Latter-day Saint Emigration and Immigration

Tracing LDS Ancestors Emigration and Immigration

In the early years of the Church, all faithful members were encouraged to gather to Zion. The records showing these early Saints’ faith and endurance are of great interest to their descendants.

See LDS Colonization to learn about the history of Church settlements and colonies.

By learning about an ancestor’s immigration to Zion, you may find records that provide clues to births, marriages, and deaths that occurred along the way. You may also find names of children and other relatives in these records. You may also find clues that will help you identify the family’s place of origin.

Mormon Migration (website)
Mormon Migration, a website hosted by the Harold B. Lee Library of BYU, is perhaps the most comprehensive sourse for finding information about Mormon companies and individuals crossing the ocean. It provides a place for historical and genealogical research into the world-wide migration records and history about the 19th and 20th century movement of thousands of immigrants from many nations who are part of the membership of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. It brings together passenger lists, journals and other historical sources relating to the journey, as well as an extensive bibliograhy. Many of the sources cited below are contained on this website.

Microfilm search strategy
If your ancestor traveled across the ocean to the United States with a Church company, follow these steps to locate microfilmed materials:

1. Use the indexes listed in "Indexes to Passenger Lists," below, to find out the voyage on which an ancestor came.

2. Find the voyage in the, which is described later in this section, and record the following information:


 * Name of Ship
 * Date of departure and the microfilm number of the Church emigration register.
 * Date of arrival and the microfilm number of the United States passenger list.

3. Obtain the microfilms of the Church emigration register and the United States passenger list.

4. On the film of the Church emigration register, look chronologically for the date of departure. Then look on the United States passenger list for the date of arrival.

5. Find the ship. (Ship’s names are recorded at the top of each page of a passenger list.)

6. Read the names of the passengers to find your ancestor.

If your ancestor did not emigrate to the United States with a Church company, check the following Wiki articles for records and strategies:


 * Find the article on "Emigration and Immigration" for the nation from which he or she came and search for "LDS."
 * United States Emigration and Immigration.
 * Tracing Immigrant Origins.

Indexes to Passenger Lists
To find the voyage of Church members who emigrated to the United States, try the following sources:


 * . Provo, Utah: Brigham Young University, 1983. (Family History Library fiche 6334931 [set of 6]). This is a personal name index to over 71,000 records including Nauvoo property records, tax lists, ship lists, censuses, family group records, and research notes. Shows the name, sex, and source information for each entry. This indexes passengers on many Church sponsored ships arriving in the United States from 1840 to 1849.
 * Davis, Grant . Salt Lake City, Utah: Your Ship, 1997. (FHL compact disc no. 60). It focuses mostly on the Saints who crossed the ocean between 1849 and 1869. This indexes Church emigration register (passenger lists), books about Church member emigrants, Perpetual Emigration Fund lists, handcart pioneers, and Sons of Utah Pioneer records. The index is not complete. This disc also includes Conway B. Sonne’s book {{{FHL|510638|title-id|disp=Ships, Saints, and Mariners}} with pictures and descriptions of many ships chartered by the Church. This is included in LDS Family History Suite 2.
 * }. Salt Lake City: Genealogical Society of Utah, 1951. (Family History Library films 298431–39). This index is also known as the Crossing the Ocean Index. It is an alphabetical card index to the Saints who crossed the ocean on their way to Zion. This index is incomplete because it focuses only on ships chartered by Church agents. The cards are filed by the head of the family or the leader of each group. The name of the ship and the date of departure from Liverpool is included.
 * Early Church Information File. This index is cited fully in LDS Biographies. It indexes Church emigration registers that were not included in the European Emigration Card Index cited previously.
 * Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Family History Dept. LDS Reference Unit. . Salt Lake City, Utah: Genealogical Society of Utah, 1992. (Family History Library fiche 6060482 [set of 344]). This indexes.
 * Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Scandinavian Mission. Emigration Records, Scandinavian Mission (Denmark, Norway, Sweden) 1852–1920. Salt Lake City: Genealogical Society of Utah, 1951–1953. (Family History Library films 025696–97). It may list in a year-by-year arrangement each emigrant’s name, age, residence, and occupation.
 * . Salt Lake City: Genealogical Society of Utah, 1948. (Family History Library film 040994). Text in Danish. This record was created by the Copenhagen police of Latter-day Saint emigrants. It may show name, age, occupation, residence, and marital status.

