Hungarian Ancestry: Beginning Your Research From America



visitors since December 7 1997

Contents: Introduction | Family Records | Local Records | Federal Sources | Immigration and Naturalization | Passenger Lists | LDS Family History Centres | On The Net

Introduction

This page has come about because virtually all the requests for further information received have come from Americans. I am not in a position to answer these; being of BRITISH and Hungarian extraction.

However, a message on the Hungarian Mailing List in December 1997 from Richard Camaur, provided a decent summary of sources and so I contacted him to suggest a collaboration. He has written most of this page and is willing to help wherever possible. Since Richard posted his message, others have made contributions that also appear here. Thank you Magda, Ralph Komives and Juliana Szucs Smith.

When you first discover that you have a Hungarian surname in your family, do not practice leapfrog genealogy! That is jumping straight in and mailing everybody with requests for information on this surname. How will you know if you are connected if you know nothing about your own ancestor?

By the way, when your ancestors left Hungary they were EMIGRANTS, when they arrived in America they became IMMIGRANTS. Please do not write "My grandfather immigrated from Budapest" there is no such word - he emigrated from Budapest.

Updates to this page will appear at New at Hungarian Sites. Alex Glendinning.


Family Records

Before you start to investigate official records, look back over your family papers. Often people will preserve wills, photographs, letters and certificates and they are most likely to be found in the possession of an elderly aunt in my experience!

Make sure that all the branches of your family know that you are willing to become the family archivist.Track down your elderly relatives and speak to them - record their memories if you can. Oral history is very important but should always be taken with a pinch of salt. Collect all the old family legends together and then set about proving them.


Local Records

Examine the official local records your ancestors left in the United States. For example, death records, birth records of their children or even their own marriage records. You should also check church records, such as baptismal, marriage and burial records. If your ancestors were Catholic, such records are very likely available. You should also glean information from city/county directories and voters' registration lists.

Magda suggests - a bit of a shortcut to try is to consider what religion your folks practiced. If you know where they are buried, get the death date from the cemetary office and look for an obituary on microfilms of the newspapers in the ancestor's residential location. The obituary or even just a small death mention will provide the CHURCH of the services. The church should lead you to some family records, the obituary (if lengthy) may give the birthplace and names of other family members, and a death certificate may also provide the birthplace, birthdate etc. In one of my cases, my great-grandfather's birthplace or parents were not on the official death record but it was on his church death record.


Federal Sources

There are 'modern' U.S. censuses for 1880, 1900, 1910 and 1920. The later ones will provide information on age, dates of birth, years in U.S. and dates of naturalization.

The 1900 and 1910 census provides the year of immigration to the U.S., the number of years in the U.S., and whether the person enumerated was naturalized by the notation "nat" ("naturalized") or "al" ("alien" or not naturalized). The 1920 census provides an additional category, namely,"if naturalized, year of naturalization".


Immigration and Naturalization

If your ancestor was naturalized after September 1906, then a copy of the records are available through the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS).

However, if your grandmother was married, she obtained her naturalization automatically through her husband's petition. She did not have to file separately. Ask for both a copy of the Declaration of Intention and the Petition and Order of Naturalization. These documents will show the place of birth, the date of arrival in the U.S., the name of the ship, as well as the names of other family members.

To discover where in Hungary this place of birth is, you might try a visit to The Counties of Hungary and Their Settlements. An atlas on the Net can be found at MapQuest. If your ancestors came from a part of Hungary that is now included in another country - since the Treaty of Trianon (1920) - consult the maps at Eastern Slovakia, Slovak and Carpo-Rusyn Genealogy.

Ralph Komives reports: starting in 1906, copies of naturalization papers were collected by the INS. These records include both immigration and naturalization records. They are more standardized than records of previous eras and include the names of spouses and children, whether they were citizens or not. INS immigration records date from 1897 onward.

The form needed to request these files directly is G639 and can be requested from your local or regional Immigration and Naturalization Service office or by calling 1-800-870-3676. Verbal information can be sought at 202-514-2607. The more information you have the more likely your ancestor will be identified even if they were not naturalized. There is no cost for the INS record search. You will need to provide full name and address (or addresses) as a minimum.

