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Ancestry.com - Hamburg Passenger Lists, 1850-1934 / Hamburger Passagierlisten, 1850-1934
Searchable indexes; database results and some digitized images available with fee-based subscription. Database includes images of all the passenger lists digitized from microfilm in partnership with the Hamburg State Archive. Also includes a partial index, covering the years 1890-1913, created by the archive. Original data: Staatsarchiv Hamburg, Bestand: 373-7 I, VIII (Auswanderungsamt I). Mikrofilmrollen K 1701 - K 2008, S 17363 - S 17383, 13116 - 13183.
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Ancestry.com - Hamburg Passenger Lists, Handwritten Indexes, 1855-1934 $
Original source: Staatsarchiv Hamburg, Bestand: 373-7 I, VIII (Auswanderungsamt I). Mikrofilmrollen K 1871 - K 1962, S 17363 - S 17383, 13174 - 13183. Ancestry.com has searchable indexes; database results and some digitized images are available with a fee-based subscription. Free articles and helpful research materials.
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BallinStadt - The Emigration Museum Hamburg
Searchable database extracted from the Hamburg Passenger Lists for selected years. A major port of embarkation for Eastern Europeans.
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Deutsche Auswanderer-Datenbank / German Emigrants Database
The database contains information about people who left Europe for the United States of America primarily from German ports. The main sources of the data in the German Emigrants Database are the passenger manifests of the ships on which the emigrants traveled.
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FamilySearch - Auswandererlisten, 1850-1934
Title Also Known As: The Hamburg passenger lists.
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Legacy Family Tree Webinars - Emigration via Hamburg $
By Andrea Bentschneider. Legacy Family Tree Webinars are available with a monthly or annual webinar membership subscription.
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One-Step Webpages by Stephen P. Morse
Alternate search functions for many online databases. Includes tools for immigration, census, vital records, calendars, soundex, foreign alphabets, Jewish and Holocaust research.
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Using Hamburg Passenger Lists | ProGenealogists - Germany
Extremely helpful article by Gary T. Horlacher.
[The original link is broken. This link points to an archived copy on the Wayback Machine]