The Alien Arrivals Collection documents the arrival of more over 600,000 immigrants into the UK, in the periods 1810-1811 and 1826-1869.
This important addition to Ancestry's databases of migrant information can be searched and viewed free of charge on the Ancestry Library website at Oxfordshire Studies, Oxfordshire Record Office, and in all Oxfordshire County Council libraries.
Better still, it is now possible to use the Alien Arrivals records alongside complementary British records to paint a clearer picture of the impact of European immigration on 19th century Britain. Political and economic conditions in Italy, for example, encouraged many to seek a new life in England and Wales:
Charles Camozzi

Ironmonger and clockmaker Charles Camozzi was recorded in the 1841 census, living with his Bicester-born wife Eleanor and their five children.
By the time of the 1851 census his business has clearly propsered, with properties both in Bicester Market Place and Buckingham Market Place, and a son and son-in-law gainfully employed as watchmakers.
Charles Camozzi no doubt made several trips between Italy and Britain, securing his family's future, but he can be pinpointed for certain on a sailing of the steam vessel Ocean, journeying from Rotterdam to London on 18 September 1847 and, although he is listed as an 'alien', it's interesting to see that his country of origin is given as "Bicester, Oxon".Friedrich Max Muller
Muller is to be found on the 11 June 1846 List of Aliens for a sailing from Boulogne, when he was known to have met The Times correspondent, William Howard Russell, after which the two became lifelong friends.








