SoundexIndex To Naturalization Petitions For The United States District .

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NATIONAL ARCHIVES MICROFILM PUBLICATIONSPAMPHLET DESCRIBING M1285SoundexIndex toNaturalization Petitions forthe United States District andCircuit Courts, Northern Districtof Illinois, and Immigrationand Naturalization ServiceDistrict 91840-1950Records of the Immigrationand Naturalization ServiceRecord Group 85NATIONAL ARCHIVES TRUST FUND BOARDNATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS ADMINISTRATIONWASHINGTON: 1991

SOUNDEX INDEX TO NATURALIZATION PETITIONSFOR THEUNITED STATES DISTRICT AND CIRCUIT COURTS,NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS, ANDIMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICEDISTRICT 9,1840-1950INTRODUCTIONOn the 179 rolls of this microfilm publication(M1285) are reproduced the Soundex Index tonaturalization petitions from the U.S. District andCircuit Courts, Northern District of Illinois, whichhad jurisdiction over the northern quarter of thestate; the Circuit, County, Criminal, and SuperiorCourts of Cook County; and county and municipalcourts in the old Immigration and NaturalizationService (INS) District #9, which comprised northernIllinois, northwestern Indiana, southern and easternWisconsin, and eastern Iowa. There are no recordsfor Cook County, Illinois, predating 1871. Thisindex is a part of the Records of the Immigration andNaturalization Service, Record Group 85, in thecustody of the National Archives-Great Lakes Region,Chicago, Illinois.BackgroundThe process of naturalization has been a concernof the people of the United States since colonialtimes. One of the grievances against George III inthe Declaration of Independence charged that "he hasendeavored to prevent the population of these states;for that purpose obstructing the Laws ofNaturalization of Foreigners; refusing to pass othersto encourage their migration hither . . . ." Thisconcern was addressed in the United StatesConstitution, which provided that "Congress shallhave the Power . . . to establish an uniform Rule ofNaturalization . . . ." (Art. 1, Sec. 8).Congress passed the first naturalization act onMarch 26, 1790 (1 Stat. 103). The law allowed anyfree, white alien over the age of twenty-oneto apply for citizenship after two year's residencyin the United States. The process simply required anapplicant to visit "any common law court of record,"prove to the satisfaction of the court that he or shewas of good moral character, and take an oath ofallegiance to the Constitution. A judge then ruled

on the applicant's petition. Married women andchildren under the age of twenty-one derivedcitizenship from their husband or fatherrespectively. Children of unsuccessful applicantscould apply for citizenship in their own right, atthe age of twenty-one.Feeling that it had set the standards forcitizenship too low, Congress repealed the 1790 actand passed a more stringent law on January 29, 1795(1 Stat. 414), which, except for a brief period(1798-1802) established the eligibility andprocedural requirements that have since been thefoundation of United States naturalization policy andlegislation. The new act increased the residencyrequirement to five years, including one year in thestate or territory in which the court of applicationwas located. The naturalization procedure waschanged from a one-step to a two-step process,requiring the alien to first file a "declaration ofintention" (sometimes referred to as the "firstpaper") at least three years prior to entering a"petition for admission to citizenship" (also knownas the "second" or "final paper"). The new law alsorequired the applicant to renounce any title ofnobility.An exception to the generally liberal 1795naturalization process—the Alien and Sedition Act of1798—accompanied a wave of xenophobia that arose inthe United States during the undeclared naval warwith France, and lasted from 1798 until 1802. The1798 act increased the waiting period between filingthe declaration of intention and entering thepetition from three to five years, and extended theresidency requirement to fourteen years, includingfive years in the state where the court of petitionwas located (1 Stat. 566). The law also required theclerk of each court to forward copies of declarationsof intention, a report of registry (some courtscombined the declaration of intention and theregistry), and a report of naturalization proceedingsto the U.S. Secretary of State. Negative reaction tothe law became so strong that on April 14, 1802,Congress finally supplanted it with a newnaturalization act (2 Stat. 153) that basicallyreestablished the provisions of the 1795 act butretained the 1798 registry requirement, whichcontinued until 1828.The act of 1802 was the last major change innaturalization law until 1906. During the

