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USA naturalization between 1912 and 1920
Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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Susan | Report | 6 May 2012 16:59 |
Hi, I should be very grateful for help to find out whether it was a requirement to provide a copy of a birth certificate at any stage when someone was applying for USA naturalization between 1912 and 1920. An ancestor of mine lodged a Declaration of Intention in 1912 and became a naturalized USA citizen in 1919. |
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mgnv | Report | 6 May 2012 22:16 |
It obviously couldn't be a requirement - there are just too many people who didn't have one for whatever reason - e.g., in 1912, a 50 y old Irishman was born before civil registration began - in 1912, I'll bet there were parts of Canada and the USA where civil registration had yet to start. Even if he was recorded, there were places where all records were destroyed - fires in Chicago and Atlanta are 2 US examples - Hiroshima is a more modern example. Even today, though they may ask for one, they must have the power to proceed without it. |
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Susan | Report | 7 May 2012 09:21 |
Many thanks for your valuable information. I was 99.9% certain that this was my ancestor - despite birth date difference and a slight middle name change. He settled in Los Angeles in 1911. Just another thought, perhaps you might know if he would have been able to leave England and enter the USA by giving the same inaccurate information and were passports required as early as June, 1911? |
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mgnv | Report | 7 May 2012 11:15 |
I would worry if his birthday was wrong - I wouldn't be too concerned if the year was out, though. |
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+++DetEcTive+++ | Report | 7 May 2012 11:37 |
You could explore the National Archives to see if one was issued |
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Susan | Report | 7 May 2012 14:42 |
His date of birth was wrong - actual birth was December 1868 in Oxford, named John Samuel Lowe and d.o.b. given on USA Declaration of Intention was given as 26th August, 1872 born in Oxford and named John Stanley Lowe. He was granted USA citizenship in 1919. I found him on the UK 1911 Census and also on the US 1920 Census. On both of these registers he was named "John Stanley Lowe". However, I could not find him on the US 1930 Census. He was a passenger on "the Baltic" departing from Liverpool and arriving in New York on the 26th June 1911. On the ship records he gave his closest relative in England as being "Mrs. Lowe of 153 Walton Street, Oxford". This was the address of John Samuel Lowe's wife and children so this is why I am 99.9% sure that "John Samuel Lowe" and "John Stanley Lowe" are one and the same person! |
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Susan | Report | 7 May 2012 15:16 |
Through the help of MGNV and Detective I have now discovered that passports were not mandatory for British travellers until 1914. |
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mgnv | Report | 8 May 2012 00:07 |
Susan, I'm thinking you don't know his actual b'day, and all you've seen is the GRO index entry: |
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Susan | Report | 8 May 2012 14:47 |
mgnv. Many thanks for the copies of relevant entries in the 1920 Census and the 1930 Census. Most helpful. |
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mgnv | Report | 9 May 2012 01:28 |
Well, sometimes there are free online records that Ancestry don't have - check out: |
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Susan | Report | 9 May 2012 12:14 |
The websites you have kindly given have proved very informative. Still haven't found a John & Gertie marriage but found a previous marriage for Gertie in 1907. At that time her name was Gertrude Radford and she married a William H. Carlin. Appears she was widowed in 1908 so this marriage could have given her USA citizenship rather than a marriage to John. |
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mgnv | Report | 9 May 2012 22:09 |
Since you've got Ancestry access, I'll leave Gertie's 1910 to you - 1910's a lot tougher for me (a non-subscriber) than any other census. |
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Susan | Report | 10 May 2012 00:14 |
I have looked at the US 1910 Census - no sign of Gertie or William H. Carlin but believe I have found her in the UK on the UK 1911 census with John. I am now searching for details of a ship taking her from the US back to the UK sometime between her 1907 marriage and the 1911 Census but so far have had no joy. She could have travelled with the surname of "Carlin", "Radford" or "Lowe". I have found details of her travelling back to the US in June, 1912 under the name of Gertrude Carlin and on John Lowe's passenger list when he travelled to the US in late June 1912 the person named for his journeys end in Los Angeles was Gertrude Carlin. |
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MargaretM | Report | 10 May 2012 03:11 |
Is this Gertrude's death in California? Father's surname was Radford: |
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Susan | Report | 10 May 2012 08:46 |
Margee, Thanks for the information re Gertrude Lilian Lowe but unfortunately this Gertrude was born in the US and my Gertrude was born in Putney near London, UK. |
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MargaretM | Report | 10 May 2012 11:44 |
But on that record her place of birth is listed as Rest (other) which is what they say for those born in England. |
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MargaretM | Report | 10 May 2012 11:57 |
Does this make any sense to you? |
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MargaretM | Report | 10 May 2012 12:25 |
This is the Gertrude who travelled back to USA with her daughter Marjorie in 1926, As you can see she says she's divorced. |
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Susan | Report | 10 May 2012 13:38 |
Many thanks Margee for your useful info. The Gertrude Lowe who travelled back to the USA in 1926 with her daughter, Marjorie, is, I believe, the Gertrude I am tracking. Her "husband"? named as John Stanley Lowe was living with Gertrude and Marjorie in Los Angeles at the time of the 1920 Census. So far I cannot find a marriage for Gertrude and John Stanley either in England or America. In the UK 1911 Census Gertrude was named as Gertrude Lowe, wife of John Stanley Lowe but Gertrude called herself Gertrude Carlin (her previous married name) when travelling back to the USA in June 1912 and later in June 1912 John Stanley Lowe was joining Gertrude Carlin in Los Angeles. |
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Susan | Report | 10 May 2012 21:36 |
I have now discovered that Gertrude Carlin travelled from New York to Liverpool as a 1st Class passenger on the Mauretania arriving in Liverpool in April 1908. She was described as a US Citizen aged 28years. This followed the death of her husband William H. Carlin on the 15th January 1908. Her surname had been wrongly transcribed on Ancestry "Curlin". |