RMS Vaderland Passenger Lists 1904-1911

 

All Digitized Passenger Lists For the RMS Vaderland Available at the GG Archives. Listing Includes Date Voyage Began, Steamship Line, Vessel, Passenger Class and Route.

 

View our RMS Vaderland Archival Collection that contains Vaderland (1900) Red Star Line Ship's History (Brief); Passenger Lists; Brochures; Sailing Schedules; Photographs; and More.

 

Front Cover of a First and Second Class Passenger List from the SS Vaderland of the Red Star Line, Departing 4 June 1904 from New York to Antwerp.

1904-06-04 SS Vaderland Passenger List

Steamship Line: Red Star Line

Class of Passengers: First and Second Class

Date of Departure: 4 June 1904

Route: New York to Antwerp

Commander: Captain R. C. Ehoff

Notable Passengers: Julian Gumperz, Henry Morgenthau (Sr.), Helen Morgenthau, and James J. Parmelee.

 

Passenger Manifest, Red Star Line RMS Vaderland, 1901, Antwerp to New York (Front Cover)

1904-08-13 RMS Vaderland Passenger List

Steamship Line: Red Star Line

Class of Passengers: Cabin

Date of Departure: 13 August 1904

Route: Antwerp to New York via Dover

Commander: Captain R. C. Ehoff

 

Front Cover of the Cabin Class Passenger List from the RMS Vaderland of the Red Star Line, Departing Saturday, 10 September 1904 from Antwerp for New York via Dover

1904-09-10 RMS Vaderland Passenger List

Steamship Line: Red Star Line

Class of Passengers: Cabin Class

Date of Departure: 10 September 1904

Route: Antwerp for New York via Dover

Commander: Captain R. C. Ehoff

 

1911-09-16 RMS Vaderland

1911-09-16 RMS Vaderland Passenger List

Steamship Line: Red Star Line

Class of Passengers: First Class

Date of Departure: 16 September 1911

Route: Antwerp to New York via Dover

Commander: Captain R. Prager

 

Passenger Lists contained in the GG Archives collection represent the souvenir list provided to the passengers of each cabin class (and other classes). Many of these souvenir passenger lists have disappeared over the years. Our collection contains a sampling of what was originally produced and printed by the steamship lines.

 

 

 

⚠️ About Accuracy in Historical Records Research Tip

Context. The GG Archives presents passenger lists as faithfully as possible to the original documents. While OCR is generally accurate, portions of these collections—especially image captions and some transcriptions—are typed by hand and may include typographical or spelling variations. The original manifests themselves also contained clerical inconsistencies (names recorded phonetically, mid-voyage corrections, etc.).

What this means for your research:

  • Search variant spellings of names (e.g., “Schmidt/Schmitt/Smith,” “Giuseppe/Joseph”).
  • Cross-reference with immigration cards, passport applications, naturalization files, city directories, and newspapers.
  • Treat manifests as primary sources with historical quirks—use them alongside corroborating records.
  • For place names, consider historical borders and language variants (e.g., Danzig/Gdańsk, Trieste/Trst).

How to cite. When quoting a name from a manifest, consider adding [sic] for obvious misspellings and include a note such as “spelling as printed in original passenger list.”

Need help? If you spot a likely transcription error in captions, feel free to contact us with the page URL and a brief note—we love community input. 🙏

 

Curator’s Note

For over 25 years, I've been dedicated to a unique mission: tracking down, curating, preserving, scanning, and transcribing historical materials. These materials, carefully researched, organized, and enriched with context, live on here at the GG Archives. Each passenger list isn't just posted — it's a testament to our commitment to helping you see the people and stories behind the names.

It hasn't always been easy. In the early years, I wasn't sure the site would survive, and I often paid the hosting bills out of my own pocket. But I never built this site for the money — I built it because I love history and believe it's worth preserving. It's a labor of love that I've dedicated myself to, and I'm committed to keeping it going.

If you've found something here that helped your research, sparked a family story, or just made you smile, I'd love to hear about it. Your experiences and stories are the real reward for me. And if you'd like to help keep this labor of love going, there's a "Contribute to the Website" link tucked away on our About page.

📜 History is worth keeping. Thanks for visiting and keeping it alive with me.

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