There are three sets of indexes: the Fifteen-year Index to the Direct Hamburg Passenger Lists, 1856–1871; the Klüber Kartei, covering approximately 1850–1871; and the regular indexes.
=== Step 1: Select the Best Index to Use  ===


If the emigrant departed between 1850 and 1854, search the alphabetical passenger list for those years. If the emigrant departed between 1856 and 1871, search the fifteen-year index or Klüber Kartei first. If the person is not listed in these, you may still wish to search the regular indexes.
''These films will be found on the FS Library International floor.''


=== The Fifteen-Year Index ===
'''''What you need to know to use the indexes.''''' Before using the index, you need to know the approximate year the emigrant departed from Hamburg, Germany. You will also need the emigrant's name. In addition, it would help to know the name of a relative or neighbor traveling with him. The 1880, 1900, 1910, and 1920 U.S. censuses are a good place to begin searching for these kinds of information. The census provides the year a person arrived in the United States, and shows neighbors. If possible, find out whether the emigrant traveled directly to his or her destination or stopped at other European or British ports along the way.


The Fifteen-year Index arranges all the names on the direct lists from 1856 to 1871 in one alphabetical index. Though it is convenient to use, this index is not complete. After checking the index, you may still need to use the Klüber Kartei or the regular indexes for the same time period. The regular indexes are more complete, but they are more difficult to use.
'''The Hamburg passenger lists have many partial indexes:'''


=== The Klüber Karteien ===
*'''''Internet Index''''' 1890-1913 - The Hamburg State Archive created the partial index at Ancestry.com.
*'''''Alphabetical Passenger Lists''''' 1850-1854 - The lists themselves are alphabetical by at least the first letter of the family name.
*'''''Klüber Index 1''''' for:
**Direct Passenger Lists, 1856–1871
**Indirect Passenger Lists, 1866–1867
*'''''Klüber Index 2''''' for:
**Direct Passenger Lists, 1850–1871
**Indirect Passenger Lists, 1854–1865
*'''''Fifteen-Year Direct Index''''' 1856-1871 - Incomplete but easier to use than handwritten indexes.
*'''''1872 Direct and Indirect Index''''' - Shows age and microfilm page number.
*'''''Handwritten Index to Direct''''' Passenger Lists 1855-1934 - Complete, but hard to read; divided by year or part of a year.
*'''''Handwritten Index to Indirect''''' Passenger Lists 1855-1910 - Complete, but hard to read; divided by year or part of a year.


The Klüber Kartei, or Klüber Card File, was filmed in 1994. It consists of two separate card indexes that cover both the direct and indirect Hamburg passenger lists for the following years:
'''''No single index lists everyone.''''' Each index covers different years and has its individual strengths and weaknesses. For example, if the emigrant departed in 1899 (between 1890 and 1913) check the Internet partial index first. If the emigrant departed in 1854, search the Klüber 2 index, or the alphabetical passenger lists themselves for that year. If the emigrant departed about 1869 or 1870, search the two sets of Klüber indexes first, then the Fifteen-Year Index, and then the handwritten indexes direct and indirect.


=== Card File 1 (Kartei 1) ===
'''''Determine the indexes to use''''' from the following table. It lists the indexes available for various emigration years. The table also shows the recommended order in which to search the indexes until you find the ancestor.  
 
<center>
Includes entries lettered from A–Z for:
{| align="center" class="plain FCK__ShowTableBorders" style="width: 669px; height: 400px;"
 
* Direct Passenger Lists, 1856–1871
* Indirect Passenger Lists, 1866–1867
 
=== Card File 2 (Kartei 2) ===
 
Includes entries lettered from A–Z for:
 
* Direct Passenger Lists, 1850–1871
* Indirect Passenger Lists, 1854–1865
 
Although the two files overlap in time periods, both are necessary since neither file is complete. These card files are considered more complete than the Fifteen-year Index when card files 1 and 2 are used together.
 
=== The Regular Indexes ===
 
Both the Direct Passenger Lists and the Indirect Passenger Lists have regular indexes. The indexes are divided into segments that cover one year or part of a year. The direct indexes begin in 1854 and end in 1934. The indirect indexes begin in 1854 and end in 1910.
 
=== STEP 2: SEARCH THE INDEX. ===
 
Use the following instructions to search the index you selected in step 1.
 
=== Using the Fifteen-year Index ===
 
Using the table shown in figure 1, get the film on which your ancestor’s name would appear.
 
=== Fifteen-year Index ===
 
{| class="plain"
! Name
! Film Number
| Aab, George-Breyer, Adam
| 0884668
|-
|-
| Breytspaak, Eliza-Fick, Ludwig
| align="right" | '''Emigration Year'''<br>
| 0884669
| align="center" |   
| align="left" | '''Search These Recommended Indexes for Those Years'''<br>
|-
|-
| Fick, Maria-Hartzke, August
| align="right" | 1850-1854 <br>
| 0884670
| <br>
| align="left" | [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Kl.C3.BCber_Index_2.C2.A0_1850-1871|Klüber 2]], [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Alphabetical_Passenger_Lists_1850-1854|Alphabetical Passenger Lists]]<br>
|-
|-
| Harung, Frid.-Katz, Salomon
| align="right" | 1855 <br>
| 0884671
| <br>
| align="left" | [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Kl.C3.BCber_Index_2.C2.A0_1850-1871|Klüber 2]], [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Handwritten_Direct_Indexes_1855-1934|Handwritten Direct]], [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Handwritten_Indirect_Indexes_1855-1910|Handwritten Indirect]]<br>
|-
|-
| Katz, Samual-Lewin, And.
| align="right" | 1856-1871 <br>
| 0884672
| <br>
| align="left" | [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Kl.C3.BCber_Index_1.C2.A0_1856-1871|Klüber 1]], [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Kl.C3.BCber_Index_2.C2.A0_1850-1871|Klüber 2]], [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Fifteen-Year_Direct_Index_1856-1871|Fifteen-Year Index]], [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Handwritten_Direct_Indexes_1855-1934|Handwritten Direct]], [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Handwritten_Indirect_Indexes_1855-1910|Handwritten Indirect]]<br>
|-
|-
| Lewin, August-Neuer, Genofeva
| align="right" | 1872 <br>
| 0884673
| <br>
| align="left" | [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#1872_Direct_and_Indirect_Index|1872 Index]], [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Handwritten_Direct_Indexes_1855-1934|Handwritten Direct]], [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Handwritten_Indirect_Indexes_1855-1910|Handwritten Indirect]]<br>
|-
|-
| Neufeld, Hoseph-Ristow, Friedr.
| align="right" | 1873-1889 <br>
| 0884674
| <br>
| align="left" | [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Handwritten_Direct_Indexes_1855-1934|Handwritten Direct]], [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Handwritten_Indirect_Indexes_1855-1910|Handwritten Indirect]]<br>
|-
|-
| Ristow, H.-Schwassengewer, H.
| align="right" | 1890-1910 <br>
| 0884675
| <br>
| align="left" | [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Internet_Index_1890-1913|Internet Index]], [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Handwritten_Direct_Indexes_1855-1934|Handwritten Direct]], [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Handwritten_Indirect_Indexes_1855-1910|Handwritten Indirect]]<br>
|-
|-
| Schwarts, Abrah.-Volkwann, A.F.W.
| align="right" | 1911-1913 <br>
| 0884676
| <br>
| align="left" | [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Internet_Index_1890-1913|Internet Index]], [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Handwritten_Direct_Indexes_1855-1934|Handwritten Direct]]<br>
|-
|-
| Volkmann, Aug.-Zyndler, Mathilde
| align="right" | 1914-1934 <br>
| 0884677
| <br>
| align="left" | [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Handwritten_Direct_Indexes_1855-1934|Handwritten Direct]]<br>
|}
|}
</center>
=== Step 2: Search the Indexes  ===


