How to Find the Records
Online Resources
- Irish Emigrants in North America, 1775-1825 at Ancestry, ($), index and images
- Caribbean, English Settlers in Barbados, 1637-1800 at Ancestry, ($), index and images
- The Original Scots Colonists of Early America. Caribbean Supplement 1611-1707 at Ancestry, ($), index and images
- The Original Scots Colonists of Early America. Supplement 1607-1707 at Ancestry, ($), index and images
- The Original Scots Colonists of Early America, 1612-1783 at Ancestry, ($), index and images
- Former British Colonial Dependencies, Slave Registers, 1813-1834 at Ancestry, ($), index and images
- Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database
- The Original Lists of Persons of Quality: Emigrants; Religious Exiles; Political Rebels; Serving Men Sold for a Term of Years; Apprentices; Children Stolen; Maidens Pressed; and Others Who Went from Great Britain to the American Plantations, 1600-1700, with Their Ages, the Localities Where They Formerly Lived in the Mother Country, the Names of the Ships in which They Embarked, and Other Interesting Particulars; from MSS. Preserved in the State Paper Department of Her Majesty's Public Record Office, England, images Indexed at Ancestry ($)
- Omitted Chapters from Hotten's Original Lists of Persons of Quality ... and Others Who Went from Great Britain to the American Plantations, 1600-1700Ancestry at Ancestry, ($), index and images.
- Immigrant Servants Database
- Registers of Servants Sent to Foreign Plantations, 1654 - 1686, index
- "List of tickets granted to people leaving the island in 1679" in "The dispatches of Governor, Sir Jonathan Atkins, relating to the population of the island of Barbados, A.D. 1679-1680"
- List of persons seeking passports to travel from New York to Barbados, 1812
- Carolina - The Barbadian Settlers, 1670 Ships lists: Carolina - Port Royal and the Three Brothers
Caribbean Emigrants
Many Barbados indentured servants, after failing to secure land following their labor terms, left the island for Jamaica, see:
- Williams, Joseph J. Whence the "Black Irish" of Jamaica? New York, N.Y.: Dial Press, 1932. FHL Collection 972.92 W2w
Central American Emigrants
More Barbadians were employed by the Isthmian Canal Commission of the United States in building the Panama Canal than any other nationality. Records of two-year work indentures survive documenting thousands of these short-term migrants. Many Barbadians also participated in the French failed attempt to build the canal in the 1880s, but fewer records survive.[1]
References
- ↑ Herbert Hutchinson, "Commemorating the Barbadians Who Excavated the Panama Canal (1904-1914)," The Journal of the Barbados Museum & Historical Society, Vol. 54 (2008): 223-248.