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Finding alternate indexes or record sets for passenger lists / ship manifests from Germany?

Genealogy & Family History Asked by Jan Murphy on January 21, 2021

I’m researching German immigrants to the USA. Some of their records can be found in NARA’s Access to Archival Databases, in this collection:

Data Files Relating to the Immigration of Germans to the United
States, created, ca. 1977 – 2002, documenting the period 1850 – 1897 –
Collection CIR

Part of: Collection CIR: Records of the Center for Immigration
Research

Function and Use: The Center for Immigration Research
created this series to promote access to information about German
immigrants to the United States. The information was extracted from
ship passenger lists in the records of the U.S. Customs Service (NARA
Record Group 36).

Scope & Content Note: This series consists of
records of 4,048,907 passengers who arrived at the United States
between 1850 through 1897; about 90 percent identified their country
of origin or nationality as Germany or a "German" state, city, or
region.

When I find results from this finding aid, I go to Ancestry or the Castle Garden site and try to access the original images there. Often the index at Ancestry is very different from the index generated by CIR.

I am trying to find alternate records, indexes, and images for this passenger manifest:

(manifest number) 36703 (ship) NECKAR (departure port) BREMEN & SOUTHAMPTON (arrival date) 06/26/1882 [arriving port of New York]

Steve Morse’s One-Step Web page for New York arrivals identifies the microfilm as follows:

(Series) M237 (Roll) 454 (Year) 1882 (Month) June (Day) 26 (Frame)
151 (ship) neckar (FHL roll) 1027024

Ancestry’s database and images of the microfilm from NARA are published as Passenger Lists, 1820-1957 [database on-line].

This voyage is too early for the Bremen Passenger Lists project sponsored by the Bremen Chamber of Commerce and the Bremen Staatsarchiv. The German passenger manifest of this voyage has probably been destroyed. Has anyone in Germany indexed the US copies of the passenger lists?

This voyage is also too early to be included in the Board of Trade records for outbound voyages (BT27), Passenger Lists Leaving UK 1890-1960 at Find My Past. Do any outbound passenger lists exist for ships leaving the UK earlier than 1890?


It is not clear to me how much the index at CastleGarden.org differs from the databases at NARA, or how much NARA’s databases differ from the CD-ROMs of Germans to America.

The FamilySearch Collection United States Germans to America Index, 1850-1897 is described as follows:

Data files relating to the immigration of Germans to the United States
for arrivals 1850-1897. Created by the Balch Institute for Ethnic
Studies, Center for Immigration Research. In August of 2013, the
National Archives replaced the ARC – Archival Research Catalog – with
the OPA – Online Public Access. ARC identifiers will still work to
access the collections in OPA.

This suggests it is the same data that was published by NARA. (see update about the OPA below the dividing line)

The book series Germans to America has known issues — links to reviews are below:

I am indebted to GenWiki’s page Germans to America for the links to the above reviews.

One of the volumes of Series II was reviewed by Giles R. Hoyt (Max Kade German-American Center, IUPUI) and spot-checks similar to those made by Prof. Dr. Holtmann and Michael Palmer revealed the same kind of errors.

Whatever the differences may be between NARA’s online version and the book or CD-ROMs, it seems likely that the pitfalls may apply to all three — which is why I was hoping for lists produced in England or Germany that might have been independently created and indexed.

For example, someone whose research subject left Hamburg in 1850 could consult Clifford Neal Smith’s Reconstructed Passenger Lists for 1850: Hamburg to Australia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, and the United States, Parts 1, 2, 3, & 4:

Working from microfilm copies of the Hamburg police lists, Clifford
Neal Smith has here reconstructed the identities of about 7,000
Hamburg passengers whose names were found among 60 separate lists for
the year 1850. For each entry the compiler provides the following
information: passenger’s surname, given name, occupation, birthplace,
and reference number from the police register.

The U.S. Customs Service records, which are the only surviving immigration records for the port of New York before 1892, have very limited information compared to the passenger lists from other ports (or from post-1892 New York arrival records).

Also, the handwriting on the extant customs list is not very good. If I could find any overlapping segment of the passenger list for this voyage, comparing them would help decipher the handwriting on the US Customs Service list.


As of 20 May 2015, the OPA (Online Public Access) at NARA has been replaced by a new catalog at http://www.archives.gov/research/catalog/ .

One Answer

According to Wikipedia, SS Neckar was operated by Norddeutscher Lloyd (NDL). An arrival from 1882 means that the ship was the first S/S Neckar, not the later one launched in 1901. Wikipedia describes it like this:

SS Neckar (1874), in service 1874–1896; scrapped at Genoa, 1896

Norway Heritage gives a build date of 1873 for the Neckar. In their 1882 fleet list for NDL, the Authorisation & Routes entry says:

Via Fredrikshavn or Hamburg and Bremen to New York or Baltimore, and via Hull or London and Southampton to New York

The arrival of interest on 26 June 1882 probably corresponds to this entry from the schedule on the Norway Heritage site:

1882 Bremen June 11 New York June 24 (no remarks)

Trond Austheim's page Arrivals reported in Norwegian newspapers February 1882 also on Norway Heritage, says "Passenger list is usually dated 1 - 2 days after arrival".

Looking at US Newspapers on the website Genealogy Bank confirms this. The Neckar's arrival on the 24th is mentioned in the shipping news published in the Sunday, June 25, 1882 issue of the Evansville Courier and Press (Evansville, Indiana), page 1, and the Monday, June 26, 1882 issue of the Cincinnati Daily Gazette (Cincinnati, Ohio), page: 2.

According to the Friday, June 9, 1882 issue of the New York Herald (New York, New York), and an ad published in the same newspaper on Wednesday, June 14, 1882, the Neckar was scheduled to depart for Bremen on June 28th. This would seem to confirm Norway Heritage's information that the NDL ships sailed either to New York City or to Baltimore, and not Bremen to New York to Baltimore to Bremen. (Later articles in the New York Herald indicate that the Neckar returned to Bremen by way of Brussels.)

Answered by Jan Murphy on January 21, 2021

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