<center>Figure 1: Fifteen-year Index film numbers</center>
Use the following instructions to search the index you selected in STEP 1.


<center>[[Image:HAMBURGFIG2.bmp|HAMBURGFIG2.bmp]]</center>
==== Internet Index 1877-1914  ====


<center>Figure 2: A fifteen-year index card.</center>
To search this partial index for free at the FamilySearch Library on Ancestry.com [http://content.ancestry.com/iexec/?htx=List&dbid=1068&offerid=0%3a7858%3a0 click here].  You can also search the same index on a home computer if you [https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/catalog/?keyword=hamburg%20passenger click here], but you will be asked to subscribe to see the search results list.


When you find a person in an index, use the information in the index to find the person in the actual passenger list. See step 3 to learn how to do this.
If you find a name in this Internet index you can click "View Image" to see a picture of the actual passenger list page including the home town of each emigrant, and his or her relatives on the same ship.


=== Using the Klüber Kartei ===
==== Alphabetical Passenger Lists 1850-1854  ====


Using the Family History Library Catalog, find the film number of the time period and correct beginning letter for your family name.
The lists themselves are alphabetical by the first letter of the surname from 1850-1854.  


=== Klüber Kartei 1 ===
'''Internet Access. '''To view the Ancestry.com images of alphabetical passenger lists for free at the FamilySearch Library [http://content.ancestry.com/Browse/list.aspx?dbid=1068&path=1850-1859 click here],  and then click the date you wish to view. You can also search the same list of images on a home computer if you [https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/1068/ click here], and then click the date you wish to view, but you will be asked to subscribe to see the images.


=== ===
'''Microfilm Access. '''For the FamilySearch Catalog listing of the alphabetical passenger lists from 1850-1854 microfilm numbers [http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Library/fhlcatalog/supermainframeset.asp?first=140&display=titlefilmnotes&titleno=43289&disp=Auswandererlisten%25252525252C%252525252B1850%25252525252D1934%252525252B%252525252B&last=239&columns=*%2C0%2C0 click here]. These microfilms can be accessed at various FamilySearch Centers, and at the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City.


{| class="plain"
==== Klüber Index 1  1856-1871  ====
! Family Name
 
! Film Number
This card index on microfilm partially indexes:
| Aab - Azeroth
 
| 1961710
*Direct Passenger Lists, 1856–1871
*Indirect Passenger Lists, 1866–1867
 
For [[Index of Changed Microfilm numbers at the FamilySearch Library]] use the following list. These microfilms can be accessed at various [https://www.familysearch.org/centers/locations/ FamilySearch centers] and at the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City.
<center>
{| class="plain FCK__ShowTableBorders"
|+ '''Klüber Index 1 FS Library International film numbers'''
|-
| align="left" | '''Family Name'''
| align="left" | '''Film Number'''
|-
| align="left" | Aab - Azeroth  
| align="left" | 1961710
|-
|-
| Ba - Bethke
| align="left" | Ba - Bethke  
| 1961978
| align="left" | 1961978
|-
|-
| Bethmann - Brezzel
| align="left" | Bethmann - Brezzel  
| 1961818
| align="left" | 1961818
|-
|-
| Bribach - Czyrner
| align="left" | Bribach - Czyrner  
| 1961979
| align="left" | 1961979
|-
|-
| Daab - Eidenmüller
| align="left" | Daab - Eidenmüller  
| 1961980
| align="left" | 1961980
|-
|-
| Eiding - Frei
| align="left" | Eiding - Frei  
| 1961981
| align="left" | 1961981
|-
|-
| Freiboese - Gorzewsky
| align="left" | Freiboese - Gorzewsky  
| 1961982
| align="left" | 1961982
|-
|-
| Gos - Hamatuzsch
| align="left" | Gos - Hamatuzsch  
| 1982354
| align="left" | 1982354
|-
|-
| Hannauer - Herzog
| align="left" | Hannauer - Herzog  
| 1963651
| align="left" | 1963651
|-
|-
| Hesbenau - Jacobus
| align="left" | Hesbenau - Jacobus  
| 1963652
| align="left" | 1963652
|-
|-
| Jacoby - Kellermeyer
| align="left" | Jacoby - Kellermeyer  
| 1963653
| align="left" | 1963653
|-
|-
| Kelling - Koßwitz
| align="left" | Kelling - Koßwitz  
| 1917107
| align="left" | 1917107
|-
|-
| Kost - Lapsap
| align="left" | Kost - Lapsap  
| 1917108
| align="left" | 1917108
|-
|-
| Larcher - Lütscher
| align="left" | Larcher - Lütscher  
| 1917109
| align="left" | 1917109
|-
|-
| Lütt - Meyenburg
| align="left" | Lütt - Meyenburg  
| 1964322
| align="left" | 1964322
|-
|-
| Meyer - Nazel
| align="left" | Meyer - Nazel  
| 1964323
| align="left" | 1964323
|-
|-
| Neander - Pehmoeller
| align="left" | Neander - Pehmoeller  
| 1964324
| align="left" | 1964324
|-
|-
| Pehr - Raßner
| align="left" | Pehr - Raßner  
| 1964325
| align="left" | 1964325
|-
|-
| Rast - Roszler
| align="left" | Rast - Roszler  
| 2012975
| align="left" | 2012975
|-
|-
| Rotbarth - Schmidmeier
| align="left" | Rotbarth - Schmidmeier  
| 2012976
| align="left" | 2012976
|-
|-
| Schmidt - Schulz E.
| align="left" | Schmidt - Schulz E.  
| 2013230
| align="left" | 2013230
|-
|-
| Schulz F. - Srock
| align="left" | Schulz F. - Srock  
| 2013305
| align="left" | 2013305
|-
|-
| Staab - Theysen
| align="left" | Staab - Theysen  
| 2013306
| align="left" | 2013306
|-
|-
| Thias - Walthusen
| align="left" | Thias - Walthusen  
| 2013307
| align="left" | 2013307
|-
|-
| Walti - de Witt
| align="left" | Walti - de Witt  
| 2013308
| align="left" | 2013308
|-
|-
| Wittach - Zywicki + unknowns
| align="left" | Wittach - Zywicki + unknowns  
| 201345 items <br />1–3
| align="left" | 201345 items 1–3
|}
|}
</center>


