New York Immigration Bundle

Type: Publications
Price: $67.85
 

Description

 

Note: NYG&B members receive a $10 discount on this bundle. If you are not already logged in, upon checkout you will be prompted to do so, and this additional discount will be automatically applied.

Purchase print copies of three of Professor Anne Sibert Buiter's essential works on immigration—Immigration to New York in the English/British Colonial Period, New York Under the Dutch: Focus on Migration and Immigration, and Tracing Immigrants through the Port of New York: Early National Period to 1924—for one bargain price.

All titles by Anne Sibert Buiter, Professor of Economics, Birkbeck, University of London

Immigration to New York in the English/British Colonial Period 

36 pages, published May 2021. 

Professor Buiter goes in-depth on immigration and related records for English and British colonial New York. A brief historical background precedes details on immigration and emigration records and some additional records that may contain immigration information. Also covered are British and colonial naturalization procedures, the naturalization records, and how to find them. Researched while writing her book, Tracing Immigrants through the Port on New York: Early National Period to 1924, Professor Buiter provides examples throughout. Also by Professor Buiter, New York Under the Dutch: Focus on Migration and Immigration

New York Under the Dutch: Focus on Migration and Immigration

42 pages, published September 2020

Interspersed among the Dutch records of New Netherland and New Amsterdam are those related to migration and immigration to the New World. Readers will find an overview of records that contain information of genealogical value while maintaining a focus on the topic of migration. Researched while writing her book, Tracing Immigrants through the Port on New York: Early National Period to 1924, Professor Buiter provides a survey of publications and original records for the period. Examples illuminate the records sets and publications throughout.

Tracing Immigrants through the Port of New York: Early National Period to 1924

332 pages, published 2020

Between the late 1700s and 1924 New York was a key gateway for millions who journeyed to the United States to establish new lives. Today, millions of Americans descend from immigrants who passed through Ellis Island and Castle Garden. Tracing Immigrants through the Port of New York: Early National Period to 1924 details the records and research strategies for use when tracing immigrants who passed through New York City.

About the Author

Anne Sibert Buiter is a Professor of Economics at Birkbeck, University of London and was head of its School of Economics, Mathematics and Statistics for seven years. She also teaches at the School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University. She is a Research Fellow of CEPR and was a founding contributor of Voxeu.org. She is a Fellow of the European Economic Association and the Kiel Institute for World Economics. She has published widely on central bank design, public finance, economic and political aspects of economic and monetary union in Europe, and the political economy of structural reform. She is a member of the London Times Shadow Monetary Policy Committee. She was an external member of the Monetary Policy Committee of the Central Bank of Iceland, the Panel of Economic and Monetary Experts for the European Parliament’s Committee for Economic and Monetary Affairs and the Council of Economic Advisors to the Opposition Front Bench, U. K. She has served on the editorial boards of several journals and was Associate Editor of the Economic Journal and Macroeconomic Dynamics. She earned her PhD in economics at Carnegie-Mellon University. She has a long-time interest in early American history and genealogy and is a Trustee of the New York Genealogical and Biographical Society.

Neon CRM by Neon One