A Guide to the Charlottesville (Va.) Naturalization Records, 1907
A Collection in
the Library of Virginia
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Library of Virginia
The Library of Virginia800 East Broad Street
Richmond, Virginia 23219-8000
USA
Email: archdesk@lva.virginia.gov(Archives)
URL: http://www.lva.virginia.gov/
© 2025 By The Library of Virginia. All Rights Reserved.
Processed by: Library of Virginia staff
Administrative Information
Access Restrictions
Department of Commerce and Labor, Division of Naturalization, Declaration of Intention, 1907, is only available on microfilm as a copy stored at the Virginia State Records Center on reel barcode 19651, SRC box 646. Security microforms (i.e. microfilm and microfiche) stored through this program are not used for reference purposes and access restrictions apply. Contact the State Records Center with questions regarding these materials.
Use Restrictions
Department of Commerce and Labor, Division of Naturalization, Declaration of Intention, 1907, is only available on microfilm as a copy stored at the Virginia State Records Center on reel barcode 19651, SRC box 646. Security microforms (i.e. microfilm and microfiche) stored through this program are not used for reference purposes and access restrictions apply.
Preferred Citation
Charlottesville (Va.) Naturalization Records, 1907. Local government records collection, Charlottesville Court Records. The Library of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia, 23219.
Acquisition Information
Microfilm images made from the original standardized volume of naturalization records issued by the federal government that are housed in the Charlottesville clerk's office.
Original volume retained in the locality. Contact the Clerk of the Circuit Court for access.
Processing Information
The standardized volume of naturalization records issued by the federal government was microfilmed by the Library of Virginia’s Imaging Services Division.
Encoded by M. Long: March 2025.
Historical Information
Context for Record Type: Following the passage of the Naturalization Act of 1906, the federal government standardized the naturalization process by issuing bound volumes containing standard naturalization forms. These bound volumes were kept by the various courts of record in which a person could make a declaration of intent to become a U.S. citizen, and copies of the records were sent on to the federal government.
Locality History: Charlottesville bears a variant spelling derived from the name of the Allegheny Mountains that pass along the county's western boundary. It was formed in 1822 from Bath, Botetourt, and Monroe (now in West Virginia) Counties. Subsequent additions were made from Monroe County in 1843 and Bath County in 1847. On 20 March 1991, the General Assembly authorized the consolidation of Charlottesville and the independent city of Clifton Forge into a new independent city of Alleghany. The citizens of both locales voted against the proposal on 5 May 1992, however, and the change did not take effect. In March 2001 Clifton Forge's citizens voted to relinquish city status, and Charlottesville regained the city (now town) of Clifton Forge on 1 July 2001. The county seat is Covington.
Scope and Content
Charlottesville (Va.) Naturalization Records, 1907, consists of Department of Commerce and Labor, Division of Naturalization, Petition and Record, 1907, a standardized volume of naturalization records issued by the federal government. There were two primary types of naturalization volumes issued by the federal government: Declaration of Intention volumes and Petition volumes. Oftentimes, applicants were documented in both of these volume types within a locality, but that is not always the case. An applicant may have entered their declaration of intention in one locality before moving and completing their naturalization petition elsewhere.
Declaration of Intention volumes record declarations of intent to become United States citizens. Information on the declaration of intent includes a person's name, age, occupation, color, complexion, height in feet and inches, weight, color of hair, color of eyes, other visible distinctive marks, place and date of birth, current residence, place from where emigrated to the United States, vessel arrived on, last foreign residence, a renunciation of allegiance and fidelity to the state of which the person is currently a citizen, and the date the intention was sworn.
Petition volumes, often called Petition and Record, record the petitions for naturalization, oaths of allegiance, and orders of court admitting petitioner to United States citizenship. Not all parts may be completed as all stages of the citizenship process could be completed in different courts and in different locations in the United States.
A petition for naturalization contains the petitioner's name, address, occupation, birthdate and place, place where emigrated from and date and port of arrival in the U.S., name of ship on which emigrated, where declared intention to become a citizen, spouse's name, place of birth and address, and number of children with their names, birth dates and places of birth. Additional recorded information includes a renunciation of allegiance and fidelity to the state of which the person is currently a citizen or subject, a statement that the petitioner can speak English, and the date since the petitioner has resided constantly in the U.S. An affidavit of witness to these facts is signed by two persons.
For many petitions, a declaration of intent and occasionally other correspondence or related documentation is inserted into the volume facing the naturalization petition. Also sometimes included is an order of the court admitting the petitioner to United States citizenship that includes date of citizenship and certificate of naturalization number.
Inserted into the volumes at various points were correspondence and regulations from the United States Department of Labor's Bureau of Naturalization.
Arrangement
This collection is arranged into the following series:
Related Material
Additional Charlottesville Court Records can be found on microfilm at The Library of Virginia. Consult "A Guide to Virginia County and City Records on Microfilm."