Table Of ContentGERMANS
O
AMERICA
Volume 45
November 1882—April 1883
Other Germans to America Publications available from Scholarly
Resources (Series ISBN 0-8420-2279-1)
Volume 1 Jan. 2, 1850-May24, 1851 (0-8420-2315-1)
Volume 2 May 24, 1851^June5, 1852 (0-8420-2316-X)
Volume 3 June 5, 1852-Sept. 21, 1852 (0-8420-2317-8)
Volume 4 Sept. 22, 1852-May28, 1853 (0-8420-2318-6)
Volume 5 May 28, 1853-Oct. 24, 1853 (0-8420-2319-4)
Volume 6 Oct. 24, 1853-May4, 1854 (0-8420-2320-8)
Volume 7 May 5, 1854-Aug. 4, 1854 (0-8420-2321-6)
Volume 8 Aug. 4, 1854-Dec. 11, 1854 (0-8420-2322-4)
Volume 9 Dec. 12, 1854-Dec. 31, 1855 (0-8420-2323-2)
Volume 10 Jan. 3, 1856-Apr. 27, 1857 (0-8420-2355-0)
Volume 11 Apr. 27, 1857-Nov. 30, 1857 (0-8420-2356-9)
Volume 12 Nov. 2, 1857-July29, 1859 (0-8420-2357-7)
Volume 13 Aug. 1, 1859-Dec. 31, 1860 (0-8420-2358-5)
Volume 14 Jan. 2, 1861-May 29, 1863 (0-8420-2359-3)
Volume 15 Junel, 1863-Oct. 31, 1864 (0-8420-2360-7)
Volume 16 Nov. 1, 1864-Nov. 2, 1865 (0-8420-2361-5)
Volume 17 Nov. 4, 1865-June12, 1866 (0-8420-2384-4)
Volume 18 June 13, 1866-Dec. 27, 1866 (0-8420-2385-2)
Volume 19 Jan. 2, 1867-Aug. 15, 1867 (0-8420-2386-0)
Volume 20 Aug. 19, 1867-May14, 1868 (0-8420-2387-9)
Volume 21 May 15, 1868-Sept. 29, 1868 (0-8420-2388-7)
Volume 22 Oct. 2, 1868-May31, 1869 (0-8420-2389-5)
Volume 23 Junel, 1869-Dec. 31,1869 (0-8420-2390-9)
Volume 24 Jan. 3, 1870-Dec. 31, 1870 (0-8420-2401-8)
Volume 25 Jan. 2, 1871-Sept. 30, 1871 (0-8420-2402-6)
Volume 26 Oct. 2, 1871-Apr. 30, 1872 (0-8420-2403-4)
Volume 27 May 2, 1872-July31, 1872 (0-8420-2404-2)
Volume 28 Aug. 1, 1872-Dec. 31, 1872 (0-8420-2405-0)
Volume 29 Jan. 2, 1873-May31, 1873 (0-8420-2406-9)
Volume 30 June 2, 1873-Nov. 28, 1873 (0-8420-2407-7)
Volume 31 Dec. 1, 1873-Dec. 29, 1874 (0-8420-2408-5)
Volume 32 Jan. 4, 1875-Sept. 30, 1876 (0-8420-2409-3)
Volume 33 Oct. 2, 1876-Sept. 30, 1878 (0-8420-2410-7)
Volume 34 Oct. 1, 1878-Dec. 31, 1879 (0-8420-2411-5)
Volume 35 Jan. 2, 1880^June 30, 1880 (0-8420-2412-3)
Volume 36 Julyl, 1880-Nov. 29, 1880 (0-8420-2501-4)
Volume 37 Dec. 1, 1880-Apr. 14, 1881 (0-8420-2502-2)
Volume 38 Apr. 16, 1881-May 31, 1881 (0-8420-2503-0)
Volume 39 Junel, 1881-Aug. 6, 1881 (0-8420-2504-9)
Volume 40 Aug. 8, 1881-Oct. 31, 1881 (0-8420-2505-7)
Volume 41 Nov. 1, 1881-Mar. 27, 1882 (0-8420-2506-5)
Volume 42 Mar. 28, 1882-May18, 1882 (0-8420-2507-3)
Volume 43 May 19, 1882-Aug. 9, 1882 (0-8420-2508-1)
Volume 44 Aug. 10, 1882-Nov. 15, 1882 (0-8420-2509-X)
Volume 45 Nov. 16, 1882-Apr. 19, 1883 (0-8420-2510-3)
germans
O
AMERICA
Lists of Passengers Arriving
at U.S. Ports
Volume 45
November 1882—April 1883
Edited by
Ira A.  Glazier
and
R William Filby
SRScholarly Resources Inc.
WWilinlminigntgotno.n D. eDloealawwaarree
The  paper  used in this  publication  meets the  minimum
requirements  of  the  American  National  Standard  for
permanence of paper for printed library materials,  Z39.48,
1984.
©1995 by Scholarly Resources Inc.