intervening 104 years a number of minor revisionswere made, including a reduction in the waitingperiod between filing the declaration of intentionand the naturalization petition from three to twoyears, and the requirement that petitioners attestthey were not anarchists. Most of the changes,however, merely altered or clarified details ofevidence and certification without changing the basicnature of the admission procedure.By the turn of the twentieth century, thesteadily increasing number of immigrants entering theUnited States each year had increased the demandsupon clerks of the courts, who did most of the workrelating to naturalization. To relieve this burdenand also to standardize the naturalization procedure,Congress passed an act on June 29, 1906 (32 Stat.596) that established a Bureau of Immigration andNaturalization (BIN) and put some of its officers(working under the direction of the JusticeDepartment) in charge of examining all citizenshippetitions. Although the court judges kept theirindependence, the findings and recommendations of thenew agency became the basis for the finaldeterminations of the courts regarding admission,denial, or continued investigation of alienpetitioners. The 1906 law also required that thenames of minor children be included on petitions andthat duplicate records be furnished to the BIN.In 1918 an act of Congress (40 Stat. 542)consolidated two previous acts that had waived thefiling of declarations of intention for aliens withhonorable discharges from the United States militaryservice (an 1862 act for the Army and an 1894 act forthe Navy and Marine Corps; 12 Stat. 597 and 28 Stat.124, respectively). The new act eliminated thedeclaration of intention for aliens with three yearsmilitary service.In 1919 the Bureau of Immigration andNaturalization was divided and transferred to theDepartment of Labor as two agencies: the Bureau ofImmigration and the Bureau of Naturalization.Derivative citizenship for married women waseliminated by an act passed September 22, 1922 (42Stat. 1021), which required them to be naturalized intheir own right. The residency requirement wasreduced to one year and the declaration of intentionwas waived for alien wives of U.S. citizens.

By the beginning of the twentieth century, publicsupport for liberal immigration and naturalizationpolicies had begun to turn to opposition. Congressresponded with the passage of the Immigration Act of1924 (433 Stat. 153), which put a ceiling on thenumber of immigrants allowed to enter the UnitedStates each year from countries outside the westernhemisphere. Within this ceiling it established a"national origins quota" system. The total number ofimmigrants allowed into the United States each yearwas divided among eastern hemisphere countries inproportion to the number of people already in theUnited States from those countries. The 1890 (andlater the 1920) United States census was used as abasis for establishing these quotas. Census countsof blacks, East Asiatics, and American Indians wereexcluded from the quota computations, whicheliminated any further need for the courts todetermine racial eligibility for citizenship. Theverified immigration visa of an alien petitionerbecame evidence of fulfillment of this requirement.Executive Order 6166, issued June 10, 1933,reunited the Bureaus of Immigration andNaturalization to form the Immigration andNaturalization Service (INS), which was transferredto the Department of Justice in 1940.Records DescriptionThe Soundex Index to naturalization petitionsreproduced here indexes records generated by severalcourts. These include both civil and militarypetitions from the United States District and CircuitCourts, Northern District of Illinois, EasternDivision; the Circuit, County, Criminal, and SuperiorCourts of Cook County, Illinois; and county andmunicipal courts in the old INS District #9 (at onetime called District #14), which comprised thenorthern third of Illinois, northwestern Indiana,southern and eastern Wisconsin, and eastern Iowa.The following counties are indexed:Illinois; Boone, Bureau, Carroll, Champaign,Cook, De Kalb, Du Page, Ford, Fulton, Grundy,Henderson, Henry, Iroquois, Jo Daviess, Kane,Kankakee, Kendall, Knox, Lake, La Salle, Lee,Livingston, Marshall, McHenry, McLean, Mercer,Ogle, Peoria, Putnam, Rock Island, Stark,Stephenson, Tazewell, Vermilion, Warren,Whiteside, Will, Winnebago and Woodford.

