Author Topic: Immigration from British Columbia, Canada  (Read 100 times)

Offline 3Chant

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Immigration from British Columbia, Canada
« on: Friday 27 February 26 10:27 GMT (UK) »
My mother in law, Helen Reid Phemister, was born  to Scottish British parents in British Columbia, Canada in 1927. The family returned to the UK when she was a child and were permanent residents thereafter. How would she have officially established British nationality by descent? Was it just a matter of applying for a British passport?
Miller Millar Moroney Burke Masterson Munro Phemister Wall Brophy Curtin Magan Thomson Galvin Price Foster Reid

Offline Elwyn Soutter

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Re: Immigration from British Columbia, Canada
« Reply #1 on: Friday 27 February 26 10:51 GMT (UK) »
Today the applicant would need to produce their birth certificate, their parents marriage certificate and the birth certificate of a UK born parent. But in 1927 the information might have been taken on trust. I read somewhere that it only became mandatory to produce a birth certiifcate in 1948 (to get a British passport) so perhaps the paperwork was less stringent in the 1920s.
Elwyn

Offline 3Chant

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Re: Immigration from British Columbia, Canada
« Reply #2 on: Friday 27 February 26 11:21 GMT (UK) »
Many thanks.
Miller Millar Moroney Burke Masterson Munro Phemister Wall Brophy Curtin Magan Thomson Galvin Price Foster Reid

Offline Andy J2022

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Re: Immigration from British Columbia, Canada
« Reply #3 on: Friday 27 February 26 12:34 GMT (UK) »
The nationality law in force at the time of her birth, and indeed when she first came to Britain, was the British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act 1914. Section 1 of that Act says:

"1 Definition of natural-born British subject

(1) The following persons shall be deemed to be natural-born British subjects, namely :—

(a) Any person born within His Majesty's dominions and allegiance; and

(b) Any person born out of His Majesty's dominions whose father was, at the time of that person's birth, a British subject, and who fulfils any of the following conditions, that is to say, if either—

   (i) his father was born within His Majesty's allegiance; or

   (ii) his father was a person to whom a certificate of naturalization had been granted; or

   (iii) his father had become a British subject by reason of any annexation of territory; or

   (iv) his father was at the time of that person's birth in the service of the Crown; or

   (v) his birth was registered at a British consulate within one year or in special circumstances, with the consent of the Secretary of State, two years after its occurrence, or, in the case of a person born on or after the first day of January, nineteen hundred and fifteen, who would have been a British subject if born before that date, within twelve months after the first day of August, nineteen hundred and twenty-two; and

(c) Any person born on board a British ship whether in foreign territorial waters or not."

The Dominions were defined in the first schedule of the Act as: The Dominion of Canada, The Commonwealth of Australia (including for the purposes of this Act the territory of Papua and Norfolk Island), The Dominion of New Zealand, The Union of South Africa, and Newfoundland.


Offline 3Chant

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Re: Immigration from British Columbia, Canada
« Reply #4 on: Friday 27 February 26 16:37 GMT (UK) »
That is very helpful. Many thanks.
Miller Millar Moroney Burke Masterson Munro Phemister Wall Brophy Curtin Magan Thomson Galvin Price Foster Reid