Guest contributor Marisa Louie Lee offers a look at the genealogical riches available in A-Files at the National Archives. NOTE: Lee will lead a webinar on "20th Century Immigration and Naturalization Records" Saturday, May 30.
The majority of Asian Pacific Americans today have family
connections to the period following
the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965. For decades prior to this,
immigration visas had been given largely to European immigrants with only a very
small quota for immigrants of Asian descent. These quotas were abolished in
1965, and visas were issued preferentially to relatives of U.S. citizens and
permanent residents in order to reunite families. By 1980, 58.6% of Asian
Pacific Americans were counted as having been born outside of the United
States, an almost two-fold increase from the 1960 census.
Where, then, can historians discover more about these twentieth-century
immigrants? And what about the stories of the pioneers who
preceded and paved the way for their families, while living under laws and
circumstances that tried to exclude them?
Since 1944, the federal government has maintained
information about individual immigrants and alien residents of the United
States in what are known as Alien Files, or A-Files. As of late 2019, over 1.3
million A-Files are publicly available through the National Archives at San
Francisco and the National Archives at Kansas City. Currently, the A-Files in
NARA’s holdings are for individuals born in 1918 and before. To search these
holdings, use NARA’s online catalog.
The breadth of what can be found in an A-File is
astonishing. No two A-Files are guaranteed to be alike. They can range from a
single document to hundreds of pages. The extent and complexity of an A-File
depends on an immigrant’s history and interactions with the federal government.
The following examples give a glimpse into the diversity of these files.
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Hazura Singh Mahaesar's photograph from his A-File |
In Mr. Mahaesar’s A-File, we discover more about his reason
for coming to the United States. His wife had died not long before, and he was
left with no immediate family in India. He decided to visit his adult children
living in the United States, who in turn filed paperwork for him to remain with
them and eventually become a permanent resident. His A-File has copies of his
wife’s death certificate from India and his own teaching credential to teach
Punjabi.
Ky Thi Hong was
among the tens of thousands of Vietnamese refugees who immigrated to the United
States during the Vietnam War. Born in Baclieu, Vietnam, she arrived at Camp
Pendleton on April 30, 1975–the date of the fall of Saigon.
Three years after arriving in the United States, Mrs. Hong
applied to become a permanent resident. Her A-File
contains her Application for Status As Permanent Resident (INS Form I-485). Documents
in her A-File also relate to her efforts to keep track of relatives in refugee
camps in the years following.
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Canuto Salaver's application for a permit to re-enter the U.S. in 1947, for a planned trip to visit family in the Philippines |
Canuto Salaver, who came to the United States from the Philippines in 1927, has an A-File that begins when he registers under the requirements of the Alien Registration Act in 1940. His A-File follows twenty years of his life, until he petitions to become a naturalized citizen in 1960. At the time of Mr. Salaver’s immigration to the United States in 1927, he was considered a United States national; this changed in 1934 when the Philippines was put on a path to independence and all Filipinos were re-classified as aliens. His A-File includes his Alien Registration Form (INS Form AR-2) from 1940, which shares that he was a musician working for a traveling band, and an Application for a Re-entry Permit in 1947 (INS Form I-131).
The A-Files are a limitless, rich source of stories about twentieth-century immigrants and the lives they built in the United States. To learn more
about the A-Files maintained by the National Archives, visit the A-Files webpage
on the National Archives website or read the article “The
A-Files: Finding Your Immigrant Ancestors,” from the Spring 2013 issue of Prologue magazine.

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