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Canada | U.S.A.
| British | Australia
Pledging Allegiance:
Naturalization records
Naturalization is the process by which an alien (foreign-born resident)
becomes an citizen of another country. Such papers can be an important source of information regarding
the immigrant's place of origin, his or her original name, former residence, and date of arrival in the
new country.
Canada. Immigrants to Canada have never been required to apply for citizenship.
Until 1947, settlers from Great Britain were considered citizens of Canada and did not have to naturalize.
Of those who applied, some did not complete the process. Evidence that the immigrant did complete it can
be found in censuses, court minutes, homestead records, passports, voting registers and military papers.
Citizenship information is reported in Canadian censuses beginning in 1901.
Prior to 1867, when Canada became a nation, naturalization was completed in accordance with the laws of
the provinces or with British law. Between 1763 and 1947, non-alien residents of Canada were considered
British subjects. Settlers from England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales did not have to naturalize in Canada.
Prior to War of 1812 Some colonies had laws that required aliens to declare the length of their
residence and the nature of their business. Some immigrants had to take loyalty oaths when applying for
land grants and sometimes these records can be found with land records.
After War of 1812 In New Brunswick, certificates of naturalization date from 1817, but in Upper
Canada (Ontario) the law did not take effect until 1828. Laws for the other provinces were enacted later.
After 1867 Most naturalization was a federal process, although provinces retained some jurisdiction
over immigrants. Since 1867 certificates of naturalization normally were granted by the office of the
Secretary of State for Canada. Petitions for citizenship were received by judicial courts, and they were
then forwarded to that office for approval. Certificates of naturalization were returned to the courts,
and then given to the applicants after they took an oath of citizenship.
In 1947 Canadian citizenship was established separate from British. The Family History Library has microfilm
copies of many, but not all, Canadian naturalization papers and the National Archives of Canada in Ottawa
has microfilm copies of naturalization papers for Upper Canada (Ontario), 1828-1850. The latter are available
through interlibrary loan system to public libraries. Many Ontario and Quebec records appear to have been
lost, especially for the years 1850-1865. Records made for all of Canada by the Department of the Secretary
of State between 1865 and 1917 were destroyed. However, there is an index with information such as name,
residence and court of certification at:
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Records Control Citizenship Branch
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Department of the Secretary of State
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P.O. Box 7000 Sydney, NS,
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Canada B1P 6G5
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Border crossings from the United States to Canada or from Canada to the United States are and were fairly
common. The official recording of those who crossed overland from the United States to Canada began in
1908. Border crossing for the time period 1908 to 1918 have been microfilmed. These records are available
at:
National Archives of Canada.
The National Archives of Canada
395 Wellington Street
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1A 0N3
In order to request the microfilms, you must first know what films you want to use. To do this, access
a finding aid entitled Ships' Passenger Lists and Border Entry Lists in PAC, RG 76 (Records of
the Immigration Branch): Microfilm Finding Aid (Ottawa: Federal Archives Division, Public Archives of
Canada, 1986). You can request via interlibrary loan through your public library up to three microfilms
at any given time. However, these records are not indexed by name, so in order to locate your ancestor
you will need to know when he crossed over into Canada and have an idea of what border entry point he
went through.
Under a U. S.-Canada agreement in 1894, immigrants destined to the U. S. were inspected and
recorded by American immigrant inspectors at Canadian ports of entry. Until 1917 records of all entries
at all Canadian ports Atlantic and Pacific were filed in Montreal, and are known as the
Canadian
Border Crossing Records - St. Albans Lists. After
1917, entries at land border ports west of the Montana/North Dakota state line were filed in Seattle,
Washington, USA.
United States. In the U. S. naturalization is a voluntary act;
naturalization is not required has never been required. Of the foreign-born persons listed on the
1890 through 1930 censuses, 25 percent had not become naturalized or filed their "first papers."
However, if your ancestor applied for U. S. citizenship those papers might reveal some important
information. These records are, in many instances, much more valuable genealogically than
ship passenger lists.
The Courts
The first naturalization law was passed by U. S. Congress in 1790
and through much of the 20th century, an alien could become naturalized in any court of record. People
usually went to the court most convenient to them, which usually was a county court. While the names and
types of courts vary through the years, they may include the county, supreme, circuit, district, equity,
chancery, probate, or common pleas court. Most researchers will find that their ancestors became naturalized
in one of these courts. A few State supreme courts also naturalized aliens, such as the supreme courts
of Indiana, Idaho, Iowa, Maine, New Jersey, and South Dakota. Aliens who lived in large urban areas sometimes
became naturalized in a federal court, such as a U. S. district court or U. S. circuit court.
