North Carolina Emigration and Immigration

Online Resources

 * 1500s-1900s All U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s at Ancestry; index only ($); Also at MyHeritage; index only ($); includes those with Destination of North Carolina
 * 1895-1956 United States, Border Crossings from Canada, 1895-1956 at MyHeritage; index & images ($); includes those with Destination of North Carolina
 * 1908-1958 North Carolina, Wilmington and Morehead City Passenger and Crew Lists, 1908-1958 at FamilySearch - How to Use this Collection; index & images
 * 1908-1958 United States, Passenger and Crew Lists - North Carolina, Wilmington And Morehead City Passenger Lists, 1908-1958 at FindMyPast; index & images ($)
 * 1920-1939 Germany, Bremen Emigration Lists, 1920-1939 at MyHeritage; index only ($); includes those with Destination of North Carolina
 * Germans Immigrating to the United States at MyHeritage; index only ($); includes those with Destination of North Carolina
 * Italians Immigrating to the United States at MyHeritage; index only ($); includes those with Destination of North Carolina
 * Russians Immigrating to the United States at MyHeritage; index only ($); includes those with Destination of North Carolina

North Carolina’s treacherous coastline prevented significant immigration by sea. Most immigrants arrived at major northern ports such as New York, Baltimore, Boston, and Philadelphia. The United States Emigration and Immigration Wiki article lists several important sources for finding information about immigrants to this country. These sources include many references to people who settled in North Carolina. Tracing Immigrant Origins introduces the principles, research strategies, and additional record types you can use to identify an immigrant’s original hometown.

People
The earliest pre-statehood settlers of North Carolina were generally of English descent and came from Virginia and South Carolina to the Coastal Plain region, between 1650 and 1730. In the early 1700s, small groups of French Huguenot, German Palatine, and Swiss immigrants founded towns on the coast. Between 1729 and 1775, several thousand Scottish settlers came directly from the Scottish Highlands and the Western Isles to settle the upper Cape Fear Valley.

During the same period, many Ulster Scots and Germans came overland down the Great Philadelphia Wagon Road into the central and western portions of the state. African Americans were brought to North Carolina very early and now constitute about one-fifth of the state’s population. Histories of Germans, Scots, and African Americans are listed in the FamilySearch Catalog under NORTH CAROLINA - MINORITIES.

Although most of the Cherokee Indians were removed from North Carolina in the late 1830s, some remained and many of their descendants still live in the western part of the state. See Indians of North Carolina for further information about American Indians in North Carolina.

North Carolina did not attract heavy settlement after the Revolutionary War and lost much of its population in the westward movement to Tennessee, Illinois, and other new states and territories.

Ports

 * Edenton
 * Wilmington

Records

 * Clay, James W. North Carolina Atlas. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Press, 1975. This atlas shows the formation of counties and the patterns of European settlement.


 * United States. Bureau of Customs. Copies of Lists of Passengers Arriving at Miscellaneous Ports on the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts and at Ports on the Great Lakes, 1820–1873. National Archives Microfilm Publications, M575. Washington, DC: National Archives, 1964. Incomplete lists of passengers for five minor ports in North Carolina: Beaufort, 1865; Edentown, 1820; New Berne, 1820–1865; Plymouth, 1820–1840; and Washington, 1820–1848.


 * Indexes to these minor ports lists United States. Bureau of Customs. A Supplemental Index to Passenger Lists of Vessels Arriving at Atlantic and Gulf Coast Ports, 1820–1874. National Archives Microfilm Publications, M334. Washington, DC: National Archives, 1960. A comprehensive list of about 140,000 immigrants to America from Britain is:


 * McBride, Ransom. "Lists of Scottish Rebel Prisoners Transported to America in the Aftermath of Culloden - 1746," The North Carolina Genealogical Society Journal, Vol. 6, No. 2 (May 1980):78-94..


 * Newsome, Albert Ray, Records of Emigrants from England and Scotland to North Carolina, 1774-1775 (Raleigh, NC : State Dept. of Archives and History, 1962) ; Digital version available through catalog entry for this book.


 * Wayne County, Indiana, settlers from North and South Carolina,


 * Meyer, Duane, The Highland Scots of North Carolina, 1732-1776 (Chapel Hill, NC : University of NC Press, [1966]) ;


 * Johnston, Hugh B., They Moved Away : North Carolinians Who Went to Other States (Wilson, NC : Wilson County Genealogical Society (NC), c1997) ;


 * Eaker, Lorena Shell, German speaking people west of the Catawba River in North Carolina, 1750-1800 : and some émigrés participation in early settlement of Southeast Missouri (Franklin, NC : Genealogy Pub. Service, c1994) ;


 * Tyler H. Blethen and Curtis W. Wood, Jr. From Ulster to Carolina : the Migration of the Scotch-Irish to southwestern North Carolina (Raleigh, NC : North Carolina Dept. of Cultural Resources, c1998) ;


 * Passenger Lists of Ships to South & North Carolina RootsWeb
 * North Carolina passenger lists and other lists of immigrants can be found in the FamilySearch Catalog by using a Place Search under:


 * NORTH CAROLINA - EMIGRATION AND IMMIGRATION


 * NORTH CAROLINA, [COUNTY] - EMIGRATION AND IMMIGRATION