Some of you may remember when Ancestry.ca became a partner with the Library and Archives Canada back in 2007, and at the time, they said they would tackle the Canadian Passenger Lists first.
They have done that over the past two years, and the last bit of the puzzle—the Ocean Arrivals (1919-1924)—have now been added to the database.
The Ocean Arrivals is Form 30A, which took the place of those huge passenger lists that we were in various states of "hard-to-use" microfilm at the LAC. And now, they are all online at http://landing.ancestry.ca/intl/canada/passenger/lists.aspx.
So I took a look at the Ocean Arrivals.
First of all, they are individual passenger lists rather than ships' manifests, as the passenger lists were before 1919.
Since they were individual passenger manifests, they are in a semi-alphabteical order, and the following information is included on the form -
- the name of the ship
- the name of port of departure. The most popular ports of departure were Liverpool, England; London, England; Glasgow, Scotland; Antwerp, Belgium; and Southampton, England.
- arrival date in Canada
- the name of port of arrival in Canada. The five most popular ports were Quebec City, Quebec; Saint John, New Brunswick; Halifax, Nova Scotia; Vancouver, British COlumbia; and Victoria, British Columbia
- the name of the passenger
- his or her age at the time of arrival
- gender
- name of the birthplace
- marital status
- present occupation
- intended occupation
- race
- citizenship
- religion
- object of going to Canada
- whether intend to live permanently in Canada
- destination
- name of the nearest relative in the country from which they came
- passport information
These original records are from the Library and Archives Canada, where the microfilm is kept.
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