Worldwide LDS Ship Register (1840–1913)
To find microfilm numbers of passenger lists of emigrating Saints, search the following source:

Taylor, Margery. . [Salt Lake City, Utah]: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Family History Department, 1991. (Family History Library book 289.309 T216w; film 1592753). This is a comprehensive list of ships used by Church emigrants. It is arranged chronologically by the departure date. It includes ships that came from Liverpool, Copenhagen, Hamburg, Capetown, Glasgow, and other foreign ports. It lists departure date, ship name, departure port, "LDS roster" (microfilm number for the Church’s emigration register), company leader, arrival date, arrival port, "US roster" (film number for the United States passenger arrival list), references to written accounts of the voyage, and references to a picture or description of the ship.

You can also find film numbers to the Church emigration registers in the Subject Search of the Family History Library Catalog under:

MORMONS— EMIGRATION AND IMMIGRATION

Written Accounts of Voyages
To find written accounts of voyages, check the following sources:

Bashore, Melvin L., and Linda L. Haslam. Mormons on the High Seas: Ocean Voyage Narratives to America (1840–1890). [Salt Lake City, Utah]: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Historical Dept., 1990. (Family History Library book 289.3016 B291mh; film 1592752 item 5). This is a bibliography of accounts of the voyages made by members of the Church. This is arranged alphabetically by the ship name, and then by the date of the voyage. The latest edition is available in the Historical Department—Church Library.

The following important source is not limited to Scandinavians:

Jenson, Andrew. History of the Scandinavian Mission. Salt Lake City, Utah: Deseret News Press, 1927. (Family History Library book 948 K2j; film 896938 item 2; fiche 6030136). This history gives accounts of voyages and the adventures while crossing the ocean. It includes detailed descriptions of many Church-chartered ships embarking from England between 1852 to 1890. Check the index to see if your ancestor’s ship is listed. The accounts include the Saints’ journeys across the plains to Utah.

Crossing the Plains
The Church’s movement to the valley of the Great Salt Lake is the largest organized migration movement in American history spanning from 1846 until 1925. This section covers this major migration. See also Mormon Trail and Handcart Pioneers. For more information about other migration movements see LDS Colonization and LDS History.

The following indexes list members who crossed the plains before the transcontinental railroad was completed:

Indexes to Pioneer Companies (1847–1869)
The Mormon Pioneer Overland Travel, 1847-1868 is the Internet version of Melvin L. Bashore's Crossing the Plains Index Database. Salt Lake City, Utah: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Historical Dept., 1998-. The Historical Department—Church Library is adding information from many recently discovered rosters and other sources to this database. Each entry gives the pioneer’s name, age, sex, and the year he or she came and the name of the pioneer company. It sometimes includes birth, death, or other identifying information. This is an attempt to correct and expand previous indexes. This database has the following searches:


 * Surname. This search provides all entries for one surname, by exact spelling.
 * Company. This search gives an alphabetical list of all the members of a pioneer company.
 * Alphabetical Search. This search may show individuals with an alternate spelling.

Journal History of the Church. For important immigrant train rosters and their index see the Journal History. These rosters were compiled from primary and secondary sources.

Utah Immigration Card Index, 1847–1868. Salt Lake City: Genealogical Society of Utah, 1963. (Family History Library films 298440–42). This card file is also known as the Crossing the Plains Index. It is not complete, but indexes pioneers who crossed the plains before 10 May 1869 in LDS Church sponsored immigrant companies. The cards are listed alphabetically by the head of the family or group. They usually contain the names of other family members or traveling companions. Each card gives the name of the company, date of arrival in Salt Lake City, or the date the company roster appears in the Journal History (see LDS History).