=== <br />Klüber Kartei 2 ===
==== Klüber Index 2 1850-1871  ====


{| class="plain"
This card index on microfilm partially indexes:
! Family Name
 
! Film Number
*Direct Passenger Lists, 1850–1871
| Aaener - Albersdorfer
*Indirect Passenger Lists, 1854–1865
| 2013451 item 4
 
For FS Library microfilm numbers use the following list. These microfilms can be accessed at various [https://www.familysearch.org/centers/locations/ nearest FamilySearch Centers] or at the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City.
<center>
{| class="plain FCK__ShowTableBorders"
|+ '''Klüber Index 2  FS Library International film numbers'''
|-
|-
| Albert - Bemberg
| align="left" | '''Family Name'''
| 2013452
| align="left" | '''Film Number'''
|-
|-
| Ben August - Braxmaier
| align="left" | Aaener - Albersdorfer
| 2013453
| align="left" | 2013451 item 4
|-
|-
| Brech - Dayton
| align="left" | Albert - Bemberg
| 2013544
| align="left" | 2013452
|-
|-
| Erasmus - Gapek
| align="left" | Ben August - Braxmaier
| 2013594
| align="left" | 2013453
|-
|-
| Gar - Güffler
| align="left" | Brech - Dayton
| 2013595
| align="left" | 2013544
|-
|-
| Gugel - Helwitz
| align="left" | Dcimeck - Epstein
| 2013696
| align="left" | 2013545
|-
|-
| Hem - Huth
| align="left" | Erasmus - Gapek
| 2013697
| align="left" | 2013594
|-
|-
| Huther - Keszewsky
| align="left" | Gar - Güffler
| 2013803
| align="left" | 2013595
|-
|-
| Ketel - Krayer
| align="left" | Gugel - Helwitz
| 2013859
| align="left" | 2013696
|-
|-
| Krebeheure - Leopoldt
| align="left" | Hem - Huth
| 2013860
| align="left" | 2013697
|-
|-
| Lepar - Martens, H.
| align="left" | Huther - Keszewsky
| 2014049
| align="left" | 2013803
|-
|-
| Martens, J - Mohnsohn
| align="left" | Ketel - Krayer
| 2014050
| align="left" | 2013859
|-
|-
| Mohr - Oetzmann
| align="left" | Krebeheure - Leopoldt
| 2014051
| align="left" | 2013860
|-
|-
| Oeverbeck - Oetzmann
| align="left" | Lepar - Martens, H.
| 2014215
| align="left" | 2014049
|-
|-
| Proh - Roschke
| align="left" | Martens, J - Mohnsohn
| 2014216
| align="left" | 2014050
|-
|-
| Rose - Schlüßler
| align="left" | Mohr - Oetzmann
| 2014323
| align="left" | 2014051
|-
|-
| Schlüter - Schultz
| align="left" | Oeverbeck - Oetzmann
| 2014324
| align="left" | 2014215
|-
|-
| Schulze - Stawizki
| align="left" | Proh - Roschke
| 2014476
| align="left" | 2014216
|-
|-
| Stealing - Sch/Sz - Traznik
| align="left" | Rose - Schlüßler
| 2014477
| align="left" | 2014323
|-
|-
| Treacks - Wezinsky
| align="left" | Schlüter - Schultz
| 2014478
| align="left" | 2014324
|-
|-
| Wemmert - Zzakowitz
| align="left" | Schulze - Stawizki
| 2014567
| align="left" | 2014476
|-
| align="left" | Stealing - Sch/Sz - Traznik
| align="left" | 2014477
|-
| align="left" | Treacks - Wezinsky
| align="left" | 2014478
|-
| align="left" | Wemmert - Zzakowitz  
| align="left" | 2014567
|}
</center>
The index cards provide the emigrant’s name, status or occupation, age, names of persons traveling in the same party, and place of origin. It also includes the year of emigration and the page number where the entry will be found. A letter i or d following the year will indicate if the entry was from the indirect or direct index. There are different types of cards used in this file. The figures below show two typical samples of cards from the Klüber indexes.
<center>[[Image:HAMBURGFIG3.jpg|center|400px|HAMBURGFIG3.jpg]]''Figure 1: Card from Klüber Index.''</center><center>[[Image:HAMBURGFIG3-4.jpg|center|400px|HAMBURGFIG3-4.jpg]]''Figure 2: Card from Klüber Index for an 1869 Direct Passenger List entry.''</center>
<br>
 
