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Explore Your German Roots

New Emigration Museum in Hamburg

Edited by Jennifer L. Price

Hamburg has a new attraction: The Port of Dreams - BallinStadt - Emigrant World Hamburg  opened July 4th in the presence of 500 invited guests. In his opening address, Hamburg Mayor Ole von Beust commented that, "The BallinStadt is more than a museum. It stands for everything that embodies American independence: liberty, equality and the right to seek one's fortune. For over five million people, the Emigrants' Halls, today's BallinStadt, were the starting point on their journey to the New World, coupled with their hope for a better life and the realization of their own dreams."

The BallinStadt Port of Dreams tells the moving story of more than five million people who left their homes between 1850 and 1939 via the port of Hamburg to start a new life in America. 81 % of them stayed in the United States – today every fifth U.S. citizen has German roots. Hamburg made emigration history.

Apart from Germans, many came from Central and Eastern Europe. For all of them, Hamburg was the "Gateway to the World". They left their homelands to find fortune in the "Country of Unbounded Possibilities". All of them made a stopover in the Port of Hamburg.

Hamburg has dedicated the Emigration Museum "BallinStadt" – named after Albert Ballin, director-general of the great shipping company HAPAG – to all of these emigrants.

In addition to providing fascinating glimpses of the different phases of leaving one's former life and traveling to start a new one, the exhibition also examines what made people choose to leave their home and traces their fortunes after their arrival in New York.  The interactive edutainment exhibition allows visitors to relate to the past and present aspects of emigration; innovative technology enables them to slip into the role of an emigrant and embark on a journey to a new life. Children can accompany their parents on this journey, allowing them to experience the topic from their own perspective. The exhibition will offer special school programs for varying age groups.

There is also a public research section with computer workstations for visitors interested in tracing the emigration history of their ancestors. BallinStadt employees specially trained in genealogy are on hand to provide assistance.

Visitors can search the passenger lists from 1850 to 1934 and the MyFamily database which includes, among other information, U.S. census lists that can help the millions of emigrants' descendants pinpoint where their family originally came from. The Hamburg passenger lists provide a wealth of information about the five million emigrants who left from Hamburg and are a unique source of information for researchers.

To learn more about this unique museum, visit www.ballinstadt.com

 

 


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