[or-roots] Re: Naturalization
Harguess, Dale
dharguess at coastline.edu
Tue Feb 14 11:38:22 PST 2006
No, it wasn't NARA that I sent the money to. I think it was some agency
in Minnesota. That is where they would have gotten naturalized (if they
really did). I will need to look up my check to remember who I sent it
to.
-----Original Message-----
From: or-roots-admin at sosinet.sos.state.or.us
[mailto:or-roots-admin at sosinet.sos.state.or.us] On Behalf Of Denise
Merritt
Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 11:13 AM
To: or-roots at sosinet.sos.state.or.us
Subject: [or-roots] Re: Naturalization
I would try again and see if a more informed individual assists you.
Unless it actually says NR. Also look at more than one census report if
possible as census records are not perfect. Naturalization records can
be difficult to locate because there was not a central "repository" of
those specific records until 1906. This means they could be in one of
many different court, city, etc records.
I doubt you can find any documentation on census guidelines that would
support the NA meaning Not Applicable. I suspect the person assisting
you was either misinformed or just plain incorrect.
Possibly the $18 went to NARA and THEY didn't have any records. It
doesn't mean that the county or city might not have some records.
See also http://home.att.net/~wee-monster/naturalizationrecords.html
Denise
3. What about Naturalization Records? (from
http://www.census.gov/genealogy/www/faqgene.txt )
By law, a person can be naturalized in any "regular" court. The
Immigration
and Naturalization Service does have records for the entire country
beginning in 1906, but before this time, the procedure will only be
located
in the records of the court where it took place.
Many of these court records are in the custody of the government which
administrates the court. That is to say, a municipal court's records
would
be in the custody of the city, a county court's records in the custody
of
the county, etc.
Although court records are routinely indexed, these indexes do not
always
include the name of each person naturalized. And in fact, during periods
of our country's history, only the head of a household would have to be
naturalized for the whole family to gain citizenship.
A further caveat: Not everyone who immigrated was naturalized. And
although the person being naturalized had to renounce his allegiance to
his former state, the records only rarely give the exact place of his
birth or previous residence.
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