Indiana; Benton, Fulton, Jasper, Lake, La Porte,Marshall, Newton, Porter, Pulaski, St. Joseph andStarke.Iowa; Allamakee, Appanoose, Benton, Black Hawk,Bremer, Buchanan, Butler, Cedar, Chickasaw,Clayton, Clinton, Davis, Delaware, Des Moines,Dubuque, Fayette, Floyd, Grundy, Hardin, Henry,Howard, Iowa, Jackson, Jefferson, Johnson, Jones,Keokuk, Lee, Linn, Louisa, Mahaska, Mitchell,Monroe, Muscatine, Scott, Tama, Van Buren,Wapello, Washington and Winneshiek.Wisconsin; Adams, Brown, Calumet, Columbia,Crawford, Dane, Dodge, Door, Florence, Fond duLac, Forest, Grant, Green, Green Lake, Iowa,Jefferson, Kenosha, Kewaunee, Lafayette,Langlade, Manitowoc, Marinette, Marquette,Menominee, Milwaukee, Oconto, Outagamie, Ozaukee,Portage, Racine, Richland, Rock, Sauk, Shawano,Sheboygan, Walworth, Washington, Waukesha,Waupaca, Waushara, Winnebago and Wood.The index consists of 162 cubic feet of3- by 5-inch cards arranged in Russell-Soundex order,and thereafter alphabetically by given (first) name.To search for a particular surname (last name) itmust first be coded. A Soundex code consists of aletter and three numbers (for example, M425). Theletter is always the same as the first letter of thesurname; numbers are assigned to the remainingletters of the surname according to the Soundexcoding guide found below. Adjacent letters fallinginto the same numeric group are coded only once.Those separated by vowels or disregarded letters arecoded separately. Zeros are added if necessary toproduce a four-character code. Additional lettersare disregarded.SOUNDEX CODING GUIDEThe NumberJ.23—4f-Represents the lettersfrVX Z—T?Disregard the letters A, E, I, O, U, W, Y, and H.

EXAMPLES OF SOUNDEX-CODED NAMESWashingtonW252KuhneK500After locating the desired Soundex code on theappropriate reel, the user should search under thatcode for the given name of the person being sought.Entries in the index are listed alphabetically:first, by Soundex code; then by given name. Do notoverlook initials, alternate spellings, and "oldcountry" versions of names.Most cards that index naturalizations takingplace after 1906 provide space for the followinginformation: name of petitioner; address; name ofthe court in which naturalization occurred;certificate, petition, or other identifying documentnumber; country and date of birth; date and place ofarrival in the United States; date of naturalization;and name and address of witnesses. Not all of thisinformation, however, is provided on every card.Index cards for naturalizations taking place prior to1906 typically contain only the name of thepetitioner, the name of the court in whichnaturalization occurred, document number, country oforigin, and date of naturalization.Related RecordsThe Soundex Index is a record of the Immigrationand Naturalization Service. But declarations ofintention, petitions for citizenship, and othernaturalization documents are court records. Thefederal court system was established by the JudiciaryAct of September 24, 1789. It established districtcourts, which heard principally criminal, admiralty,and bankruptcy cases; and circuit courts, which heardthe mass of litigation between individuals andcorporations, either because of the amount involvedor because of diverse citizenship. Both courts couldnaturalize aliens.Illinois was divided into two judicial districtsin 1855 (Act of February 13, 1855, 10 Stat. 606).The Northern District, which comprised the northernquarter of the state sat at Chicago; the Southern

District, which served the remainder of the state,sat at Springfield.Further reorganization took place in 1887 whenthe Northern District was separated into twodivisions (Act of March 2, 1887, 24 Stat. 442).Chicago was designated the seat of court for theNorthern Division, and Peoria that of the SouthernDivision. In 1937 a third district—the Eastern—wasestablished, which encompassed much of the southernthird of the state as well as the eastern counties(Act of August 12, 1937; 50 Stat. 624). Peoria wasshifted to the Southern District, and the NorthernDistrict was realigned when the divisions werechanged to Eastern and Western, the principal courtsbeing Chicago and Freeport, respectively.The following records are in the custody of theNational Archives-Great Lakes Region:United States Circuit Court,Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division(Naturalized aliens until 1911, when the federalcircuit courts were abolished, 36 Stat. 1167)Declarations of Intent, 1906-1911**Petition Books, 1906-1911Certificate of Naturalization Stubs,1907-1911United States District Court,Northern District of Illinois, Eastern DivisionIndex to Declarations of Intention,1906-1960Declarations of Intention, 1872-1982Naturalization Orders, 1872-1903Naturalization Order Books, 1921-1976Naturalization Depositions, 1909-1964Naturalization Journals, 1925-1959Records of Repatriation, 1936-1939Index to Petition Books, 1906-1960**Petition Books, 1906-1959**Military Petition & Record Books,1918-1926; 1942-1946; 1954-1956Certificate of Naturalization Stubs,1912-1918**Petitions, 1872-1902Naturalization Case Files, 1928-1978