==== Fifteen-Year Direct Index 1856-1871  ====
 
Use the following table to determine the [[Index of Changed Microfilm numbers at the FamilySearch Library]]. These microfilms can be accessed at the various [https://www.familysearch.org/centers/locations/ FamilySearch centers] and at the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City.
<center>
{| class="plain FCK__ShowTableBorders" style="width: 326px; height: 246px;"
|+ '''Fifteen-Year Index  FS Library International film numbers'''
|-
| align="left" | '''Name'''
| '''Film Number'''
|-
| align="left" | Aab, George-Breyer, Adam
| 0884668
|-
| align="left" | Breytspaak, Eliza-Fick, Ludwig
| 0884669
|-
| align="left" | Fick, Maria-Hartzke, August
| 0884670
|-
| align="left" | Harung, Frid.-Katz, Salomon
| 0884671
|-
| align="left" | Katz, Samual-Lewin, And.
| 0884672
|-
| align="left" | Lewin, August-Neuer, Genofeva
| 0884673
|-
| align="left" | Neufeld, Hoseph-Ristow, Friedr.
| 0884674
|-
| align="left" | Ristow, H.-Schwassengewer, H.
| 0884675
|-
| align="left" | Schwarts, Abrah.-Volkwann, A.F.W.
| 0884676
|-
| align="left" | Volkmann, Aug.-Zyndler, Mathilde
| 0884677
|}
|}
[[Image:HAMBURGFIG2.jpg|thumb|center|400px|HAMBURGFIG2.jpg]]''Figure 3: A Fifteen-Year Direct Index card.''</center>
When you find a person in an index, use the information in the index to find the person in the actual passenger list. See [[Hamburg_Passenger_Lists#Step_3:_Obtain_the_Desired_Passenger_List|step 3]] to learn how to do this.
==== 1872 Direct and Indirect Index  ====
'''Internet Access.''' This index is available for free on the Internet from AncestryProGenealogists by [http://www.progenealogists.com/germany/hamburg/index.html?url=http://www.progenealogists.com/germany/hamburg/index.html&affiliate=joeb&merchant=cottrill clicking here].
'''Microfilm Access.''' This index is on FS Library microfilm {{FSC|576461|item|disp=1183696 items 3 - 6}}. This microfilm can be accessed at various [https://www.familysearch.org/centers/locations/ FamilySearch centers] and at the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake city. The book call number is FS Library INTL Ref book 943.515/H1 W39h 1872. Books do not circulate to FamilySearch Centers.
==== Handwritten Direct Indexes 1855-1934  ====
'''Note: Indexes are not necessary for the years 1850-1854 because the records are already sorted by first letter of last name.'''
'''Internet Access. '''At the FamilySearch Library search for the free images of this complete but hard-to-read index on Ancestry.com [http://content.ancestry.com/iexec/?htx=List&dbid=1166&offerid=0%3a7858%3a0 click here].  You can see a list of images and years covered for the same index on a home computer if you [https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/1166/ click here], but you will be asked to subscribe to see the actual index images.
'''Microfilm Access. '''For the FamilySearch Catalog listing of [[Index of Changed Microfilm numbers at the FamilySearch Library]]. These microfilms can be accessed at various [https://www.familysearch.org/centers/locations/ FamilySearch centers] and at the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City.
'''Instructions. '''Find the year the emigrant departed, and the letter of the alphabet with which your ancestor’s surname begins in the index. Names are arranged by the first letter of the surname only, so you may need to search the entire section (letter of the alphabet) to find the person.
NOTE: Each letter of the alphabet was allotted only a certain number of pages. When these pages were filled, the rest of the names beginning with that letter were continued on the unused pages under another letter. There may or may not be a note indicating this happened. Therefore, search all of the end pages assigned to other letters if your ancestor’s name is not listed where it should be.
''Figure 4'' below is a sample of an entry from the handwritten index. The actual format of the indexes vary over time. Notice the type of information provided within these entries.
<center>[[Image:HAMBURGFIG5.jpg|thumb|center|300px|HAMBURGFIG5.jpg]]''Figure 4: Handwritten Index Entry.''</center>
This index entry contains:


The index cards provide the emigrant’s name, status or occupation, age, names of persons traveling in the same party, and place of origin. It also includes the year of emigration and the page number where the entry will be found. A letter i or d following the year will indicate if the entry was from the indirect or direct index. There are different types of cards used in this file. The figures below show two typical samples of cards from the Klüber Kartei.
#The name of the ship (''California'').
#70th ship to leave port and departure date of the ship (''28 June 1883'').
#The passenger's name (''Peter Becker &amp; wife [Frau] &amp; 4 sons [Söhne] &amp; 2 daughters [Töchter]'').  
#The name of the ship's captain (''Capt. Winckler'').  
#The name of the destination port (''New York'').  
#The page this information is found on the actual passenger lists (''1086'').


<center>[[Image:HAMBURGFIG3.bmp|HAMBURGFIG3]]</center>
When you find the emigrant in the index, note the number following the name. This number indicates which page the name appears on in the passenger list. In some cases page numbers are dittoed, referring to the previous page. Occasionally, large page numbers are partially dittoed. For example, pages 1086, 1087, and 1088 might appear as 1086, 87, 88.  


<center>Figure 3: Index card from Klüber Kartei.</center>
Next, move up the column until you find the departure date, and ship. When you have the departure date, ship, and page number, you are ready to find the emigrant in the passenger list.  


<center>[[Image:hamburgFIG3-4.bmp|hamburgFIG3&4.bmp]]</center>
If you cannot find a person in the index to the direct lists, follow the steps outlined here to search the index to the Indirect Lists.


<center>Figure 4: Index card from Klüber Kartei.</center>
==== Handwritten Indirect Indexes 1855-1910  ====


=== Using the Regular Indexes ===
'''Internet Access. '''At the FamilySearch Library to search for the free images of this complete but hard-to-read index on Ancestry.com [http://content.ancestry.com/Browse/list.aspx?dbid=1166&path=1855-1910+(Indirekt) click here].  You can see a list of images and years covered for the same index on a home computer if you [http://content.ancestry.com/Browse/list.aspx?dbid=1166&path=1855-1910+(Indirekt) click here], but you will be asked to subscribe to see the actual index images.


Using the Family History Library Catalog to find the film number, locate the index for the time period the emigrant departed.
'''Microfilm Access. '''For the FamilySearch Catalog listing of Handwritten Indirect Indexes microfilm numbers [http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Library/fhlcatalog/supermainframeset.asp?first=402&display=titlefilmnotes&titleno=43289&disp=Auswandererlisten%25252C%252B1850%25252D1934%252B%252B&last=501&columns=*%2C0%2C0 click here]. These microfilms can be accessed at various [https://www.familysearch.org/centers/locations/ FamilySearch centers] and at the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City.  