Further, critical dates, social security number, birthday and place of birth will help insure a creditable search. The address of the Washington, D.C. INS office is: Immigration and Naturalization Service, 425 I Street NW, Washington, DC 20536

The first naturalization law was passed March 26, 1790. Naturalization was an option, not a requirement. Early naturalization records (pre 1906) were maintained at various courts in all states. The type of information in these early records is not standard. These files are more difficult to locate because they may be part of records held by numerous judicial entities. In some cases these records have been moved to other repositories. Please visit the National Archives Web Page on Naturalization Records for more details.

While the rules for naturalization have changed, the basic format has generally been a two step process of "intent" followed by a final "petition", except for veterans of certain wars, who were allowed to do both at once. Minors residing here for five years prior to their 23rd birthday could also complete both steps at once between 1824 and 1906.

Naturalization records were not collected by one single entity. A person could "declare intent" in one court and file "petition for citizenship" in a different court. To add to the complexity various courts kept records of differing detail. Some declarations of intent my contain some genealogical data such as original country or place of birth. These records may not contain details about family members.

The courts holding naturalization records could be at the county, state or federal level. Children became citizens when their fathers did. Wives, until 1922, likewise became citizens when their husbands did. Further the names of wife and children may not be listed on either application. In general if you are not reasonably sure if, when and where a declaration might have been made, a search is likely to be time consuming and difficult.

Ralph Komives also runs a useful research service in Washington D.C. - pay him a visit.

NOTE: Juliana Szucs Smith reports that you can also download the forms via the INS Homepage. If you cannot print them in accordance with their specifications, they also provide a form to request the forms by mail. Also available is a list of addresses for all of the INS regional offices.

An excellent source of information is Christina K. Schaefer, "Guide to Naturalization Records of the United States" (Baltimore: Genalogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1997).


Passenger Lists

Step Two - get a copy of the passenger ship arrival list for your ancestor. You can obtain this directly from the National Archives and Records Administration Washington D.C. using Form 81. However, you need at least an approximate date of entry in the U.S. and port of entry. You can visit a regional National Archives and use the Soundex and get a copy for yourself.

Here is some information on Shipping Companies and Liners that may be useful for emigrant families, also check out The Cunard Line Archives.

You may also find something of interest at the Ellis Island Immigration Museum.


LDS Family History Centres

Armed with the information obtained from steps one and two, visit a local LDS Family History Center to obtain microfilm records for Hungary. You will want to check church records, civil registration records after 1895, the 1828 census,and Austro-Hungarian military records. Make sure that you check these items using the microfiche catalog!

Here are the addresses of all the Mormon Family History Centres in the US and the Mormon Family History Centres in the rest of the world.

Once you search for your ancestors abroad, please remember that they came from Austria-Hungary, not The Czech Republic or modern-day Austria. The names of their home towns may have changed after WWI. The new Czechoslovakia changed towns with German-sounding names to Slavic ones. Hungary was decimated after World War I and that many (most) pre-war Hungarian counties were absorbed by successor states, including Slovakia, Romania, and (the former) Yugoslavia. Therefore, in the event your ancestor did not come from Budapest or another location in present-day Hungary, remember to check the LDS microfilm records for the successor states. LDS microfilm inventory for Hungary is in excellent shape. Also, brush up on your Hungarian! These records are going to be in Hungarian, German or Latin; never in English.

Don't be discouraged if the place name you have identified from an immigration record cannot immediately be identified in a current atlas.

Further information at Gordon Hillman's Guide to Researching at LDS Family History Centres and his Hungarian Genealogy.


On The Net

An Atlas on the Net: MapQuest.

You can post your new information in several places. The World GenWeb site Hungary Genealogy and has both Surname Interests and Queries pages.

To join the Hungarian Mailing List, just send the command "subscribe" to HUNGARY-D-request@rootsweb.com.
This is for the digest mode. If you want the postings as individual e-mail send the same message to
HUNGARY-L-request@rootsweb.com.

You might also want to follow some of the links at my Hungarian Introduction Page and those at the Eastern European Section of Cyndi's Genealogical Sites on the Internet.

If, at this point, you decide to visit Hungary, or need further background information, visit my pages: Family History in Hungary (and Slovakia) A Guide to Tracing Your Ancestors.

If you need research assistance in Hungary go to Hungarogens: my friend Dr Alexander Harmath's Genealogical Bureau.


Back to: Hungarian Introduction Page | Family History in Hungary | Alex Glendinning's Home Page
Do you have a correction or addition to this page? glen@itl.net. To repeat, however, if you are still stuck please DO NOT contact me, I am British not American and cannot help you!