New South Wales Emigration and Immigration: Difference between revisions

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==FamilySearch Library==
==FamilySearch Library==
Additional sources are listed in the '''FamilySearch Catalog:'''  
Additional sources are listed in the '''FamilySearch Catalog:'''  
*{{FSC|Australia, New South Wales - Emigration and immigration|keywords|subject-id=1952184524|disp=Australia, New South Wales - Emigration and immigration}}
*{{FSC|Australia, New South Wales - Emigration and immigration|subject|subject-id=1952184524|disp=Australia, New South Wales - Emigration and immigration}}
*{{FSC|Australia, New South Wales - Emigration and immigration - History|keywords|subject-id=36743787|disp=Australia, New South Wales - Emigration and immigration - History}}
*{{FSC|Australia, New South Wales - Emigration and immigration - History|subject|subject-id=36743787|disp=Australia, New South Wales - Emigration and immigration - History}}
*{{FSC|Australia, New South Wales - Emigration and immigration - Indexes|keywords|subject-id=979614209|disp=Australia, New South Wales - Emigration and immigration - Indexes}}
*{{FSC|Australia, New South Wales - Emigration and immigration - Indexes|subject|subject-id=979614209|disp=Australia, New South Wales - Emigration and immigration - Indexes}}
==References==
==References==
<references/>
<references/>


[[Category:New South Wales, Australia]]
[[Category:New South Wales, Australia]]

Revision as of 01:36, 11 February 2025

New South Wales Wiki Topics
Flag of New South Wales.png
Beginning Research
Record Types
New South Wales Background
Local Research Resources
New South Wales Emigration and Immigration

Online Resources[edit | edit source]

Australia[edit | edit source]

Convict Records[edit | edit source]

Australia Convict Records[edit | edit source]

Archive Resources Kit[edit | edit source]

Immigration Records[edit | edit source]

Indexes to ships arrived, 1837-1925
Assisted immigrants, 1828-42
Assisted immigrants (Port Phillip), 1839-51
Assisted immigrants Sydney, 1838-96, and Moreton Bay, 1848-59
Persons on bounty ships to Sydney, Newcastle and Moreton Bay, 1848-91
Unassisted Passengers arriving in Sydney, 1826-53, 1854-1900
Wage agreements & entitlement certificates (Sydney), 1844-45
Germans on bounty ships (Sydney), 1849-52
Wives and families of convicts on bounty ships (Sydney), 1849-55
Immigration deposit journals, 1853-1900
Members of the Family Colonization Loan Society, 1854-57
Passenger lists of the Family Colonization Loan Society, 1854-55
Ships musters: passengers departing, 1816-25

Convict Records[edit | edit source]

Index to Convict Indents, 1837-42
Convict Indents, 1788-1842
Musters and other papers relating to convict ships, 1790-1849 NRS 1155
Registers of convicts' applications to marry, 1825-51
Assignment Registers, 1821-24
Register of Tickets of Leave, 1824-27
Ticket of Leave butts, 1827-67
Registers of Conditional Pardons, 1791-1825
Registers of convicts recommended for Conditional Pardons, 1826-56
Registers of Absolute Pardons, 1791-1843 and Registers of recommendations for Absolute Pardons, 1826-46
Convict Deaths, 1828-79

"The ARK is held by 40 community access points across NSW. The majority of access points are libraries. The ARK consists of microfilm copies of our most popular and heavily used colonial records. Included are records relating to convict arrivals, assisted immigrants, births, deaths and marriages, publicans' licences, electoral rolls, naturalisation, returns of the colony ('Blue Books'), land grants, and the wide range of functions of the Colonial Secretary (1788-1825). You may find that the ARK (or parts of it) are held at a library near you." [1]

Archives[edit | edit source]

National Archives of Australia[edit | edit source]

"The National Archives holds detailed passenger records for arrivals and departures at all Australian ports from 1924. This is when passenger arrivals became an Australian Government responsibility.
"We hold a few passenger records from before 1924, but only for ports in Western Australia, Tasmania and Queensland. Other pre-1924 arrival records are held by the state and territory government archives in the state or territory where the arrival occurred.
"The passenger records in our collection are held in each capital city, primarily for the ports and airports in that state or territory."[2]