Most of the above records are arranged bydocument number; and some volumes are self-indexed.The Soundex Index may provide identifying numbersthat allow other documents to be located. Manypetitions are filed with the correspondingdeclaration of intention, and sometimes a certificateof arrival. Records that pre-date 1906 typicallycontain little information.Copies of Circuit, County, Criminal,and Superior Court RecordsThe National Archives-Great Lakes Region alsoholds dexagraph (negative photostat) copies ofpetitions and orders filed in Circuit, County,Criminal, and Superior Courts in Cook County, 18711906. These records are also indexed by the SoundexIndex. The original records, including those datingafter 1906, are in possession of the Circuit Court ofCook County. For additional information, researchersshould contact:Law Division, Circuit Court of Cook CountyRichard J. Daley Center, Room 120150 West WashingtonChicago, IL 60602**These records are indexed by the Soundex Index.Other Court RecordsFor information about other naturalizationrecords referred to in the Soundex Index, researchersshould contact the court in which the naturalizationoccurred. Some courts retain custody of theserecords, others have been transferred to state andmunicipal archives.Additional information about naturalization lawand process is available in Frank George Franklin,The Legislative History of Naturalization in theUnited States (New York: Arno Press & the New YorkTimes, 1969) and John J. Newman, AmericanNaturalization Processes and Procedures 1790-1985(Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society, 1985).George B. Everton, Sr., ed., Handy Book forGenealogists (Logan, Utah: Everton, 1981) provides aconcise guide for determining county and othergeographical boundaries at a given time. For related8

records relevant to Chicago, see Loretto DennisSzucs, Chicago and Cook County Sources; AGenealogical and Historical Guide (Salt Lake City:Ancestry, 1986); and for a comprehensive discussionof other records held by the National Archives-GreatLakes Region as well as the other ten regionaldepositories, see Loretto Dennis Szucs & SandraHargreaves Luebking, The Archives; A Guide to theNational Archives Field Branches (Salt Lake City:Ancestry, 1988).These introductory remarks were written byShirley J. Burton and the records were filmed by theGenealogical Society of Utah. There are no rolls 95,96, 97, and 98.

CONTENTSRollSoundex Codes and Given 2829303132333435363738394041424344454647A-000 through A-234A-235 through A-352 MartinA-352 Mary through A-436 JonathonA-436 Joseph through A-536 Abr. (Alo)A-536 Abraham through A-536 Franzaen (Frank)A-536 Fred through A-536 OttilieA-536 Otto through A-651 Motel (Max)A-651 N. A. through B-200 AntoleB-200 Anton through B-216B-220 through B-241B-242 through B-260 Gys. BertB-260 H. through B-321B-322 through B-400 Cyril NeilsonB-400 Demko through B-420 Wilhelm RobertB-420 William through B-450 Dwosia (Dora)B-450 E. P. A. through B-500 Frank WilliamB-500 Fred through B-523B-524 through B-550 Gustov JosephB-550 H. through B-612B-613 through B-620 OwenB-620 P. through B-623B-624 through B-626 Johen (Johan)B-626 John through B-632 VojtaB-632 W. J. through B-650 Chas.B-650 Chris (Christ) through B-652 EzioB-652 F. through B-653 Szlomi (Samuel)B-653 Tekla through C-124C-125 through C-200 EwaC-200 F. W. through C-240C-241 through C-350C-351 through C-426C-430 through C-466C-500 through C-520C-521 through C-562C-562 through C-623 AndyC-623 Ann Marie through C-631C-632 through C-642 Fritz RobertC-642 G. through C-652 Lydia AugustaC-652 Mabel Doreen through D-124D-125 through D-165 Duje (Daniel)D-165 Edmund through D-246D-250 through D-320 OttoD-320 Paul through D-420 IvanD-420 Jacob through D-450 MurthyD-450 Natalie through D-526D-530 through D-562D-563 through D-625 Esther10

