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PRO FREE GRATIS AND FOR NOTHING "RECORDS INFORMATION" LEAFLET
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                      FAMILY FACT SHEET 10

             TRACING AN ANCESTOR WHO WAS AN EMIGRANT

There are a great many references in documents held at Kew to
individual emigrants, but there is no central index of names.
     The following classes of record are those most likely to be
useful. Choose the class you think might contain information on the
emigrant you are looking for and use Family Fact Sheet 1 to help
you get an exact document reference.
HO 11 Convict Transportation Registers
     1787 - 1871. These list the transport ships, giving the names
of all the convicts who sailed on each ship.

HO 10 Censuses of Convicts
     1788 - 1859. These list convicts and their families in New
South Wales and Tasmania. The census for 1828 is the most complete.
     Information Leaflet 94 will give you more information on
Australian convicts and suggest other classes of record to try.

BT 27 Passenger Lists, Outwards
     Lists earlier than 1890 no long~er survive. They give the
names of passengers leaving the United Kingdom by sea for
destinations outside Europe. The lists form a veryv large class and
there is no index of names. To use them you need to know the
approximate date of departure, the port, and if possible, the name
of the ship, because they are arranged year by year by the port of
departure under the name of each ship.

BT 32 Registers of Passenger Lists
     date from 1906 and under the name of each port list the ship
which sailed from there each month.

FO 610 Passport Registers
     1795 - 1898.  These contain entries in date order of the names
and countries of destination of all persons to whom passports were
issued.

FO 611 Index of names to passport registers, 1851-1862, 1874-1898.
     At this period it was not necessary to have a passport and
most people did not apply for one.

COLONIAL OFFICE RECORDS

These are not easy to use and you should ask for guidance at the
Reference Desk. The main correspondence class for each colony may
contain papers relating to individual settlers, and the following
are some examples:

CO48 Cape Colony, Original Correspondence,
     includes letters and papers about grants of land, 1814 - 1825.


CO 201 New South Wales, Original Correspondence,
      has a number of lists of convicts and free settlers, 1801 -
1821. There is an index to this class which is held at the
Reference Desk.

CO 384 Emigration Original Correspondence,
     contains many letters from settlers and people intending to
emigrate.
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