[Ger-Poland-Volhynia] Voyage costs

gpvjem gpvjem at sasktel.net
Fri Dec 14 06:28:12 PST 2012


    Further to Jerry's email.  
        My Marsch grandparents and their children arrived in Canada early in 1900.  An adult fare from Libau to Winnipeg was $48.25.  There were six children ranging in age from 15 years to an infant but I have no idea what the fare would have been for them if any.  I assume both Grandparents had to pay the adult fare of course.  
        I doubt they required or received any financial assistance because Grandfather purchased a farm for a substantial amount shortly after arrival in southern Manitoba .

John Marsch

-----------------------------------------
  From: Jerry Frank 
  To: Randy Svenson 
  Cc: ger-poland-volhynia at eclipse.sggee.org 
  Sent: Thursday, December 13, 2012 10:56 PM


  Randy,

  Here is an example of a passenger ticket from 1883 covering steerage passage for a family of 4 for $70.

  http://www.gjenvick.com/HistoricalImages/PassageContracts/NorddeutscherLloyd/PrepaidPassage/1883-02-17/SteerageContract/BealleNutchenParty-Front.jpg

  I think I have seen others quote amounts in the range of $45 for an adult which included ship and rail travel from Hamburg to Winnipeg.  I'm not sure if it covered Volhynia to Hamburg.

  For context, my wife's grandparents migrated to Alberta in 1912 from the Volga region of Russia and entered the country with $55 cash.  Friends on the same ship had $100 cash.

  Keep in mind that some came under the sponsorship of immigration companies (such as Canadian Pacific Railways) or of others who had arrived here in the years before them.  For example, my Lutheran grandparents came in the mid 1890s under the sponsorship of a Mennonite family living near Gretna, MB.  They worked for the Mennonites for several years to pay off the fare before establishing themselves with their own land.  These families did not know each other.  It was simply a contract somehow arranged over that long distance, again probably with the assistance of either government authorities who were encouraging the migration or through immigration companies.

  I don't know if similar arrangements existed in the States.


  Jerry




  ----- Original Message -----
  From: "Randy Svenson" <randy_svenson at yahoo.com>
  To: ger-poland-volhynia at eclipse.sggee.org
  Sent: Thursday, December 13, 2012 8:23:47 AM
  Subject: [Ger-Poland-Volhynia] Voyage costs

  Does anyone know the approximate cost of the voyage from Volhynia to North America in the late 1800s? That would include ship and other travel, food and lodging, documentation.... To me, this sounds like it could be very expansive and times for some families in this area could have been very difficult.

  Randy Svenson
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