Series 83892
District Court (Second District : Weber County) Naturalization record books

Dates: i 1896-

6.50 cubic feet and 8 microfilm reelsSkip to Containers

These records are housed in the Utah State Archives' permanent storage room.

Scope and Content

To become a citizen of the United States, an individual normally filed a "declaration of intention to become a citizen" at least two years prior to applying for citizenship. The next step was the naturalization hearing at which the candidate and witnesses either made oral statements or filed written petitions and affidavits attesting to the applicant's character, worthiness to become a citizen, and the validity of statements made to the court. If the judge found the applicant eligible to become a citizen, an oath was administered and the individual renounced his former citizenship. At this point a certificate of citizenship was issued documenting the fact. These volumes contain documentation of the final steps of becoming a United States citizen. They include petitions for naturalization, certificates of citizenship, and accompanying documentation.

The first volume contains only certificates of citizenship. Each form gives the date, applicant's name, former country and kingdom, current county of residence , and a standardized statement that the applicant had produced the necessary evidence and taken the required oaths. The judge then signed the certificate.

The 1904-1906 volume of preprinted application forms consisted of an applicant's affidavit and witness affidavits, as well as a certificate of citizenship. The applicant's affidavit gave his name; current address; occupation; birthplace, birthdate and age; port, vessel, and date of arrival; other U.S. residences; date and place of declaration of intention; and any U.S. military service. The affidavit included an oath of renunciation of allegiance to his former sovereign and a declaration that the applicant is not insane, epileptic, a pauper, begger, contagious, a felon, guilty of moral turpitude, a polygamist, anarchist, or pimp. The affidavits of two witnesses acquainted with the applicant confirmed the applicant's statements and declared his worthiness to become a citizen. The court's order admitting the applicant as a citizen was included and a copy of a certificate of citizenship form was then completed reiterating this information. Blanks are provided for the signatures of the individual, witnesses, judge, and court clerks.

After 1906, courts were required to use pre-printed forms in volumes furnished by the Bureau of Immigration and Naturalization of the Department of Commerce and Labor (later the Naturalization Service of the U.S. Dept. of Labor). Each volume was to be indexed and the petitions numbered consecutively beginning with number 1 in volume 1. A duplicate copy was to be sent to the Bureau of Naturalization.

The petitions include the individual's name, residence, occupation, birthdate, and birthplace; the place from which he emigrated, the date, port of arrival, and vessel name; the date on which he declared his intention of becoming a citizen and the name of the court involved; his wife's name, birthplace, and residence; his children's names, birthdates, birthplaces, and residences; and any previous petitions filed. The applicant was also required to take an oath that he was not an anarchist or a polygamist and to renounce his former sovereign. An applicant had to be able to speak English and have resided continuously in the United States for five years and in the state for one year.

Also included on the petition form were the affidavit of two citizen witnesses who validated the individual's petition information and declared that he was of good moral character. The printed oath of allegiance and court order admitting the petitioner to citizenship are also included. Later space was added for memoranda of continuances in the proceedings, names of substitute witnesses, and space to record the denial, not just the acceptance, of the petition.

Various corroborating documents had to be produced at the time of application and hearing. These are usually bound into the volumes along with the petitions. They include declarations of intention, filed earlier in a variety of courts in several states, of the individual's desire to become a citizen. Certificates of U.S. military service may also be included, as they could be used in lieu of a declaration of intention or to shorten residency requirements. The volumes also include certificates of arrival, required of those who entered the country after 1906, from the Bureau of Naturalization showing the individual's name, date, place and manner of arrival in the United States. If the witnesses who could vouch for his length of residency lived out of state, depositions could be mailed in. The depositions, which describe how long the witness had known the applicant and confirm his moral character, were then bound in with the petition and other forms. Correspondence is sometimes included, usually from the Bureau of Naturalization, detailing changes in naturalization law and procedures. Court orders revoking citizenship are also included.

Arrangement

After 1906 entries are arranged numerically by case number in sequentially numbered volumes. From 1896-1906 arrangement is chronological.

Related Records

Naturalization memorandum books from the District Court (Second District : Weber County), Series 83454, can be used as a partial index to the naturalization records.

Declarations of intention record books from the District Court (Second District : Weber County), Series 83896, may include declarations of some of the same individuals filed earlier in the same court.

Additional Forms

This series is available on microfilm.

Access Restrictions

This series is classified as Public.

Preferred Citation

Cite the Utah State Archives and Records Service, the creating agency name, the series title, and the series number.

Finding Aids

Indexes: by 1907, each volume has an index listing applicants alphabetically by first letter of surname, covering from August 11, 1907 thru 1939. Indexes: The Weber County naturalization memorandum record books can also be used as an index. Locate the individual's name in the memorandum's index and check the memorandum for the petition number. The petition can then be located in this series by the number, covering from 1906 thru 1982. Other: A Research Guide to Naturalization records is available in the Research Center. Indexes: The first volume has a name index alphabetical by the first letter of the applicant's surname, covering from March 3, 1896 thru April 6, 1903.

Indexing Terms

  • Naturalization--Utah--Weber County.
  • Emigration and immigration--Utah--Weber County.

Container List

REEL BOX VOLUME DATE DESCRIPTION
1 13 1 1896-1903 N/A
1 1 2 1904-1906 N/A
2 2 1 1907-1910 1-50
2 3 2 1910-1914 51-150
3 4 3 1914-1916 151-250
4 5 4 1916-1919 251-350
5 6 5 1919-1921 351-450
5 7 6 1921-1922 451-550
6 8 7 1922-1925 551-650
6 9 8 1925-1928 651-750
7 10 9 1928-1929 751-787
7 11 9 1929-1933 788-849
8 11 9 1933-1935 850-900
8 12 9 1937 961-1013
8 12 9 1939 1121-1177

Page Last Updated October 18, 2012.