Jenson, Andrew. Index to the Deseret News Weekly 1850–1900. This indexes several immigrant rosters not available elsewhere. The full citation is in LDS Newspapers.

Rosters
A roster is a list of people who were in the same pioneer company as they crossed the plains.

For a bibliography of all known pioneer company rosters see:

"Pioneer Companies that Crossed the Plains, 1848–1868." Deseret News 1997–1998 Church Almanac. Salt Lake City, Utah: Deseret News, 1996. (Family History Library book 289.305 D457). Pages 167–76 list pioneer companies by date of departure. Each company has a reference citation to the roster, if one is available. These references are usually to entries in the Journal History. This issue of the almanac also includes a sketch of a typical pioneer wagon, typical pioneer clothing, trail maps, and a list of pioneer supplies on pages 107–14.

Incomplete rosters can be found in:

Carter, Kate B. Heart Throbs of the West. Salt Lake City: Daughters of Utah Pioneers, 1939–1951. (Family History Library book 979.2 H2cah).


 * "They came in 47" v. 8: 401–48
 * "They came in 48" v. 9: 453–524
 * "They came in 49" v. 10: 429–72
 * "They came in 50" v. 11: 377–454
 * "They came in 51" v. 12: 405–62

These volumes are indexed on the Internet at Ancestry.com and included in the LDS Family History Suite 2. Although the compact disc has a search function that should find a name within these volumes, it does not seem to check these lists. Go directly to the article and look for your ancestor’s name.

Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Historical Department. Church Emigration, 1831–1881. [Salt Lake City, Utah: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Historical Dept., 199-?] This is available in the Historical Department—Archive Search Room. The information was taken from the Millennial Starand the Journal History.

Written Accounts of the Journey
To find written accounts of the journey across the plains see:

Bashore, Melvin L., and Linda L. Haslam. [Database of] Mormon Pioneer Companies Crossing the Plains [1847–1868] Narratives: Guide to Sources in Utah Libraries and Archives. Salt Lake City, Utah: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Historical Dept., 1998-. It is arranged by year and lists each company by date of departure. For each company, it lists sources of accounts alphabetically by author. For each source cited, it gives a summary of the account and list of every name and place mentioned in the original. It includes the repository and call number for each narrative. The staff at the Historical Department—Church Library will search the current database for you. The Family History Library only has the predecessor listed below:

Bashore, Melvin L., and Linda L. Haslam. [http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Library/fhlcatalog/supermainframeset.asp?display=subjecthitlist&columns=*%2C0%2C0&subject=Mormons+-+Emigration+and+Immigration&presubject=Mormons+-+Emigration+and+Immigration Mormon Pioneer Companies Crossing the Plains (1847–1868.) Narratives. Third Revised Edition]. Salt Lake City, Utah: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Historical Dept., 1990. (Family History Library book 289.3016 B291m; film 1592752 item 6). Since then, many more sources have been added. Pioneer companies are listed chronologically by year and then by company leader. This is indexed in the Early Church Information File.

Bashore, Melvin L. ''"New Mormon Emigration Finding Aids: The Compiler’s Personal Experiences." Nauvoo Journal 10'' (Spring 1998): 97–108. (Family History Library book 977.343/N1 H25n). This article explains the sources he used to compile his emigration indexes and reference works which are cited in this article.

Hafen, LeRoy R. Handcarts to Zion: The Story of a Unique Western Migration, 1856–1860, With Contemporary Journals, Accounts, Reports, and Rosters of Members of the Ten Handcart Companies. Glendale, Calif.: Arthur H. Clark, 1960. (Family History Library book 289.309 H119h; film 1059487 item 7; fiche 6031590 [set of 4]). This is a good resource for accounts of the handcart companies. However, the rosters are incomplete. This is indexed in the Early Church Information File.

Also check LDS Biographies and LDS Genealogy for more sources that may have accounts of the journey.

The Pioneer Trail
The following books and Internet sites also good places to find trail maps, histories, and other information:

Mormon Trail Wiki page emphasizing strategies and records for finding immigrant ancestors, and connecting migration pathways.

