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Ellis Island Records create links to millions of immigrant ancestors from all over the world. Use this website to learn about Ellis Island records, Ellis Island immigrants, museum and archive information, and tips for using immigration records for genealogy research. |
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| History of Ellis Island |
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The Port of New York has for centuries been the most used portal to the United States for immigrants from around the world. While there were many other important entries into the country, it is estimated that more than 100 million Americans are directly related to immigrants who passed through Ellis Island during its tenure as a federal immigration station. |
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TIMELINE |
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| pre1855- | Immigration is the responsibility of the state. | ||||
| 1855- | Castle Garden, NY is used for the influx of immigrants. | ||||
| 1890- | Castle Garden ceases processing immigrants. | ||||
| 1890- | The U.S. Government selects Ellis Island as the Federal Immigration Center for New York. | ||||
| 1892- | The Ellis Island Immigration Center opens. | ||||
| 1897- | Fire destroys the original buildings on Ellis Island. | ||||
| 1900- | Ellis Island Immigration Center re-opens, in the building that still exists to this day. | ||||
| 1924- | The National Origins Act dramatically reduces immigration flow. | ||||
| 1954- | Ellis Island Immigration Center closes. | ||||
| 1986- | Ellis Island's main building is restored. (The largest historic restoration in the country's history) | ||||
| 1990- | Ellis Island Immigration Museum opens | ||||
| 2001- | The American Family Immigration History Center launches the Ellis Island Database (EIDB) making some 22 million immigration records from 1892-1924 available for free searching at EllisIslandRecords.org. Click Here to access the world's largest online collection of historical records free for 14 days. |
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Prior to the opening of Ellis Island, immigrant processing was the responsibility of the state, and before 1855, there was no official center. In 1855, the State of New York began processing immigrants through the facilities at Castle Garden (previously known as Castle Clinton) in response to a massive influx of immigrants, many escaping famine in Ireland. This did not prove to be the best possible site, though, because as the new immigrants left the facilities, they were routinely exploited by con men, who sold them phony tickets to various destinations, took their money in exchange for non-existent jobs, or found other ways to part the unwary immigrant with his or her money. Castle Garden processed its last immigrant in April 1890, and after reviewing several possible sites, the United States government selected Ellis Island for the establishment of a new federal immigration center for New York. On the island, it would be easier to screen and protect the new immigrants before they proceeded out onto the streets of New York. After the closing of Castle Garden, immigrants were processed at an old barge office in Manhattan until the opening of the Ellis Island Immigration Center on 1 January 1892. Thousands of immigrants passed through the doors of Ellis Island during its peak years of 1892 to around 1924, and the National Park Services' Ellis Island site says that in a single day in 1907, 11,747 immigrants came through. In 1897, a fire destroyed the original buildings on Ellis Island, and once again, the barge office was reopened as a temporary processing center. In 1900, the Ellis Island Immigration Center reopened in the building that still exists today. The Process Inspectors examined them, looking for any sign of illness, and those with suspicious symptoms were marked and detained for further inspection. They were also asked a myriad of questions as to their origins, their past, how much money they had, where they were going, and their intentions in America. Many were detained for various reasons, and some had to have relatives come to claim them. About two percent were turned back. In these heartbreaking cases, families were often forced to decide on the spot whether to split up or go back with those that were denied access. Once they passed the inspections, immigrants collected their baggage and exchanged their money for U.S. currency. There was also a railroad agent available from whom they could purchase tickets for the next leg of their journey. It is important to note that no records are known to have been kept of the immigrant processing at either Castle Garden or Ellis Island. Passenger lists are typically the only actual records available of immigrant trips to America. The Beginning of the End This and subsequent restrictions added by a revision to the National Origins Act in 1929, which further reduced the maximum number of admissions to the country, reduced the flow of immigrants to a trickle. In later years, parts of the island were used as a Coast Guard station and as a detention center for enemy aliens in WWII. The Ellis Island Immigration Center closed in 1954 after millions of immigrants had entered America through its doors. Looking to the Future - Juliana Smith Click Here to access the world's largest online collection of historical records free for 14 days.
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