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General => The Common Room => Topic started by: Jean McGurn on Sunday 18 September 11 05:34 BST (UK)

Title: Passengers in steerage
Post by: Jean McGurn on Sunday 18 September 11 05:34 BST (UK)
Am I right in thinking that anyone travelling in steerage would have just bought a ticket but not be named on the ships manifest?

Jean
Title: Re: Passengers in steerage
Post by: maryn1913 on Sunday 18 September 11 06:02 BST (UK)
not always true,
here's one example:
http://mariner.records.nsw.gov.au/
you can browse lists of crew and passengers, including steerage for many ships in Australian waters.
I'm sure there are others.
Title: Re: Passengers in steerage
Post by: Jean McGurn on Sunday 18 September 11 06:19 BST (UK)
Thanks Mary will have to keep looking. I had wondered as in the film Titanic it showed that Jack won his ticket in a gambling game from another man which would have meant (had this been real life) that he would not have been on the manifest.

 As I have been having trouble to find a couple of ancestors I thought they may have emigrated by travelling steerage as I haven't been able to find them yet.

Will have to try different spellings of names. I do know of one family who are down on census records as McGurn until 1901 census  when for some reason they changed the N to an L and it appears to have stuck like that.

Jean

Title: Re: Passengers in steerage
Post by: johnnyboy on Sunday 18 September 11 18:11 BST (UK)
I should have noted that the following qpplies to travel to the U.S. I have no idea what other countries required.

Hi Jean: Anyone buying a ticket in steerage would more than likely be listed on a manifest, since they were filled out by the steamship company in the port of origin.

The hypothetical case of Leonardo DiCaprio character Jack in Titanic would have depended on whether the manifest was filled out when a passenger bought a ticket or when the person boarded the ship. If the manifest was filled out at the time of purchase, Jack probably would have sailed under the name of the ticket buyer, since passports weren't needed for proving one's identity back then.

I've never seen the movie, but I would guess that Jack's case is a moot point anyway, isn't it!

John  :o :o :o