RollSoundex Codes and Given 59697D-625 Fanny through E-152 EvenE-152 Faustino through E-252E-253 through E-425 Carl RickardE-425 Catherine through E-552E-553 through E-652E-653 through F-240F-241 through F-356F-360 through F-431F-432 through F-520 KlaraF-520 L. through F-620 KurtF-620 Laughlin Alex through F-634 JuliusF-634 Karl through F-652 Fraz (Franze)F-652 Fred through G-100 Fritz AugustG-100 George through G-216G-220 through G-260 CyrielleG-260 David through G-355 Orke (Harry)G-355 Oscar through G-420G-421 through G-432 Ruth (Rachel)G-432 S. through G-516G-520 through G-565G-600 through G-616 Motte (Max)G-616 Nathan through G-622 VincentyG-622 W. through G-632G-633 through G-651 IzydoreG-651 J. through G-662G-663 through H-155 MauriceH-155 Max through H-200 JozsefH-200 Jules through H-242H-243 through H-263 Louis (Lazer)H-263 M. through H-400 DusanH-400 E. Bruce through H-423 OttoH-423 P. Gust through H-453 ElizabethH-453 Elke (Anne) through H-520 GustavH-520 Harriett through H-525 James SigurdH-525 Jan through H-536H-540 through H-562H-563 through H-622H-623 through H-636H-640 through 1-3511-352 through J-220 SamJ-220 Tadeusas through J-520J-521 through J-525 Franciszek (Frank)J-525 Frank through J-525 Oysten AnaliusJ-525 P. through K-110K-112 through K-200 Axel NickK-200 B. through K-240K-241 through K-320 LukasK-320 Mabel through K-343Roll 96 does not exist.Roll 97 does not exist.11

RollSoundex Codes and Given 30131132133134135Roll 98 does not exist.Roll 99 does not exist.K-344 through K-420 JonK-420 Joseph through K-451K-452 through K-510 IrvingK-510 J. through K-532 KyelK-532 L. through K-615K-616 through K-625 GustavK-625 H. H. through K-650 LydiaK-650 M. through L-100 JuliusL-100 Karl through L-153L-154 through L-220 QuintiliaL-220 Raffaello through L-312L-313 through L-514L-515 through L-530 EvelineL-533 F. through L-550 Luigi (Louis)L-550 Magdalena through L-625 PeterL-625 P. A. through M-200 SzymonM-200 Tamy through M-234M-235 through M-242 TrygveM-242 Vaclav through M-254 DuncanM-254 Ebbe through M-263 VittoriaM-263 Walter through M-326 PhilippM-326 Rudolph through M-422 KonstantynM-422 Ladislav through M-460 Dore WilhelminaM-460 E. F. through M-520 OwenM-520 P. through M-600 CharlisM-600 Charlotte through M-620 JohannaM-620 John through M-632 JohannM-632 John through N-120 LulaN-120 Mabel through N-242 JonasN-242 Kannen through N-425 Everett JonasN-425 F. A. through N-550 Dorothee MargaretN-550 E. G. through O-166O-200 through O-4000-410 through O-462O-463 through P-142 JustinaP-142 Karel (Charles) through P-236 IvanConstantineP-236 Jacob through P-325 Myer (Mayer)P-325 Naida through P-362 HulverP-362 I. M. through P-411P-412 through P-432P-433 through P-534 SzymonP-534 Theresa through P-625 AxelP-625 B. through Q-355Q-356 through R-152R-153 through R-216R-220 through R-252 EinorR-252 E. through R-320 Augustin13613713813914014114214314414514612

RollSoundex Codes and Given 8179180181182183R-320 Balbina through R-400 LydiaR-400 Mafalda through R-534R-535 through S-120 JonsS-120 Josef through S-152 Gustave AdS-152 H. through S-166S-200 through S-240S-241 through S-315 DuncanS-315 Earl Stanley through S-330S-331 through S-352 FrankS-352 H. through S-362 VyncenzS-362 W. A. through S-415 Douglas FrankS-415 E. P. through S-432 AvrumS-432 Balhaser through S-463S-465 through S-525 AmonS-525 Anders through S-530 Izrael ArogaS-530 J. through S-535 Iver A.S-535 J. A. through S-551S-552 through S-616S-620 through S-646S-650 through T-216T-220 through T-450 EveT-450 Francis (Franz) through T-526T-530 through T-624T-625 through U-450U-451 through V-263V-264 through V-526V-530 through W-160 GutliffW-160 H. through W-236W-240 through W-300 IvanW-300 J. through W-410 EvaW-410 F. through W-425W-426 through W-516 HarryW-516 H. through W-620W-621 through Y-520Y-521 through Z-263Z-264 through Z-560 IrvingZ-560 J. through END3GSA-DC-891120007913

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