As
a general rule, naturalization was a two-step process that took a minimum of five years. After residing
in the United States for two years, an alien could file a "declaration of intent" (so-called
"first papers") to become a citizen. After three additional years, the alien could "petition
for naturalization." After the petition was granted, a certificate of citizenship then was issued.
These two steps did not have to take place in the same court. As a general rule, the DI (Declaration of
Intent) generally contains more genealogically useful information than the Petition, but a search for
both should be conducted. Sometimes declarations include the alien's month and year (or possibly the exact
date) of immigration into the United States and even the name of
ship.
Exceptions
Derivative citizenship was granted to wives and minor children
of naturalized men. From 1790 to 1922, wives of
naturalized men automatically became citizens. An alien woman who married a U. S. citizen automatically
became a citizen. (Conversely, an American woman who married an alien lost her U. S. citizenship,
even if she never left the United States.) From 1790 to 1940 children
under the age of 21 automatically
became naturalized citizens upon the naturalization of their father. Unfortunately, however,
names and biographical information about wives and children are rarely included in declarations or petitions
filed before September 1906. From 1824 to 1906, minor aliens who
had lived in the United States five years before their 23rd birthday could file both their declarations
and petitions at the same time.
Special consideration was given to veterans. An 1862 law allowed honorably discharged Army veterans of
any war to petition for naturalization without previously having filed a declaration of intent
after only one year of residence in the United States. If your ancestor filed for a Homestead claim
under the Homestead Act of 1862, or applied for a passport, the application for either may give the name
of the court where the naturalization took place.
An
1894 law extended the same no-previous-declaration privilege to honorably discharged five-year veterans
of the Navy or Marine Corps. Under an act in 1918 aliens serving in the U. S. armed forces during
World War I were allowed to file a petition for naturalization without making a declaration of intent
or proving 5 years' residence. More than 192,000 aliens were naturalized between May 9, 1918, and June
30, 1919. Other laws later enacted continued various preferential treatment provisions for veterans.
Canada | U.S.A.
| British | Australia
Where to find the records
Naturalization
records from county courts may still be at the county court, or in a county or State archives, or at a
regional archives. Some of these records or indexes have been published.
As a general rule, the National Archives does not have naturalization records created in state or local
courts. However, some county court naturalization records have been donated to the National Archives.
If the naturalization took place in a federal court, naturalization indexes, declarations of intent, and
petitions will usually be in the National Archives serving the state in which the federal court is located.
Some of these indexes regional records services
facility and records have been microfilmed.
Not
all of our immigrant ancestors became U. S. citizens. Some filed the first papers, but never completed
the process. Before starting the search for naturalization records, American researchers should trace
their ancestors through the federal censuses. The 1930, 1920, 1910, 1900, and 1870 censuses all have columns
pertaining to citizenship. While the information is not always 100 percent correct, it does provide clues.
Under the question of whether or not an individual was naturalized, you are likely to see one of three
abbreviations:
AL
this abbreviation was used to signify that the individual was still an alien (was not naturalized
and had not begun the naturalization process).
PA this abbreviation was used to signify that the individual had gone through the declaration of
intent and had filed his "first" papers.
NA this abbreviation was used to signify that the individual had completed the naturalization process
and was a naturalized citizen.
Three important time frames pertaining
to American naturalization records:
- Colonial period. If your ancestors arrived prior to the Revolutionary
War non-British ancestors may have taken an oath of allegiance in the colony in which they resided. Many
of these records have been published.
- Revolutionary War to 1906. Before 1802, the records are limited in
value and availability. After 1802 they are more complete, but could have been filed in any federal, state
or local court. Check first in court records in the county or counties where your ancestor resided. People
normally did not go great distances to file the papers.
- After Sept. 27, 1906. While naturalization proceedings could have
taken place in any U. S. District Court, or in any court of record, all proceedings were required
to be recorded by the clerk of the court and a copy sent to a central office maintained by
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (formerly the INS), 75 Lower Welden St, Saint Albans, Vermont 05479.
For pre-1906 naturalization records pinpoint the locations via census, land, tax records, and city directories
in which your male ancestor lived from the time of his arrival in the United States through to his naturalization.
