The Archives holds a valuable collection of sources for family history researchers. The majority date from Federation in 1901, although in some fields material from the colonial period is held. Records are generally available to the public once they are over 30 years old.
This fact sheet outlines the main sources of genealogical information held by our Canberra office.
Passenger lists – The master of each passenger vessel and aircraft arriving at Australian ports was required to provide port authorities with a list of passengers disembarking at that port. The Commonwealth assumed responsibility for passenger arrivals and departures from the states in 1923.
Original passenger lists for all Australian ports from 1924 and microfilm copies of earlier passenger lists for some ports are held. Details of holdings are in Fact Sheet 38 – Passenger records held in Canberra.
Migrant selection documents – The Commonwealth government's participation in the administration of migration schemes dates from 1945. Prior to World War II this responsibility lay principally with the State governments. All offices of the Archives have considerable holdings of migrant selection documents from 1945. They include schemes for resettlement of refugees and displaced persons, and a range of assisted passage schemes. See Fact Sheet 66 – Migrant selection documents held in Canberra.
Migrant case files – Migrant case files cover those migrants who were not participants in assisted migration schemes. These are usually held in the general correspondence series of the Department of Immigration, or Australian overseas posts. There are considerable holdings of these records.
Naturalisation records – Naturalisation records for the Commonwealth of Australia from 1904 are held in Canberra, as are some earlier records of the former colony of Victoria. See Fact Sheet 68 – Naturalisation records held in Canberra.
Many records relating to the Commonwealth’s administration of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in the Northern Territory from 1911 are held by the Archives in Canberra. Names of Indigenous people referred to in these records have been indexed in the Bringing Them Home name index. See Fact Sheet 175 – Bringing Them Home name index.
Main printed electoral rolls are held for the electoral division of the Australian Capital Territory from 1930 (and for the divisions of Canberra and Fraser from 1974) in record series A6354.
General sources – Service records for Australians who served with the First AIF in World War I or the Army, Navy or Air Force in World War II are available through the Defence Service Records service. For details about service in other conflicts see Fact Sheet 63 – Sources of information about military service. The following fact sheets contain more specific information about holdings:
Aliens – As part of the domestic security measures adopted during the two world wars, aliens living in Australia were required to seek registration. Relevant records are held for both periods and include lists of aliens, registration files, and relevant information within correspondence file series. Further details are listed in the the Archives research guide Finding Families: The Guide to the National Archives of Australia for Genealogists.
Internees and prisoners of war – Internment was the wartime confinement within a prescribed area, normally a camp, of people considered to be a threat to domestic security. Internees and prisoners of war were administered under similar arrangements. Details of relevant records are included in Fact Sheet 58 – WWI internee, alien and POW records held in Canberra and Fact Sheet 59 – WWII internee, alien and POW records held in Canberra.
Security dossiers of individuals (and organisations) identified for surveillance by the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) and its predecessors are being transferred from ASIO. Records not already in the Archives' custody will be transferred from ASIO on request. To obtain access to these records, see Fact Sheet 33 – Security intelligence records held in Canberra.
Published sources – A number of government publications contain information on people elected to either the Senate or the House of Representatives, or Commonwealth government employees. These publications include Commonwealth staff and seniority lists (1903 to 1972), Federal guides and Commonwealth government directories (from 1921), Commonwealth of Australia Gazettes (Fact Sheet 22 – Commonwealth of Australia Gazettes has more detail on the Gazettes) and Commonwealth Parliamentary Handbooks (from 1918).
Personal files – Personnel records of former public servants will generally be found in the records of the department in which they last worked, or its successor. However, all except the most senior public servants' records are destroyed once the person has or would have reached the age of 75 years.
Personal records collections – The Archives also holds the personal records of many former governors-general, prime ministers, ministers and senior public servants. A list of persons for whom records are held is available in all reading rooms.
Prime Ministers’ records – The Archives holds records about all prime ministers of Australia and personal records collections (some quite small) for the majority of them. See Fact Sheet 70 – Prime Ministers of Australia for details of fact sheets on all prime ministers to 1975, and the Australia’s Prime Ministers website.
You can obtain more information from RecordSearch, the Archives database. You can also use RecordSearch to find out about the agencies that created the records and to locate more records on your subject. You might also explore PhotoSearch to find out if there are photos pertaining to your subject.
RecordSearch and PhotoSearch are also available in all Archives reading rooms. Reference staff are available in the reading rooms to help you, or email ref@naa.gov.au.
Comments or other feedback can be sent to archives@naa.gov.au
updated January 2004