Start Looking

Immigrant Ships
Transcribers Guild

Brig Echo


Malaga, Spain to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
25 May 1839

John D. George, Ship and Insurance Broker, No. 121 South Second Street,
opposite the Custom House, Philadelphia
REPORT OR MANIFEST of all the Passengers taken on board the Brig Echo whereof L. Stevens is Master from Malaga, burthen 170 49/95 tons, and owned by G. C. Barckley & Coy of Philadelphia and bound to Philadelphia.
Columns represent: Names, age, sex, occupation, the country to which they severally belong, the country of which they intend to become inhabitants*.
						
  1  C. P.      Haness      36     male    state minister from Spain  United States
  2  M^rs?      Haness      25     female                             United States
  3  G. B.      Cheirez     32     male    clergyman                  United States
  4  Nathaniel  Cheney      23     male    gentleman                  United States
  5  Manuila    Leon        18     female  servant                    Spain
  6  Mardalena  Vanness      3     female  child                      United States
   

Transcriber's Notes:    

*  An asterisk indicates an error on the part of the original recorder, not the
   transcriber, or is used to call your attention to additional information in the
   transcriber's notes.
?  Indicates a letter or number which could not be determined due to the condition
   of the manifest or handwriting of the original recorder.
^  A ^ followed by a letter indicates that the letter was superscripted.

*  Names were transcribed as seen regardless of spelling.
*  Passengers were numbered by the transcribers for ease of referencing.
*  All passengers intended to reside in the United States so this column is not shown.

National Archives and Records Administration, Film M425, Reel 54.
Transcribed by Harry Green a member of the
Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild
5 June 2009



If you find an ancestor on a ship on ISTG and would like to link to your email address or home page,
please submit a short paragraph about the passenger, where settled, children, etc.,
with the name of the ship and date of arrival, and send to the transcriber at the bottom of the manifest or
to the ISTG Production Coordinator.

Ancestry.com

We strive to make your search productive. If you don't find the passenger list you are looking for on our site, please consider a subscription to Ancestry.com. There, you can locate your ancestors ship, passenger list, view and save a copy of the original list. You can also access census data and death records to help you in your search. Census records, and in particular the 1930 census, is one of the most easily used tools for beginners and seasoned genealogists alike. Ancestry.com is the only place where all census years are easily searchable.

ISTG™ NOTICE: Copyright 1998-2011 applies on this material if intended for for-profit or fee-charging uses, and permission from Patricia MacFarlane, Founder of Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild, must be obtained. Otherwise, this material and information is given in perpetuity as a gift to the public domain by the the Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild and may be freely used for personal not for profit purposes. Please do source it, however, as part of good research practices, and please do credit the contributor for bringing this information to us all.


ISTG Home Page

Created & Maintained by the ISTG™Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild