Crew Lists
- Crew Lists, 1805-1824.
- Transcriptions compiled by the Works Progress Administration of the sworn documents made out to the U.S. Bureau of the
Customs by masters of vessels entering and leaving the Port of New Orleans. mf LN59
Note: Transcriptions of additional crew lists (1803-1808) can be found on mf LN65 (labeled “Wreck Reports”). It is unclear
whether the 1805-1808 lists are copies of those on mf LN59. Some of the lists are interspersed between pages of passenger
arrivals. (Using this roll of film will require patience on the part of the researcher, as its organization is very puzzling.)
- Crew Lists of Vessels Arriving at New Orleans, 1910-1945. mf T939
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Other Immigration-Related Records
- New Orleans (La.) Office of the Mayor. Passenger Lists of Ships Arriving at New Orleans, 1822.
Finding Aid
- Individual manuscript lists of incoming passengers compiled by ship masters. These lists identify the name, port of origin, and
date of arrival of each ship, along with the master's name and signature. Generally, the lists give the name, age, place of birth,
occupation, place last from, nation owing allegiance to, and remarks (sometimes referring to means of subsistence) of each
passenger. Many of the lists also include a physical description of each passenger, including height and complexion. Lists
written in foreign languages generally are accompanied by manuscript English translations, possibly made at a later date by
archives workers. At least some of the individual passenger lists in this series also appear in the Customs lists now held by the
National Archives. This series also includes, however, lists from ships arriving from other U.S. ports, whereas the National
Archives lists represent vessels arriving only from foreign ports. mf AA822
- New Orleans Passenger Lists, 1851. (MS-151)
- Twelve folders of manuscript lists of passengers arriving at the port of New Orleans during April and May of 1851. Other copies
of most of these lists exist in the passenger list records filmed by the National Archives. Lists for two vessels are not included
on those microfilms: Schooner Union, from San Juan de Nicaragua (April 20, 1851) and Bark Cora, from Richmond (May 9,
1851). These lists may have been deposited in the Mayor's Office in accordance with some unidentified local ordinance. One
of them indeed is marked "Mayor's Office." mf LM650 1854 or mf AA253 1881
- Proofs of Citizenship used to Apply for Seamen’s Protection Certificates for the Port of New Orleans,
Louisiana, 1800, 1802, 1804-1807, 1890-1812, 1814-1816, 1818-1819, 1821, 1850-1851, 1855,
1857.
- Certificates issued by the Collector of Customs to merchant seamen and masters of merchant vessels engaged in foreign trade.
These certificates were a direct response to the detention and impressments of American seamen by officials of the government
of Great Britain. Generally, the records give name, age, place of birth, place of residence at time of issuance, height, hair and
eye color, and complexion. mf M1826
- Wreck Reports Taken from the U.S. Bureau of the Customs Files, 1873-1924.
- Transcripts compiled by the Works Progress Administration from records originally housed in the Custom House in New
Orleans. The records give name of vessel, master, owner, the vessels’ planned route “from and to,” date and time of the wreck,
location of the wreck, and remarks (briefly describing what happened to the vessel, passengers, cargo, etc.) Names of
passengers aboard the vessel are not given. mf LN65
Note: The organization of this roll of microfilm is chaotic. Apparently, pages of transcriptions of wreck reports were bound
into a volume containing passenger arrivals and crew lists. Thus, pages of the wreck reports are interspersed between pages of
those other records. Patience is advised.
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