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Julius Otto<br>Gender: Female<br>Birth: Circa 1859<br>Arrival: Nov 10 1909 - New York, New York, United States<br>Departure: Bremen<br>Ship: George Washington<br>Age: 50<br>Last permanent residence: Kelmy, Russia<br>Nationality: Russia<br>Marital status: Married<br>Relative in country of origin: Emilia Hund (???)<br>Relative joined in the U.S.: Julius Otto (Husband)<br>Line: 26<br>Source information: Passenger andCrew Lists of Vessels Arriving at New York, New York, 1897-1957 (National Archives Microfilm Publication T715, roll 1371); Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, Record Group 85.
Early passenger lists were single page manifests and recorded minimal information about passengers. Over time forms were standardized and additional questions were added. Depending on the year, information recorded about a passenger may include name, age, gender, occupation, destination, and information regarding place of origin—e.g. native country, citizenship status, race, nationality, birthplace, or last residence. By 1907 passenger manifests contained 29 columns and were two-pages wide with left and right sides. Many of the passenger manifests span two pages, and a common omission for genealogists has been to locate the first page and miss the existence of the second. MyHeritage has solved this problem for the first time by stitching the double pages into single document images, ensuring that important information will not be missed.Two questions that were included on the manifest beginning in 1907 were: 1) name and address of nearest friend or relative in country whence the alien came; and 2) whether going to join a relative orfriend, and if so, what relative or friend, and his name complete address. MyHeritage has indexed the names and relationships of the individuals referenced in these two additional questions, making MyHeritage the only place where these additional names are searchable.Update June 2018: Added records primarily from crew lists, lists of detained alien passengers, U.S. citizen lists, and lists of aliens held for special inquiry.Records in this collection come from National Archives (NARA) microfilm collections M237 (<i>Passenger Lists of Vessels Arriving at New York, New York, 1820-1897</i>) and T715 (<i>Passenger and Crew Lists of Vessels Arriving at New York, New York, 1897-1957</i>). |