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The aim of CLIP is simple - to improve access to the records of seafarers on British registered ships of the late 19th and early 20th century. We do this by making available information about the records, and providing data drawn from crew lists and agreements.
- CLIP data
How the CLIP finding aids can help your research CLIP began...
- Seafarers names from crew lists
The CLIP system will provide you with likely matches, using...
- Masters names from BT124
Be aware The images show the man's career and this is...
- Masters names from crew lists
Crew lists and agreements for British registered ships show...
- Owners names from crew lists
Crew lists and agreements for British registered ships show...
- Peoples names from shipping registers
Seafarers names from crew lists; Masters name from BT124 ......
- Ships by name
The index shows the ships' names, official numbers and ports...
- Ships by official number
This page is an index of ships by official number drawn from...
- CLIP data
These records consist of the Crew Lists and Ships' Agreements, with some Official (Crew) Log Books, which were required by law to be sent to the Registrar of Shipping and Seamen for ships...
To find a ship’s official number go to the Crew List Index Project (CLIP) website, which has information about merchant ships from 1855 to 1913, or the Miramar Ship Index website...
The CLIP system will provide you with likely matches, using our vessels database (the largest and most comprehensive database of British registered ships) with further information and links to help you find the crew lists.
A ship's crew can generally be divided into four main categories: the deck department, the engineering department, the steward's department, and other.
By using the list of officers in the deck logs and the muster rolls, one can compile a list of the crew. Then by using the crew list and the list of casualties, the names of the survivors of a...
Crew List Index Project. Types of sailing ships with the abbreviations used in the Mercantile Navy List. Human ingenuity has produced a huge variety of sailing ships with an extensive, and sometimes inconsistent, jargon to describe the ship types, rigs and sails.