NSW Government State Records and Archives[edit | edit source]

161 O'Connell Street
Kingswood NSW 2747
Australia

New South Wales Archives Guides[edit | edit source]

Historical Background[3][edit | edit source]

Penal Transportation[edit | edit source]

  • European migration to Australia began with British convict settlement.
  • The First Fleet comprised 11 ships carrying 775 convicts and 645 officials, members of the crew, marines, and their families and children. The settlers consisted of petty criminals, second-rate soldiers and a crew of sailors.
  • There were few with skills needed to start a self-sufficient settlement, such as farmers and builders, and the colony experienced hunger and hardships. Male settlers far outnumbered female settlers.
  • The Second Fleet arrived in 1790 bringing more convicts. The conditions of the transportation was described as horrific and worse than slave transports. Of the 1,026 convicts who embarked, 267 (256 men and 11 women) died during the voyage (26%); a further 486 were sick when they arrived of which 124 died soon after.
  • The fleet was more of a drain on the struggling settlement than of any benefit.
  • Conditions on the Third Fleet, which followed on the heels of the Second Fleet in 1791, were a bit better. The fleet comprised 11 ships. Of the more than 2000 convicts brought onto the ships, 173 male convicts and 9 female convicts died during the voyage.
  • Other transport fleets bringing further convicts as well as freemen to the colony would follow. By the end of the penal transportation in 1868, approximately 165,000 people had entered Australia as convicts.

Bounty Immigration[edit | edit source]

  • The Bounty Immigration Scheme (1835-1841) boosted emigration from the United Kingdom to New South Wales.[11] The South Australia Company was established to encourage settlement in South Australia by laborers and skilled migrants.

Gold Rush and Population Growth[edit | edit source]

  • The Gold rush era, beginning in 1851, led to an enormous expansion in population, including large numbers of British and Irish settlers, followed by smaller numbers of Germans and other Europeans, and Chinese. This latter group were subject to increasing restrictions and discrimination, making it impossible for many to remain in the country.
  • One of the first acts of the new Commonwealth Government was the Immigration Restriction Act 1901, otherwise known as the White Australia policy, designed to restrict non-White settlement.
  • With the onset of the Great Depression, the Governor-General proclaimed the cessation of immigration until further notice, and the next group to arrive were 5000 Jewish refugee families from Germany in 1938.

Post-war Immigration to Australia[edit | edit source]

  • After World War II Australia launched a massive immigration program, believing that having narrowly avoided a Japanese invasion, Australia must "populate or perish". Hundreds of thousands of displaced Europeans migrated to Australia and over 1,000,000 British subjects immigrated under the Assisted Passage Migration Scheme.
  • In the 1970s, multiculturalism largely displaced cultural selectivity in immigration policy.

Ancestry in Census Records[edit | edit source]

At the 2016 census, there were 2,581,138 people living in New South Wales that were born overseas, accounting for 34.5% of the population. Only 45.4% of the population had both parents born in Australia. The most commonly nominated ancestries are listed here. Click on the blue link for a Wikipedia article giving historical details for that nationality.[4]


Country of Birth (2016 Census)

Birthplace ! Population
Australia 4,899,090
China 234,508
England 226,564
India 143,459
New Zealand 117,136
Philippines 86,749
Vietnam 84,130
Lebanon 57,381
South Korea 51,816
Italy 49,476
South Africa 43,058
Hong Kong 42,347

For Further Reading[edit | edit source]

FamilySearch Library[edit | edit source]

Additional sources are listed in the FamilySearch Catalog:

References[edit | edit source]

  1. "Archive Resource Kit," New South Wales State Archives and Records, https://www.records.nsw.gov.au/archives/collections-and-research/guides-and-indexes/archives-resources-kit-ark, accessed 3 March 2022.
  2. "Passenger arrival records", National Archives of Australia, https://www.naa.gov.au/explore-collection/immigration-and-citizenship/passenger-arrival-records, accessed 6 March 2022.
  3. "Immigration to Australia", in Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immigration_to_Australia, accessed 5 March 2022.
  4. "New South Wales: Ancestry and immigration", in Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_South_Wales#Ancestry_and_immigration, accessed 5 March 2022.