Find the year the emigrant departed and the letter of the alphabet with which your ancestor’s surname begins. Names are arranged by the first letter of the surname only, so you may need to search the entire section to find the person you are looking for.
'''Instructions. '''The Indirect and the Direct Handwritten indexes are similar. For more detailed instructions explaining how to use these '''''Indirect''''' indexes see the [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#Handwritten_Direct_Indexes_1855-1934|Handwritten '''''Direct''''' Indexes instructions]].


NOTE: Each letter of the alphabet was allotted only a certain number of pages. When these pages were filled, the rest of the names beginning with that letter were continued on the unused pages under another letter. There may or may not be a note indicating this happened. Therefore, search all of the end pages assigned to other letters if your ancestor’s name is not listed where it should be.
==== Cannot Find Your Ancestor in the Indexes?  ====


Figure 5 below is a sample of an entry from the regular index. The actual format of the indexes vary over time. Notice the type of information provided within these entries.
{| cellspacing="1" cellpadding="1" border="1" style="width: 100%; height: 24px;"
|-
| bgcolor="#ffff99" | <center>'''If you cannot find an emigrant in the indexes, there are several possible reasons:''' </center>
*The emigrant did not sail from Hamburg. He or she may have sailed from one of several other ports in Europe, most of which have few or no records available.


<center>[[Image:HAMBURGFIG5.bmp|HAMBURGFIG5.bmp]]</center>
*The person was listed on another index page because the first page was full. Search the end sections of other letters of the alphabet.


<center>Figure 5: A Regular Index Entry.</center>
*The person was listed on another index. If you tried the '''''Handwritten Direct Index''''', switch to the '''''Handwritten Indirect Index''''' or some other index. For a list of alternate indexes see the [[Hamburg Passenger Lists#STEP_1:_Select_the_Best_Index_to_Use|table at the end of Step 1]] in this Wiki article.


The actual format of the indexes vary over time. Notice the type of information provided within these entries.
*The name was spelled differently than it appears in your records. Look for [[Guessing a Name Variation|alternate spellings of the name]].


An index entry contains:
*The person emigrated at a different date. Try other years.


* The name of the ship.
|}
* The departure date of the ship (28 June 1893).
* The passenger's name.
* The name of the ship's captain.
* The name of the destination port.
* The page this information is found on the actual passenger lists.


When you find the emigrant in the index, note the number following the name. This number indicates which page the name appears on in the passenger list. In some cases page numbers are dittoed, referring to the previous page. Occasionally, large page numbers are partially dittoed. For example, pages 1086, 1087, and 1088 might appear as 1086, 87, 88.
====Passenger List Terminology====
For a Wiki list of terminology used in the Hamburg passenger lists, see [[Hamburg Passenger List Terminology]].


Next, move up the column until you find the departure date. When you have both the departure date and page number, you are ready to find the emigrant in the passenger list.
=== Step 3: Obtain the Desired Passenger List  ===


If you cannot find a person in the index to the direct lists, follow the steps outlined here to search the index to the Indirect Lists.
Once you have found your ancestor in an index, you will want to get the actual passenger list on which that person appears.
 
'''Internet Access. '''On the Ancestry.com Internet index results list, click "View Image" at the end of a name entry to see the image of that person's passenger list page.  


=== CAN'T FIND YOUR ANCESTOR IN THE INDEXES? ===
Also, at the FamilySearch Library you can browse a complete set of free images of both Direct and Indirect Passenger Lists on Ancestry.com if you [http://content.ancestry.com/iexec/?htx=List&dbid=1068&offerid=0%3a7858%3a0 click here]  and scroll to the bottom of the page to select the appropriate years. You can browse the same years and passenger list images on a home computer, if you scroll to the bottom after you [https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/1068/ click here], but you will be asked to subscribe to see the actual passenger list images.


If you cannot find an emigrant in the indexes, there are several possible reasons.
'''Microfilm Access. '''For the FamilySearch Catalog listing of '''''Direct Passenger List''''' microfilm numbers [http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Library/fhlcatalog/supermainframeset.asp?first=140&display=titlefilmnotes&titleno=43289&disp=Auswandererlisten%2525252C%25252B1850%2525252D1934%25252B%25252B&last=239&columns=*%2C0%2C0 click here].  


The emigrant did not sail from Hamburg. He or she may have sailed from one of several other ports in Europe, most of which have few or no records available.
For the FamilySearch Catalog listing of '''''Indirect Passenger List''''' microfilm numbers [http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Library/fhlcatalog/supermainframeset.asp?first=414&display=titlefilmnotes&titleno=43289&disp=Auswandererlisten%252525252525252C%2525252525252B1850%252525252525252D1934%2525252525252B%2525252525252B&last=513&columns=*%2C0%2C0 click here].  


The person was listed on another page because the first page was full. Search the end sections of other letters of the alphabet.
These microfilms can be accessed at various [https://www.familysearch.org/centers/locations/ FamilySearch centers] and at the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City.


The name was spelled differently than it appears in your records. Look for alternate spellings of the name.
=== Step 4: Search the Passenger List  ===


The person emigrated at a different date. Try other years.
[[Image:{{Hamburg2005}}]]In the passenger list, turn to the page number you found in the index. On some passenger lists a numbered page is followed by one or more unnumbered pages. If your ancestor's name does not appear on the numbered page, search the unnumbered page(s) immediately following it.  


=== STEP 3: OBTAIN THE DESIRED PASSENGER LIST. ===
Format and titles may vary by shipping line and year.  


Once you have found your ancestor in an index, you will want to get the actual passenger list on which that person appears. Film numbers for the passengers lists appear after the regular indexes in the Family History Library Catalog.
If you know the name of a traveling companion, or the name of a relative or neighbor who lived near the ancestor in both the old world and the new world, it may help to more clearly identify your ancestor on the passenger lists.  


=== STEP 4: SEARCH THE PASSENGER LIST. ===
'''''Update your records.''''' When you find an ancestor make a note on your [[Research Logs|research log]] showing exactly where you found them. Also, [[Copying Sources|make a printout or photocopy]] of the passenger list pages showing your ancestor and other family members. Note the microfilm number and page on the back of the copy. Update your [[Family group record: roadmap for researchers|family group record]] by [[Adding a Custom Event to a PAF Family Group Record|adding a custom event for emigration]] and include [[Cite Your Sources (Source Footnotes)|source footnotes]]. Organize and [[Document AS YOU GO!|document as you go]].


