Manifest of ship Finland upon arrival New York, September 7, 1903, from Antwerp, Belgium
printed from Microfilm T715-390, page 146C, New York Immigration Passenger Lists, Vol 705
showing arrival of Josefa Cedzich, mother of Immigrant Ancestor Josef Cedzich
Manifest at Ellis Island Website Photo of the ship
data extracted at EllisIsland.org
Line | 14 | 15 | 16 | 20 |
Name | Helena Czopek | Jozefa Cedzich | Jan Cedzich | Josefa Cedzich |
Age | 29y 2m | 8y 4m | 7y 2m | 60y |
Sex | F | F | M | F |
Married | Marr | - | - | Widow |
Occupation | None | - | - | Laborer |
Able to Read/Write | Yes/Yes | -/- | -/- | Yes/Yes |
Nationality | Russia | Russia | Russia | Russia |
Race | Polish | Polish | Polish | Polish |
Last Residence | Krakau | Krakau | Krakau | Dzieszkowice* |
Final destination in U.S. | New York Cy | New York Cy | New York Cy | New York Cy |
Have Ticket to Final Destination | - | - | - | - |
By whom was passage paid | Husband | Father | Father | Self |
In posession how much money | $10 | - | - | $36 |
Ever been in U.S. | No | No | No | No |
Relation in U.S. | Husband Kazimir Czopsek College Point 15 Street 135 New York Cy |
Father (ditto) | Father (ditto) | Son-in-Law Kazimir Czopsek College Point 15 Street 135 New York Cy |
*I cannot read this on the manifest; the record at EllisIsland.org shows Dzieszkowice. |
"Record of Detained Alien Passengers" shows that they were held overnight.
Apparently Josef and Kazimir did not know they had arrived and weren't there to meet them.
Did the Ellis Island people dispatch a messenger to tell them?