R E S E A R C H   G U I D A N C E

Tennessee
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EMIGRATION AND IMMIGRATION


The United States Research Outline (30972) “Emigration and Immigration” section lists several important sources for finding information about immigrants to this country. These nationwide sources include many references to people who settled in Tennessee. The Tracing Immigrant Origins Research Outline (34111) introduces the principles, search strategies, and additional record types you can use to identify an immigrant ancestor’s original hometown.


Migration Trends

European. Pre-statehood settlers of Tennessee generally came from Virginia and the Carolinas by way of the Cumberland Gap and other land routes. Some settlers from Pennsylvania and New England poled keel boats from the Ohio River up the Cumberland and Tennessee Rivers. Most of these early settlers were of English and Ulster Scottish origin, although some were of German, Irish, and French ancestry.

Tennessee continued to attract settlers from the Atlantic Coast into the 1830s and received Irish and German settlers during the European immigrations beginning at that time. However, most of the overseas immigrants preferred the industrialized North rather than the agricultural South. Many settlers moved from Tennessee to areas further west, most notably to Arkansas and Texas.

African. The African-American population comprised about 10 percent of the total population in the first federal census and is only a little above that percentage today. For information on African-Americans in Tennessee, see the “Minorities” section of this outline.

Native American. The Chickasaw and Cherokee Indians had nearly all been exiled from the state by 1839. For further information on the Indians in Tennessee, see the “Native Races” section of this outline. For information on specific settlement patterns, see county and local histories.

Major Ports of Entry. Most foreign-born immigrants arrived at the ports of New Orleans, New York, or other Atlantic and Gulf ports. The major port of entry for the Mississippi River was New Orleans. Passenger lists for these ports are at the Family History Library and the National Archives. The Tracing Immigrant Origins Research Outline (34111) and the United States Research Outline (30972) give details about those records.


Records

Some published sources about migration to Tennessee include:

Lightfoot, Marise Parrish. Let the Drums Roll: Veterans and Patriots of the Revolutionary War Who Settled in Maury County, Tennessee. [Columbia, Tenn.]: Maury County Historical Society, 1976. (FHL book 976.859 D3L; computer number 352867.) This record contains maps, historical information, biographical sketches, and an index.

Williams, Mike K. Virginians in Tennessee, 1850. Signal Mountain, Tenn.: Mountain Press, 1988. (FHL Book 976.8 W2w; computer number 499477.) This book is divided into two parts: the first contains an alphabetical list of Virginians with their ages, county of residence, and the birth date and place of the spouse; the second part contains historical and genealogical information. There is an index.

For the history and location of some of the old roads in Tennessee used by immigrants, see:

Daniels, Jonathan. The Devils’s Backbone: The Story of the Natchez Trace, with Map and Headpieces by the Dillons. New York: McGraw- Hill, [1962]. (FHL book 976 B4d; computer number 272573.)

Other sources on emigration and immigration can be found in the Locality Search of the Family History Library Catalog under:

TENNESSEE- MIGRATION, INTERNALTENNESSEE- HISTORY

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