British Bark "Tay"
August 1840 passenger list, Greenock, Scotland to New
York, New York. Our ancestor Peter Ralston and family
is among those listed.
Bark "Charlotte
Harrison" July 1850 passenger list,
Greenock, Scotland to New York, New York. Our
ancestor Jean Ralston and family is among those
listed.
British Barque
"Gleaner" July 1842 passenger list,
arrived at New York on 5 July 1842, 33 days from
Campbeltown, Argyll, Scotland.
British Ship "Sarah"
July 1850 passenger list, arrived at New York on 18
July 1850, 38 days from Glasgow.
Brig "Czar" June 23,
1841 passenger list, from Greenock.
List of immigrant ship passengers
who settled in Argyle, Illinois.
"Diana" from Greenock
to Wilmington, North Carolina with Kintyre, Scotland
natives in September 1774.
"Ulysses" and
"Diana", and
"Jupiter", Emigrants from Scotland to
North Carolina, 1774-1775.
Ship "Wilmington" July
1803, passengers intending to travel from Belfast to
New York. John Cross, among those listed, may be our
ancestor.
Ship "Edinburgh"
passenger lists. Voyages from Campbeltown, Scotland
to Cape Fear, North Carolina in 1770 and to Island of
St. Johns (Prince Edward Island) in 1771.
"Champion" and
"Constitution" voyages, 1864. From New
York to Panama Isthmus and on to San Francisco,
California.
Scot & Irish Passenger
Lists from Mailing List:
Scotch-irish-l@rootsweb.com.
Seventy One ships are listed altogether!
"New York", U.S. Mail
Steamer, June 6, 1914, Southampton to New York via
Cherbourg
The
Ships List, another resource for immigrant
information.
Emigration / Ship Lists and
Resources, another site with ship passenger
lists.
"English-America",
another site with ship passenger lists.
Lou and Jan Alfano's
Immigrant Ship Descriptions page.
Help with Finding
Passenger Lists, 1820-1940.
Passenger Lists for Immigrant
Ships to
New Zealand by Denise & Peter.
S.S. England. I have the Customs
Passenger List scanned and posted on my web site for
the voyage dated May 11, 1866. In the spring of 1866,
the S.S. England, a steamship from Liverpool,
England, was bound for New York with over 1,200
passengers. Hundreds died from an outbreak of
cholera. Joe Miler