In the passenger list, turn to the page number you found in the index. On some passenger lists a numbered page is followed by one or more unnumbered pages. If your ancestor's name does not appear on the numbered page, search the unnumbered page(s) immediately following it.
== Related Content  ==


Format and titles may vary by shipping line and year.
*[[Hamburg Passenger List Terminology|Hamburg Passenger List Terminology]] English translations of German phrases.
*[http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/RG/Guide/Hamburg_Pass_List.ASP Hamburg Passenger Lists 1850-1934 Resource Guide] an older version of this Wiki article.
*''Hamburg Passenger Lists'' (Salt Lake City, Utah: Genealogical Society of Utah, 1984; FS Library fiche 6000034). Paper and microfiche publication: Fourth edition, 1996.
*[[Germany Emigration and Immigration|Germany Emigration and Immigration]] Wiki article about search strategies and sources about German emigration.
Wiki article about the principles, search strategies, and record types you can use to identify an immigrant ancestor's original hometown. Worldwide scope.
{{Hamburg, Germany}}</div>  {{-}}
[[pt:Lista de Passageiros Hamburgo]][[fr:Hambourg : Listes de Passagers]]


For more information on the Hamburg Passenger Lists and how to use them, see ''The Hamburg Passenger Lists'' (Salt Lake City, Utah: Genealogical Society of Utah, 1984; FHL fiche 6000034). Paper publication: Fourth edition, 1996.
[[Category:Hamburg, German Empire]] [[Category:Emigration_and_Immigration]]

Latest revision as of 15:52, 15 January 2024

Hamburg, German Empire Wiki Topics
Hamburg-Sankt-Pauli-peers.JPG
Beginning Research
Major Record Types
Reading the Records
Additional Hamburg Record Types
Hamburg Background
Ethnic Groups
Local Research Resources
Germany Record Types
Germany Background



Hamburg-St. Pauli port about 1900. From 1850 to 1934 police recorded information about millions of European emigrants departing from this port in Hamburg, Germany.

Online Resources

Using the Passenger Lists and Indexes

The Hamburg passenger lists contain the names of millions of Europeans who departed Europe from Hamburg, Germany between 1850 and 1934 (except 1915–1919). Nearly one-third of Germans, and 90 percent of the people who emigrated from eastern Europe (Russia, Poland, Austria-Hungary, Romania) during this time are included on these lists. If you have ancestors who emigrated from these areas, the Hamburg passenger lists could provide important genealogical information about them, including their hometowns. Extensive indexes make these records easier to use than most other passenger lists and emigration records.

The records of Europeans who emigrated through other ports, such as Bremen, LeHavre, Amsterdam, Rotterdam, and Antwerp, have either been destroyed or are not available for research at the FamilySearch Library.

You may not need to look at the Hamburg passenger lists if you already know where your ancestor was born in Europe. Furthermore, you may be able to find your ancestor's birthplace in other sources, such as local records where the person resided.

The Hamburg passenger lists are made up of two sections. Each section has its own separate handwritten index.

  • The Direct Passenger Lists include passengers who left Hamburg, Germany, and sailed directly to their destination without stopping at other European ports.
  • The Indirect Passenger Lists include passengers who stopped at another European or British port before sailing to their final destination. About 20 percent of the immigrants leaving Europe took indirect routes.

Internet Access. The partially completed (1877-1914) Internet index and, on the right side of same screen, the "Browse this collection" option can be used to access the direct and indirect lists for all years 1850-1934. The separate handwritten index images; 1855-1934 [1850-1854 need no index] are available at Ancestry.com, a subscription site. The FamilySearch Library and many FamilySearch Centers have a subscription which includes the Ancestry images and indexes. Use these links when at one of these locations: Internet index and the separate handwritten index images; 1855-1934.

Microfilm Access. Also, the passenger lists, Fifteen-Year Direct Index, and handwritten indexes are on 486 rolls of microfilm at the FamilySearch Library, and can be accessed at various FamilySearch Centers and the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City. An additional 48 rolls of microfilm for the Klüber Indexes for the years 1850-1871, and one additional roll for the 1872 Direct and Indirect Index are also available.

For details and film numbers, use the Place Search of the FamilySearch Catalog under:

Germany, Hamburg, Hamburg - Emigration and Immigration

Ships arriving in America from Hamburg 1850 to 1934. If you know the name of the ship on which your ancestor arrived in the United States from Hamburg and the date that ship arrived, Roger P. Minert's, Kathryn Boeckel's, and Caren Winter's Germans to America and the Hamburg Passenger Lists: Coordinated Schedules (FS Library International Ref Desk Book 973 W22m) can help you quickly access the Hamburg Passenger Lists microfilm departure record for your ancestor. This can be done without having to search the alphabetical name index for your ancestor's name. In this book each ship arrival in America from Hamburg is listed by arrival date and ship name. The FS Library film and page number of that ship's list in the Hamburg Passenger Lists is also given. The book's WorldCat entry.

Four Steps to Follow:
STEP 1: Select the best index to use.
STEP 2: Search the index.
STEP 3: Obtain the passenger list.
STEP 4: Search the passenger list.

Step 1: Select the Best Index to Use

These films will be found on the FS Library International floor.

What you need to know to use the indexes. Before using the index, you need to know the approximate year the emigrant departed from Hamburg, Germany. You will also need the emigrant's name. In addition, it would help to know the name of a relative or neighbor traveling with him. The 1880, 1900, 1910, and 1920 U.S. censuses are a good place to begin searching for these kinds of information. The census provides the year a person arrived in the United States, and shows neighbors. If possible, find out whether the emigrant traveled directly to his or her destination or stopped at other European or British ports along the way.

