Brazil Emigration and Immigration

Emigration and immigration sources list the names of people leaving (emigration) or coming into (immigration) a country.

Emigration and immigration records can help you determine where in Brazil your ancestor came from as well as where she or he came from prior to settling in Brazil. The information in these records may include the emigrants’ names, ages, occupations, destinations, ports of emigration, and occasionally places of origin or birthplaces. If you do not find your ancestor, you may find emigration information on your ancestor’s neighbors. People often emigrated with neighbors and friends from the same communities, and by finding the neighbor’s town of origin, you may locate your ancestor in the same place.

There are not many immigration records for Brazil prior to 1808, as Portuguese settlers were not considered immigrants.

Online Records

 * Brazil Immigrants Project (Projeto Imigrantes, ($) index
 * Brazil, São Paulo Immigration Memorial (Arquivo Público Do Estado De São Paulo), index
 * at FamilySearch — index and images
 * , images, no index. Also at Ancestry.com, ($), images, no index.
 * at FamilySearch — index & images; also at MyHeritage ($)
 * Brazil, Rio de Janeiro, Immigrant Arrivals, 1875-1910 index
 * at FamilySearch — index & images
 * at FamilySearch — browsable images

Entrada de Estrangeiros no Brasil


 * Porto do Rio de Janeiro.
 * Click on Consulta to access the search engine of indexed records.
 * Close to 750,000 indexed records.
 * Land and colonization records.
 * Register books of permanent immigrants in the immigrant hostels of Ilha das Flores and Pinheiros
 * Passenger and disembarkation lists – steamships. 1875-1900
 * Browse digital images through the Sistema de Informações do Arquivo Nacional This site requires registration for a free account. Click on the tab Favoritos to get to the images for the following.
 * Hospedaria de imigrantes for immigrant hostel records.
 * Relações Vapores Entrada Porto Rio de Janeiro to browse images of ship arrivals at the port of Rio de Janeiro.
 * Relações Vapores Entrada Porto Santos to browse images of ship arrivals at the port of Santos.

Arquivo Público do Estado de São Paulo

Repositório Digital


 * Acervo Textual
 * Documentos Pessoais. Use the drop-down menu for a list of names of people whose records are available.
 * Listas de Bordo. Passenger lists. Use drop down menus to see which ships Vapor and years Ano are included.
 * Fotos e Filmes
 * Mapas
 * Bibliográficos

Memoria do Imigrante


 * Hospedaria. Immigrant hostel records 1882-1958
 * Desembarque. Passengers disembarking in the port of Santos. 1888-1978.
 * Delegacia. Police registration forms for foreigners in the capital. 1939-1984.
 * Use the certificate certidão links to search for and request copies of records. When you find a record and click on Ver Dados para Emitir Certidao or Solicitar Certidao, click on that to see who is listed in the record with or near them.

Acervo digital do Museu da Imigração do Estado de São Paulo


 * Iconografias. Photos, post cards, and portraits of immigrants
 * Requerimentos SACOP. Documents seeking restitution for transporting immigrants to Brazil.
 * Registros de matricula. Immigrant hostel registers 1882-1958
 * Cartografias. Maps showing immigrant colonies and floor plans for the immigrant hostel and the museum of immigration
 * Jornais. Newspapers from immigrant colonies in Brazil 1886-1987
 * Cartas de chamada. Letters offering help to those who wish to settle with their family in Brazil.
 * Listas de bordo. Passenger lists for the Port of Santos 1888-1978.

Arquivo Público do Paraná, Registro de Imigrantes


 * Searchable database
 * Approximately 100,000 records
 * Time-period included is 1876-1879 and 1885-1896
 * Some books can be accessed from the FamilySearch Catalog under Brazil, Paraná, Paranaguá – Emigration and Immigration. If the book is not listed there, contact the archive for more information.

Imigrantes Espirito Santo

Immigration records from the public state archive of Espirito Santo, providing name of passenger, age, date of arrival and often name of birth place.


 * 1) Begin your search by entering the first letter of the last name in the space Iniciais.
 * 2) Next click on Filtrar
 * 3) A drop-down list of surnames will appear in the Familia space. Choose the surname you are looking for.
 * 4) Click on Pesquisar to see all results with the surname you have chosen.
 * 5) When your results appear, click on Pesquisar next to the name of interest. A new section will open up.
 * 6) In section 3, click on Pesquisar next to the name of interest. You will then see information about the person you have chose.

Arquivo Público do Estado da Bahia

This site has images of passenger lists of arrivals to the Port of Salvador. Choose the images you with to view from the list found on the left side of the page. The information about the images can be found directly below the image viewer.