Historical Atlas of Mormonism cited fully in LDS Colonization.

Kimball, Stanley B. Discovering Mormons Trails: New York to California, 1831–1868. Salt Lake City, Utah: Deseret Book, 1979. (Family History Library book 978 E7k). Includes index. This shows current maps with the original trails marked. Using these maps, you can travel along the original trails.

"Mormon Trail." In Wikipedia: the Free Encyclopeida [Internet site]. Wikipedia Foundation, 2008 [cited 21 February 2008]. Available at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mormon_Trail. History and information about places along the trail.

Mormon Trails Association. [Internet site]. N.p.: MTA, 1999-2005 [cited 21 February 2008]. Available at http://mormontrails.org/Trails/MormonTrails.htm. Includes detailed descriptions of variations in the trail route from year to year.

The Mormon Pioneer Trail (AMWEST). In the American West Home Page [Internet site]. AmericanWest.com, 2007 [cited 21 February 2008]. Available at http://www.americanwest.com/trails/pages/mormtrl.htm. More emphasis on the history than on the route.

"Mormon Pioneer National Historic Trail" National Park Service Internet site [cited 21 February 2008] Available at http://www.nps.gov/mopi/index.htm. Discusses the culture and history of the trail, and has a great map showing the trail and modern roads nearby.

"Oregon - California Trails Association." In Calcite Rocky Mountain College [Internet site]. Independence, Missouri: OCTA, 28 June 1999 [cited 21 February 2008]. Available at http://www.octa-trails.org/. Includes Mormon trail maps, photos, site descriptions, and diary quotations. For an index of overland trail documents try http:// www.paper-trail.org/search.asp.

Deaths Along the Trail
A complete list of all Saints who died crossing the plains does not exist as explained in:

Black, Susan Easton, et. al. Do We Know How Many Latter-day Saints Died Between 1846–1869 in the Migration to the Salt Lake Valley? The Ensign of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 28, no. 7 (July 1998): 41–44. (Family History Library book 289.305 C473e). This article includes background information about the types of illness that saints died of, their symptoms, and possible causes. It also explains the types of fatal accidents that occur with a wagon.

The following lists have been compiled:

Bashore, Melvin L. [Database of] Mormon Trail Deaths 1847–1868. Salt Lake City, Utah: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Historical Dept., 1998-. The purpose of this database is to keep a record of all of the documented deaths that occurred while crossing the plains. This database will grow as new information becomes available. It is arranged by year, by emigrant company, and then alphabetically by surname. Each entry includes the person’s full name, sex, age, death date, death place, source and notes. The Historical Department—Church Library staff will search the current database for you.

Black, Susan Easton. ''Inscriptions Found on Tombstones and Monuments in Early Latter-day Saints Burial Grounds: Nauvoo, Illinois (Joseph Smith Homestead, and Pioneer Saints Cemetery on Parley Street), Mt. Pisgah, Iowa, West Bank of the Niobrara River, Nebraska, Winter Quarters, Nebraska. N.p.,'' [198-?] (Family History Library book 973 V3es; fiche 6019028). Entries may include name, birth date, birthplace, death date, headstone markings, location of the grave, nickname, age, or source. This is included in the LDS Family History Suite 2.

Record of Early Members of the Church Who Died in Missouri, Kirtland, Nauvoo and on the Plains: Taken from the Evening &amp; Morning Star, the Messenger &amp; and Advocate, the Elders’ Journal, the Times and Seasons, the Wasp, the Nauvoo Neighbor, the Prophet, the St. Louis Luminary, the Frontier Guardian, the Mormon, the Western Standard, and the Deseret News: Down to 1868. Holograph, 1965. Salt Lake City, Utah: Genealogical Society of Utah, 1965. (Family History Library book Q973 V2rc; film 413034 item 2). This is an alphabetical list of people who died along the trail. It gives the person’s name, birth date and place, and death date. It includes only the pioneers who died crossing the plains whose temple work was not completed as of 1918.