The Hamburg passenger lists have many partial indexes:

  • Internet Index 1890-1913 - The Hamburg State Archive created the partial index at Ancestry.com.
  • Alphabetical Passenger Lists 1850-1854 - The lists themselves are alphabetical by at least the first letter of the family name.
  • Klüber Index 1 for:
    • Direct Passenger Lists, 1856–1871
    • Indirect Passenger Lists, 1866–1867
  • Klüber Index 2 for:
    • Direct Passenger Lists, 1850–1871
    • Indirect Passenger Lists, 1854–1865
  • Fifteen-Year Direct Index 1856-1871 - Incomplete but easier to use than handwritten indexes.
  • 1872 Direct and Indirect Index - Shows age and microfilm page number.
  • Handwritten Index to Direct Passenger Lists 1855-1934 - Complete, but hard to read; divided by year or part of a year.
  • Handwritten Index to Indirect Passenger Lists 1855-1910 - Complete, but hard to read; divided by year or part of a year.

No single index lists everyone. Each index covers different years and has its individual strengths and weaknesses. For example, if the emigrant departed in 1899 (between 1890 and 1913) check the Internet partial index first. If the emigrant departed in 1854, search the Klüber 2 index, or the alphabetical passenger lists themselves for that year. If the emigrant departed about 1869 or 1870, search the two sets of Klüber indexes first, then the Fifteen-Year Index, and then the handwritten indexes direct and indirect.

Determine the indexes to use from the following table. It lists the indexes available for various emigration years. The table also shows the recommended order in which to search the indexes until you find the ancestor.

Emigration Year
Search These Recommended Indexes for Those Years
1850-1854

Klüber 2, Alphabetical Passenger Lists
1855

Klüber 2, Handwritten Direct, Handwritten Indirect
1856-1871

Klüber 1, Klüber 2, Fifteen-Year Index, Handwritten Direct, Handwritten Indirect
1872

1872 Index, Handwritten Direct, Handwritten Indirect
1873-1889

Handwritten Direct, Handwritten Indirect
1890-1910

Internet Index, Handwritten Direct, Handwritten Indirect
1911-1913

Internet Index, Handwritten Direct
1914-1934

Handwritten Direct

Step 2: Search the Indexes

Use the following instructions to search the index you selected in STEP 1.

Internet Index 1877-1914

To search this partial index for free at the FamilySearch Library on Ancestry.com click here. You can also search the same index on a home computer if you click here, but you will be asked to subscribe to see the search results list.

If you find a name in this Internet index you can click "View Image" to see a picture of the actual passenger list page including the home town of each emigrant, and his or her relatives on the same ship.

Alphabetical Passenger Lists 1850-1854

The lists themselves are alphabetical by the first letter of the surname from 1850-1854.

Internet Access. To view the Ancestry.com images of alphabetical passenger lists for free at the FamilySearch Library click here, and then click the date you wish to view. You can also search the same list of images on a home computer if you click here, and then click the date you wish to view, but you will be asked to subscribe to see the images.

Microfilm Access. For the FamilySearch Catalog listing of the alphabetical passenger lists from 1850-1854 microfilm numbers click here. These microfilms can be accessed at various FamilySearch Centers, and at the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City.

Klüber Index 1 1856-1871

This card index on microfilm partially indexes:

  • Direct Passenger Lists, 1856–1871
  • Indirect Passenger Lists, 1866–1867

For Index of Changed Microfilm numbers at the FamilySearch Library use the following list. These microfilms can be accessed at various FamilySearch centers and at the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City.

Klüber Index 1 FS Library International film numbers
Family Name Film Number
Aab - Azeroth 1961710
Ba - Bethke 1961978
Bethmann - Brezzel 1961818
Bribach - Czyrner 1961979
Daab - Eidenmüller 1961980
Eiding - Frei 1961981
Freiboese - Gorzewsky 1961982
Gos - Hamatuzsch 1982354
Hannauer - Herzog 1963651
Hesbenau - Jacobus 1963652
Jacoby - Kellermeyer 1963653
Kelling - Koßwitz 1917107
Kost - Lapsap 1917108
Larcher - Lütscher 1917109
Lütt - Meyenburg 1964322
Meyer - Nazel 1964323
Neander - Pehmoeller 1964324
Pehr - Raßner 1964325
Rast - Roszler 2012975
Rotbarth - Schmidmeier 2012976
Schmidt - Schulz E. 2013230
Schulz F. - Srock 2013305
Staab - Theysen 2013306
Thias - Walthusen 2013307
Walti - de Witt 2013308
Wittach - Zywicki + unknowns 201345 items 1–3

Klüber Index 2 1850-1871

This card index on microfilm partially indexes:

  • Direct Passenger Lists, 1850–1871
  • Indirect Passenger Lists, 1854–1865

For FS Library microfilm numbers use the following list. These microfilms can be accessed at various nearest FamilySearch Centers or at the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City.

Klüber Index 2 FS Library International film numbers
Family Name Film Number
Aaener - Albersdorfer 2013451 item 4
Albert - Bemberg 2013452
Ben August - Braxmaier 2013453
Brech - Dayton 2013544
Dcimeck - Epstein 2013545
Erasmus - Gapek 2013594
Gar - Güffler 2013595
Gugel - Helwitz 2013696
Hem - Huth 2013697
Huther - Keszewsky 2013803
Ketel - Krayer 2013859
Krebeheure - Leopoldt 2013860
Lepar - Martens, H. 2014049
Martens, J - Mohnsohn 2014050
Mohr - Oetzmann 2014051
Oeverbeck - Oetzmann 2014215
Proh - Roschke 2014216
Rose - Schlüßler 2014323
Schlüter - Schultz 2014324
Schulze - Stawizki 2014476
Stealing - Sch/Sz - Traznik 2014477
Treacks - Wezinsky 2014478
Wemmert - Zzakowitz 2014567

The index cards provide the emigrant’s name, status or occupation, age, names of persons traveling in the same party, and place of origin. It also includes the year of emigration and the page number where the entry will be found. A letter i or d following the year will indicate if the entry was from the indirect or direct index. There are different types of cards used in this file. The figures below show two typical samples of cards from the Klüber indexes.

Figure 1: Card from Klüber Index.
Figure 2: Card from Klüber Index for an 1869 Direct Passenger List entry.


Fifteen-Year Direct Index 1856-1871

Use the following table to determine the Index of Changed Microfilm numbers at the FamilySearch Library. These microfilms can be accessed at the various FamilySearch centers and at the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City.