Once you have plotted this, search each county courthouse for his naturalization papers. It is possible
that the records you seek may be available on microfilm through your local Family History Center. Or you
may need to actually contact the county about the records. Finally, it is always possible that your ancestor
went to federal court. In which case, the records you need may be housed at one of the branches of the
National Archives.
DO YOUR HOMEWORK
Some records have been transferred to regional branches
of the federal archives or may be found in state archives.
County court employees may tell you that their naturalization
records are at the National Archives or that their court never conducted naturalizations. Many current
employees are not genealogists and may not be familiar with the court's older records. It is up to you
to determine the location of older court records
Prior to the opening of Ellis Island in 1892, immigrants coming through the Port of New York City usually
went through Castle Garden. While there are documented customs lists or passenger lists for New York City
going back as far as 1820, Castle Garden was not opened until 1855. In the 40-year period from 1820 to
1860, according to The Source,
two-thirds of the 5.4 million immigrants to the United States passed through New York. Castle Garden was
an old fort and was located on the lower tip of Manhattan. By 1890 it was obvious that it was outgrowing
its capabilities as more and more immigrants flooded in. So, in 1892, Ellis Island was opened. There are
passenger lists for New York beginning in 1820 and going on up into the 20th century, but they are not
all indexed. There is a 50-year gap in the indexing of New York passenger lists for New York from 1846
to 1897.
Immigration Records at the National Archives
See Guide 15 for more on ship passenger lists.
Naturalization Records at the National Archives
Alien Records at the National Archives
Passport Applications at the National Archives
Passport applications can be an excellent source of genealogical information, especially about foreign-born
individuals. The National Archives and Records Administration has passport applications from October 1795-March
1925; the U. S. Department of State has
passport applications from April 1925 to the present.
Foreign travel in the 19th century was much more frequent than one might expect. Overseas travelers included
businessmen, the middle class, and naturalized
U. S. citizens who frequently returned to their homelands to visit relatives.
Although 95 percent of mid-19th century passport applicants were men, many women traveled overseas. If
the applicant was to be accompanied by his wife, children, servants, or other females under his protection,
their names, ages, and relationship to the applicant were stated on the passport application. One passport
was then issued to cover the whole group. Likewise, when children traveled abroad solely with their mother,
their names and ages were indicated on the mother's passport application.
Many U. S. residents traveled overseas without holding a U. S. passport because:
- Not Required. As a general rule, until 1941, U. S. citizens were
not required to have a passport for travel abroad except for particular periods during the Civil War and
World War I.
- Aliens Were Ineligible. As a general rule, the U. S. government
only issued passports to U. S. citizens, but aliens who had declared their intent to become a
naturalized citizen could, at certain times,
obtain a passport.
Passport applications for naturalized citizens may state the court and date of naturalization and the
date and ship upon which the applicant immigrated
to the United States. Evidence of the applicant's naturalization as a U. S. citizen may be detailed
or cursory. Photographs have been required with applications since December 21, 1914.
Passport applications (1795-March 1925) may be searched at the National
Archives in Washington, D.C.
Some National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) regional
facilities have selected microfilmed passport records.
Copies of passport applications (1795-March 1925) can be ordered by mail from National Archives and Records
Administration, Attention: Archives I Research Support Branch (NWCC1), 700 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington,
DC 20408-0001. You can also make an online request at http://www.archives.gov/contact/ and
then clicking on the links in the following order:
- "I have a question about research and records"
- "People & Groups"
- "State Department Files"
- Select "Passport applications" from the drop-down box, and hit "Go".
- Then click on the "Reference Request" link in the upper right.
Your letter or email
must include: your name and mailing (postal) address; the passport applicant's name, year of birth, place
of residence at the time the application was made, and the approximate year of travel.
British Denization
Some records of immigrants to Great Britain are in the Public Records
Office and are described in PRO Records Information leaflets (see below). There are records of aliens
becoming British subjects, by the processes of denization or naturalization.
A person who was a subject of the British Crown was known as a denizen, whether he obtained that status
by birth or by grant. Aliens in Britain (particularly merchants) were subject to various disabilities,
so denization was advantageous and could be granted by the Crown (by Royal Charter or by Letters Patent
under the Great Seal). According to Mark D. Herber in Ancestral Trails, from the 16th century
the rights of a denizen could also be granted by a private act of Parliament, but these parliamentary
grants became known as naturalization because the person was then deemed to have always been a subject
of the Crown.
