This section of the site will allow you to browse more detailed information on the people and places associated with our family tree.
This section of the site will allow you to browse more detailed information on the people and places associated with our family tree.
If you have registered and received an account, then you will be able to login here with that account as well. Logging in will allow you access to protected pages, and also allow you to add and edit pages as well.
If you have registered and received an account, then you will be able to login here with that account as well. Logging in will allow you access to protected pages, and also allow you to add and edit pages as well.
This section of the site will allow you to browse more detailed information on the people and places associated with our family tree.
If you have registered and received an account, then you will be able to login here with that account as well. Logging in will allow you access to protected pages, and also allow you to add and edit pages as well.
Featured article
In 1876, the Nissen Family comprising Hans Christian Nissen, his wife Christine Frederickke Nissen (nee Boisen), and their five children aged 2 to 11, sailed from the port of Kiel in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany (previously Denmark), for England. On 25th May 1876, they then left England for Australia in the City of Adelaide.
The family are listed in the passenger list for the voyage. The passengers on this voyage were all assisted migrants from Germany and the passengers were described as labourers - Hans, was a cabinetmaker-joiner. The family regarded themselves as coming from Denmark, however Schleswig, the part of Denmark where that had been living had been annexed as part of Germany in 1864.
The Nissen Family received free passage from the South Australian Govenment to migrate to South Australia. After the voyage, the family kept the Passenger's Contract Ticket issued by the Emigration Agent for South Australia, presumably in London. The ticket ended up in the posessions of Maren Nissen, who was the youngest member of the family who travelled on the City of Adelaide - only two years old in 1876. Maren was a keen genealogist, ahead of her time, and kept many scrapbooks recording her family history. These have been passed down in her family, and the ticket survives to this day.
Did you know
... that superior tonnage and a greater spread of canvas provided clipper ships with higher speed. In 1876, an Ocean Race from the English Channel to Australia saw the City of Adelaide keep apace with a much larger clipper - the Bundaleer. They kept in sight of each other for almost the entire voyage.
... that Devitt and Moore were consistently identified as the registered owners of the City of Adelaide, but technically they were only the managing agents in London.
... the donor of the Sandover Medal, presented annually to the fairest and best player in the West Australian Football League, Alfred Sandover was likely conceived on board the City of Adelaide during the 1866 voyage to London.