Fifteen-Year Index FS Library International film numbers
Name Film Number
Aab, George-Breyer, Adam 0884668
Breytspaak, Eliza-Fick, Ludwig 0884669
Fick, Maria-Hartzke, August 0884670
Harung, Frid.-Katz, Salomon 0884671
Katz, Samual-Lewin, And. 0884672
Lewin, August-Neuer, Genofeva 0884673
Neufeld, Hoseph-Ristow, Friedr. 0884674
Ristow, H.-Schwassengewer, H. 0884675
Schwarts, Abrah.-Volkwann, A.F.W. 0884676
Volkmann, Aug.-Zyndler, Mathilde 0884677
File:HAMBURGFIG2.jpg
HAMBURGFIG2.jpg
Figure 3: A Fifteen-Year Direct Index card.

When you find a person in an index, use the information in the index to find the person in the actual passenger list. See step 3 to learn how to do this.

1872 Direct and Indirect Index

Internet Access. This index is available for free on the Internet from AncestryProGenealogists by clicking here.

Microfilm Access. This index is on FS Library microfilm 1183696 items 3 - 6. This microfilm can be accessed at various FamilySearch centers and at the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake city. The book call number is FS Library INTL Ref book 943.515/H1 W39h 1872. Books do not circulate to FamilySearch Centers.

Handwritten Direct Indexes 1855-1934

Note: Indexes are not necessary for the years 1850-1854 because the records are already sorted by first letter of last name.

Internet Access. At the FamilySearch Library search for the free images of this complete but hard-to-read index on Ancestry.com click here. You can see a list of images and years covered for the same index on a home computer if you click here, but you will be asked to subscribe to see the actual index images.

Microfilm Access. For the FamilySearch Catalog listing of Index of Changed Microfilm numbers at the FamilySearch Library. These microfilms can be accessed at various FamilySearch centers and at the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City.

Instructions. Find the year the emigrant departed, and the letter of the alphabet with which your ancestor’s surname begins in the index. Names are arranged by the first letter of the surname only, so you may need to search the entire section (letter of the alphabet) to find the person.

NOTE: Each letter of the alphabet was allotted only a certain number of pages. When these pages were filled, the rest of the names beginning with that letter were continued on the unused pages under another letter. There may or may not be a note indicating this happened. Therefore, search all of the end pages assigned to other letters if your ancestor’s name is not listed where it should be.

Figure 4 below is a sample of an entry from the handwritten index. The actual format of the indexes vary over time. Notice the type of information provided within these entries.

HAMBURGFIG5.jpg
Figure 4: Handwritten Index Entry.

This index entry contains:

  1. The name of the ship (California).
  2. 70th ship to leave port and departure date of the ship (28 June 1883).
  3. The passenger's name (Peter Becker & wife [Frau] & 4 sons [Söhne] & 2 daughters [Töchter]).
  4. The name of the ship's captain (Capt. Winckler).
  5. The name of the destination port (New York).
  6. The page this information is found on the actual passenger lists (1086).

When you find the emigrant in the index, note the number following the name. This number indicates which page the name appears on in the passenger list. In some cases page numbers are dittoed, referring to the previous page. Occasionally, large page numbers are partially dittoed. For example, pages 1086, 1087, and 1088 might appear as 1086, 87, 88.

Next, move up the column until you find the departure date, and ship. When you have the departure date, ship, and page number, you are ready to find the emigrant in the passenger list.

If you cannot find a person in the index to the direct lists, follow the steps outlined here to search the index to the Indirect Lists.

Handwritten Indirect Indexes 1855-1910

Internet Access. At the FamilySearch Library to search for the free images of this complete but hard-to-read index on Ancestry.com click here. You can see a list of images and years covered for the same index on a home computer if you click here, but you will be asked to subscribe to see the actual index images.

Microfilm Access. For the FamilySearch Catalog listing of Handwritten Indirect Indexes microfilm numbers click here. These microfilms can be accessed at various FamilySearch centers and at the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City.

Instructions. The Indirect and the Direct Handwritten indexes are similar. For more detailed instructions explaining how to use these Indirect indexes see the Handwritten Direct Indexes instructions.

Cannot Find Your Ancestor in the Indexes?

If you cannot find an emigrant in the indexes, there are several possible reasons:
  • The emigrant did not sail from Hamburg. He or she may have sailed from one of several other ports in Europe, most of which have few or no records available.
  • The person was listed on another index page because the first page was full. Search the end sections of other letters of the alphabet.
  • The person was listed on another index. If you tried the Handwritten Direct Index, switch to the Handwritten Indirect Index or some other index. For a list of alternate indexes see the table at the end of Step 1 in this Wiki article.
  • The person emigrated at a different date. Try other years.

Passenger List Terminology

For a Wiki list of terminology used in the Hamburg passenger lists, see Hamburg Passenger List Terminology.

Step 3: Obtain the Desired Passenger List

Once you have found your ancestor in an index, you will want to get the actual passenger list on which that person appears.

Internet Access. On the Ancestry.com Internet index results list, click "View Image" at the end of a name entry to see the image of that person's passenger list page.

Also, at the FamilySearch Library you can browse a complete set of free images of both Direct and Indirect Passenger Lists on Ancestry.com if you click here and scroll to the bottom of the page to select the appropriate years. You can browse the same years and passenger list images on a home computer, if you scroll to the bottom after you click here, but you will be asked to subscribe to see the actual passenger list images.

Microfilm Access. For the FamilySearch Catalog listing of Direct Passenger List microfilm numbers click here.

For the FamilySearch Catalog listing of Indirect Passenger List microfilm numbers click here.

These microfilms can be accessed at various FamilySearch centers and at the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City.

Step 4: Search the Passenger List

Hamburg-St. Pauli (Germany) port in 2005.

In the passenger list, turn to the page number you found in the index. On some passenger lists a numbered page is followed by one or more unnumbered pages. If your ancestor's name does not appear on the numbered page, search the unnumbered page(s) immediately following it.

Format and titles may vary by shipping line and year.

If you know the name of a traveling companion, or the name of a relative or neighbor who lived near the ancestor in both the old world and the new world, it may help to more clearly identify your ancestor on the passenger lists.

Update your records. When you find an ancestor make a note on your research log showing exactly where you found them. Also, make a printout or photocopy of the passenger list pages showing your ancestor and other family members. Note the microfilm number and page on the back of the copy. Update your family group record by adding a custom event for emigration and include source footnotes. Organize and document as you go.

Related Content

Wiki article about the principles, search strategies, and record types you can use to identify an immigrant ancestor's original hometown. Worldwide scope.