Immigration Trends

 * 1530-1755 The Portuguese sent prisoners, degredados (exiles) or indesejáveis (undesirables) to Brazil.
 * 1530-1808 The Portuguese limited immigration to Brazil to Portuguese nationals.
 * 1808 Brazil opened immigration to individuals from any country.
 * 1890 In response to the freeing of the slave population, plantation owners (fazendeiros) created the Sociedade Promotora de Imigração (Society for the Promotion of Emigration) to promote immigration, leading to an increased European immigration to Brazil.
 * 1808-1940 Immigrants came from over 50 nations, mainly Portugal, Italy, Germany, Switzerland, Austria, Japan, Russia, France, Spain, Turkey, the British Isles, and other South American countries. Many settled in the states of São Paulo, Minas Gerais, Paraná, Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina, and Rio de Janeiro.
 * 1865-1870s Thousands of Southerners from the United States emigrated to Brazil. Most settled in Amazonas, Espírito Santo, and São Paulo, establishing rural colonies. Most of these colonies failed and the settlers returned to the United States.

Passenger Lists
When migrants arrived or departed from Brazilian ports, they usually used one of the three following ports:


 * Rio de Janeiro had its own port. There, migrants were registered through the Agência Central de Imigração (Central Agency for Immigration). Newly arrived immigrants were then taken to the Ilha das Flores (Isle of Flores) and processed at the Casa dos Imigrantes (House of Emigrants).
 * Santos was the main port for the city of São Paulo. The port authorities who registered and handled migrants in Brazil were known as the Hospedaria de Imigrantes (Hostelry of Immigrants).
 * Salvador was the main port for the state of Bahia.

Many of the Brazilian immigrants from Europe and other western hemisphere countries left from the ports of Bremen, Hamburg, La Havre, Bordeaux, Marseille, Antwerp, Rotterdam, Lisbon, Funchal, Cádiz, New Orleans, Naples, Tokyo, and New York. While Hamburg Passenger Lists are available on microfilm at the Family History Library, departure lists from La Havre, New Orleans, and New York were not preserved.

The information in passenger lists varies over time but usually includes the emigrants’ names, ages, occupations, and destinations. In addition, relationships and last residences or birthplaces may be given.

Records at the Family History Library
Some passenger lists are available on microfilm at the Family History Library. Perform a keywords search in the FamilySearch Catalog for Brazil passageiros to find lists of passengers entering and leaving Brazil.

The Family History Library has microfilm copies of immigration records from each of these ports. These records can be found in the FamilySearch Catalog under a subject search for:

BRAZIL - EMIGRATION AND IMMIGRATION

Records at Brazilian Archives
Arquivo Público do Estado da Bahia (Salvador) The "Historical Section" of the Bahia state archive has six volumes of passport records (passaportes e guias) from 1718 to 1822 as well as copies of the record of immigrants to the port of Salvador from 1839 to 1854.

For an address of the state and national archives, see Brazil Archives and Libraries.

Immigration Cards
Brazilian consulates around the world issued immigration cards, which were presented at the Brazilian port of entry by foreigners visiting or immigrating to Brazil.

Information on immigration cards may contain the immigrant's name, date of immigration, date and place of birth, nationality, marital status, parents' names, profession/occupation, place of residence in country of origin, names, ages, and genders of children under the age of 18 traveling with the individual, passport number, whether the stay was permanent or temporary.

Records at the Family History Library

 * first of six films. All have been digitized.
 * items 1-3.
 * film number 1285633–1285704.

The Family History Library has microfilm copies of immigration records from each of these ports. These records can be found in the FamilySearch Catalog under a subject search for:

BRAZIL - EMIGRATION AND IMMIGRATION

Records at the Brazilian Archives
Arquivo Nacional (Rio de Janeiro) In the Arquivo Nacional (National Archive), in Rio de Janeiro, there is a large collection of immigration records on cards in nearly 30 drawers. These cards have information on Portuguese immigrants to Brazil. The National Archive in Brazil compiled a supplement volumes to this collection:


 * Registro de Estrangeiros e Entradas de Portugueses do Registro de Estrangeiros nas Capitanias, 1777–1819 (Register of the Foreigners and Emigrants from the Portuguese Register of Foreigners in the Captaincies, 1777–1819). Rio de Janeiro: Arquivo Nacional.

Another book from the National Archives in Brazil lists emigration records of French residents in Rio de Janeiro:


 * Os franceses residentes no Rio de Janeiro, 1808–1820 (The French Residents in Rio de Janeiro, 1808–1820). Rio de Janeiro: Arquivo Nacional, 1960.

The original records of the Hospedaria de Imigrantes (Hostelry of Immigrants) in Rio de Janeiro are also available, although they have been microfilmed by the Family History Library and include arrival lists, passports, lists of ships, and so on:


 * Registros de imigrantes (Register of Immigrants). Arquivo Nacional no Rio de Janeiro, N.p., (1981).

Arquivo da Secretaria da Promoção Social (Santos/São Paulo) The original records of the Hospedaria de Imigrantes (Hostelry of Immigrants) from 1854 to 1885 in São Paulo are at the Arquivo da Secretaria da Promoção Social (Archive of the Secretary of Social Progress).

''Many records prior to 1940 of naturalization and citizenship are in the National Archives. Records created after 1940 are in the office of the Minister of Justice.''

For an address of the National Archives, in Rio de Janeiro, see Brazil Archives and Libraries.