Parliamentary naturalization required the applicant to receive the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper and
take oaths of supremacy and allegiance. Some people (for example Jews and Catholics) were therefore unable
to use this process and instead relied on the denization procedure until the requirements for the oaths
were withdrawn in the 19th century. A third procedure was introduced in 1844 when the Home Secretary was
empowered to grant naturalization to aliens by a certificate. Letters Patent of denization were published
in the London Gazette and enrolled on the Patent Rolls. The Huguenot Society has published indexes
to letters of denization and acts of naturalization from 1509 to 1800.
Under the Aliens Act 1792 all foreigners arriving in England were suppose to register with a Justice of
Peace, providing their name, rank, address and occupation. Such surviving registration records can be
found at the County Registry Offices.
Public Record Office's Family
History publications are available for a nominal price. Check the various ones available by searching
via the radio button at the PRO's bookstore.
Australian Denization
Immigrants
to Australia who were not British subjects could elect to apply to the government for naturalization,
also called denization. It was not compulsory. Those immigrants who were officially naturalized received
certain rights and privileges, one of which that they were entitled to own land. The first naturalizations
in Australia occurred in New South Wales in 1825. A previous residence in the colony of five years was
required.
Naturalization
became a federal government responsibility in 1903 and all "Applicants Files and Enrolled Certificates
for naturalizations in all states and territories in Australia from 1904 are held by the AACT [Australian
Archives, PO Box 447, Belconnen, ACT 26216], with an index to these maintained by the DOI [Department
of Immigration & Ethnic Affairs, Central Administration, Benjamin Offices, Chan St., Belconnen, ACT
2617].
There
is an alphabetical surname "Index to Naturalizations, 1849-1903" at the AONSW [Archives Office
of New South Wales, 2 Glove St., Sydney, NSW 2000] that gives a register number and page reference for
each person listed.
Canada | U.S.A.
| British| Australia

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Suggested Reading
& References |
Family
History Library. Research Outline: Canada. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints:
Salt Lake City, Utah, 1993.
Greenwood, Val D. The Researcher's Guide
to American Genealogy (2nd edition). Baltimore, Maryland.: Genealogical
Publishing Co., Inc., 1990.
Hall, Nick Vine. Tracing Your Family History
in Australia: A Guide to Sources. Adelaide, Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, New York, London,
Auckland: Rigby Publishers, 1985.
Herber, Mark D. Ancestral Trails: The Complete
Guide to British Genealogy and Family History. Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical
Publishing Co., Inc., 1998.
Meade, Bishop William. Old Churches, Ministers,
and Families of Virginia Reprinted with Digested Index and Genealogical Guide Compiled by Jennings Cropper
Wise (two volumes). Originally published: Philadelphia, 1857. Reprinted: Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical
Publishing Co., Inc., 1966, 1978, 1995.
National Archives and Records Administration.
Guide to Genealogical Research in the National Archives. Washington, D.C. (Revised 1985.) Available
for purchase.
National Archives and Records Administration.
Microfilm Resources for Research: A Comprehensive Catalog of National Archives Microfilm Publications.
Washington, D.C., 1996. Available online
or for purchase.
Newman, John J., American Naturalization
Processes and Procedures, 1790-1985. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society, 1985.
Potter, Dorothy Williams.Passports of Southeastern
Pioneers 1770-1823: Indian, Spanish, and other Land Passports for Tennessee, Kentucky, Georgia, Mississippi,
Virginia, North and South Carolina. Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical
Publishing Co., Inc., 1982. [Chapter ISpanish Passports in the Mississippi Valley, British and
Spanish Passports in West Florida; Chapter IIWar (Indian Agencies) and State Department (Territorial
Agencies) Passports; Chapter IIIState Passports.]
Schaefer, Christine, Guide to Naturalization
Records of the United States. Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical
Publishing Co., Inc., 1997.
Scott, Kenneth and Kenn Stryker-Rodda. Denizations,
Naturalizations and Oaths of Allegiance in Colonial New York. Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical
Publishing Co., Inc., 1975. [IntroductionDenization and Naturalization; source references; alphabetical
listing of Denizations and Licenses (75 pp.); Oaths of Allegiance; Index of Persons Incidentally mentioned
and in the Oaths of Allegiance]
Szucs, Loretto Dennis. They Became Americans:
Finding Naturalization Records and Ethnic Origins. Salt Lake City, Utah. Ancestry,
Inc., 1997.
Szucs, Loretto Dennis and Sandra Hargreaves Luebking.
The Archive, A Guide to the National Archives Field Branches. Salt Lake City, Utah. Ancestry,
Inc., 1988.
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