All rights reserved
First printed 1995
Printed and bound in the United States of America
Scholarly Resources Inc.
104 Greenhill Avenue
Wilmington,  Delaware  19805-1897
Series  ISBN  0-8420-2279-1
Library  of  Congress  Cataloging-in-Publication
Data
Germans to America: lists of passengers arriving at U.S.
ports / edited by Ira A. Glazier, P. William Filby
p.  cm.
Includes  indexes.
ISBN 0-8420-2315-1 (v. 1)
1.  German Americans—Genealogy. 2. Ships—
United States—Passenger lists. 3. United States—
Emigration and immigration.  4. Immigrants—United
States—Registers. 5. Germany—Emigration and
immigration.  I. Glazier, Ira A. II. Filby, P. William, 1911-
E184.G3G38 1988
929'.3'08931-dc19  87-35442
CIP
CONTENTS
Foreword by P. William Filby  vii
Introduction by Ira A. Glazier  ix
Lists of Codes
Occupations  xvii
Provinces or Countries  xxiii
Villages  xxv
Destinations  xlvii
Key  li
Passenger Lists  1
Index  427
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FOREWORD
As a speaker at many major genealogical
conferences,  I am  aware  of the  enormous interest  in
German immigration,  particularly  after 1840. Most of the
questions  at  these  conferences  and  in  my
correspondence  concern  the  search  for  German
immigrants.  About  four  million  Germans  came  to  the
United States between 1850 and 1893. Although they are
recorded  in the  National  Archives, their  names  remain
unindexed  and  therefore  unfindable  unless  the
researcher  knows the ship  on which the  person  arrived
and the exact date of arrival. What has been needed is a
list  of  immigrants,  arranged first  by ship  at the  port of
debarkation and then indexed by family name.
The  original  passenger  lists for  1850 through  1893,
prepared by shipping agents and ships' officers, are now
deposited  at  the  Temple-Balch  Institute's  Center  for
Immigration Research in Philadelphia  and are reproduced
chronologically  in these volumes  by date  of each ship's
arrival.  This  arrangement will  greatly  aid  genealogical
researchers  as  will  the  volume-by-volume  index  of
passenger surnames.
Why was there such a great mass of people wishing to
quit  their  homeland  for  the  unknown  United  States?
Emigration  from  Germany was  spurred  by a variety of
factors,  including  crop  failures,  a  lack  of  industrial
employment,  overpopulation,  social  discontent  and
political repression and upheaval, as well as the lure of
cheap land and the chance to make a fresh start in a new
country. The lists, starting  from 1850,  were chosen  for
publication  because  that  year  begins  a  period  when
immigration to the United States was swelling, touched off
by  the  departure  of  political  refugees,  liberals,  and
intellectuals and by stories about a better life sent back by
those  who  had  emigrated  previously.  Most  of  the
VU
immigrants found the trip worthwhile, and few returned to
Germany.
The  two  main  German  ports  of  embarkation  were
Bremen and Hamburg, where German officials  prepared
lists of emigrants.  For various reasons the Bremen lists
have been destroyed or otherwise made unavailable, but,
since the lists reproduced here record arrivals  in all U.S.
ports, the  loss of the  Bremen lists does  not present  as
serious a problem as  it  might  be otherwise. The great
majority of immigrants came to New York, but many went
to New Orleans and Baltimore, with fewer going to Boston
and Philadelphia.
P. William Filby
Former director, Maryland Historical Society
Fellow of the Society of Genealogists,  London
Fellow of the National Genealogical Society
Vlll
INTRODUCTION
Germans to America provides both the historian and
the genealogist with an extensive data base of German
immigrants who came  to the  United States  from 1850
through  1893.  This  data base  derives from the  original
ship manifest schedules, currently housed at the Temple-
Balch Institute's  Center for Immigration Research. These
schedules were filed by all vessels entering U.S. ports in
accordance with the act of Congress of 1819.
The passenger lists reproduced in these volumes are
arranged in chronological order by date of arrival.  In the
1850-1855 volumes, these lists contain a minimum of 80
percent  German  surnames  and  are  published  in  their
entirety. Starting in 1856 the selection criterion changes to
include  all ships with German passengers, regardless of
the percentage. Unlike the previous volumes, only those
calling  themselves  Germans  are  now  listed;  all  other
passenger  names  are  deleted.  It should  be  noted that
after  1856 these  German  immigrants  include  those
coming not only from German states or territories but also
from  countries  such  as  France,  Switzerland,  or
Luxemburg.
According to the  act of 1819,  lists  of all passengers
were to be delivered upon arrival to the local collector of
customs, who made copies that were then transmitted to
the  secretary  of  state  and  subsequently  reported  to
Congress.1 The secretary of state also published quarterly
and annual  summaries under the title of Statement  of
the Number and Description of Passengers Arriving in
the United States between 1820 and 1870. These reports
were  later  published  by the  Bureau of  Statistics of the
Treasury Department from 1867 to 1895 and by the Office
of  Immigration,  now the  Immigration  and  Naturalization
Service, after 1895.
IX