Passports
People desiring to leave Brazil were required to obtain passports from the Federal Police (Polícia Federal) in each state capital.

The applicant had to provide an original copy of her or his birth certificate, two recent pictures, a voter’s registration, an identification card, CIC (income tax information), and a military release (required for males over 18 and under 45 years). After completing the necessary forms the police performed a background check. You can research these records if you can show your relationship to the person and a need to see the records. Useful records are:

The addresses for the Federal Police are:

Policia Federal (Escritório Central) Avenida Prestes Maia, 700 Centro 05512-000 São Paulo, SP BRASIL

Policia Marítima Avenida Venezuela 2 - Saúde 20081-310 Rio de Janeiro, RJ BRASIL

Directoria de Portos e Costas (CIPANAVE) Rua Teófilo Otoni 4-Centro Rio de Janeiro RJ - Brazil CEP: 20090-070 Phone: +55 21 2104 5195 Fax: + 55 21 2104 5196 E-mail: [mailto:secom@dpc.mar.mil.br secom@dpc.mar.mil.br]

Departamento de Policia Federal Rua da Assembléia 70 - Centro 20011-000 Rio de Janeiro, RJ BRASIL http://www.dpf.gov.br/

Other Sources of Immigration Information
You may be able to learn the town your ancestor came from by talking to older family members. Members of your family may have documents that name the city or town, such as:

Records of Brazilian Emigrants to the United States
Sometimes the best sources for information about your immigrant ancestor are created in the country he or she emigrated to. Many Brazilians migrated to Florida, New York, Illinois, California, Texas, Washington, and Utah. Emigration from Brazil has occurred mostly in the 20th century.

Immigration records provide the town of origin and other information. To learn about these records, view the state naturalization pages under United States Naturalization and Citizenship.


 * Passenger lists. Most Brazilian immigrants to the United States arrived at the ports of New York and New Orleans. Many of these records have been digitized. See United States Emigration and Immigration for more information about emigration and immigration records of the United States.


 * Immigration and Naturalization. The Immigration and Naturalization Service has a national index of immigrants who arrived in the United States between 1906 to 1956. For its records, write to:

Immigration and Naturalization Service 425 "I" Street NW Washington, D.C. 20536 Tel.: 1-800-375-5283  1-800-767-1833 (TTY) e-mail: [mailto:uscis.webmaster@dhs.gov uscis.webmaster@dhs.gov] Website: http://www.uscis.gov/portal/site/uscis

Additional Resources
The following websites give further information on Brazilian emigration and immigration


 * History of immigration from Brazil
 * Immigrant Project (in Portuguese) Record searches available for a fee.
 * Emigrants from Bukovina to Paraná (in Portuguese)
 * Italian Immigrants (in Portuguese)
 * Japanese Immigration to Brazil (in Portuguese)
 * Italian Surnames (in Spanish)
 * Confederates in Brazil

The Family History Library has additional information on Brazilian emigration and immigration. These sources include:


 * Bangerter, Lawrence B. The Brazilian Compass.
 * This two volume work includes name of vessel, places of embarkation and debarkation, dates and corresponding Family History Library film numbers for immigration records. Both volumes have been digitized by the Family History Archives at Brigham Young University, and are accessible online.
 * The Confederados: Old South Immigrants in Brazil. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, c1995.
 * Ferenczi, Imre. International Migrations, volume I: Statistics. Series: The American immigration collection. Series 2, vol. 1. New York: Arno Press and the New York Times, 1970.
 * Griggs, William Clark. The Elusive Eden: Frank McMullan’s Confederate Colony in Brazil. Austin: University of Texas Press, c1987.
 * Hauschild-Thiessen, Renate. Germans in Brazil 1850-1865, German emigrants to Brazil advertised their whereabouts in Brazil in order to give their relatives an update in the newspaper Hamburger Nachrichten. The author listed all emigrants who posted such announcements. 
 * Luetjohann, Roland. Die Ersten deutschen Auswanderer in Brasilien. Archiv für Sippenforschung, 8. Jahrgang, Heft 3.Contains names of Swiss (canton Freiburg) and German emigrants (from Helsbach) with date of arrival and circumstances.
 * Oliveira, Betty Antunes de. Movimento de passageiros norte-americanos no porto do Rio de Janeiro, 1865–1890 (Movement of North American Passengers in the Port of Rio de Janeiro, 1865–1890). Rio de Janeiro: B. A. de Oliveira, 1982. ;

Wiki Articles Describing this Collection
Brazil, Bahia, Passenger Lists - FamilySearch Historical Records Brazil Immigration Records - FamilySearch Historical Records Brazil, Rio de Janeiro, Immigration Cards - FamilySearch Historical Records Brazil, São Paulo, Immigration Cards - FamilySearch Historical Records Brazil, São Paulo, Immigrant Hostelry Records, - FamilySearch Historical Records Brazil, São Paulo, Port of Santos, Passenger and Immigrant Lists - FamilySearch Historical Records

Brasil Emigração e Imigração Emigración e inmigración de Brasil