Inspired by a wonderful blog post written by Nancy Gilbride Casey, I decided to email the US National Archives (NARA) to order an Alien Registration Form (AR-2) just before Thanksgiving.
According to NARA, the Alien Registration Program registered more than 5.6 million noncitizens between August 1, 1940, and March 31, 1944. If you, like Nancy and me, have an immigrant ancestor who was not naturalized at that point, maybe your ancestor will also have registered using the AR-2 form.
To learn more about the AR-2 and the ordering process, please read the NARA info on this page.
Why order AR-2?
Nancy's post and the NARA website show why an AR-2 can be a valuable document for genealogical purposes. Above, a sample page from an AR-2 form taken from NARA's info page.
The form asks for current name and other names used by the noncitizen, as well as address, birth date and place, marital status, physical characteristics, date and place of arrival in America, occupation, employer, organizations involved with, military service if any, other close relatives living in America, and more!
Process for searching and ordering
For an excellent, detailed tutorial, see the Allen County Public Library's Genealogical Center's video here.
I checked Ancestry's collection of alien registrations here and discovered a number of ancestors had filed AR-2 forms. Here's NARA's search page and be sure to check the FAQs if this is your first search. You need the A-file number of your ancestor to make your request.
After finding my great aunt Jennie Salkowitz in the database, I followed the instructions to email an inquiry, as follows:
Greetings! I would like to order the Alien Registration Form of:
Name: Jennie Salkowitz [female]
Country of birth: Russia
Date of birth: 1888
A-file number: A4_41071
Registration place: Bronx, New York
I then wrote that I would like NARA to quote me the fee or bill me so I could pay for non-certified pdf copies. I included my full mailing address, phone number, and email (vital to be able to receive response).
Waiting with hope
Because Nancy received her response within days, I was hopeful that maybe I would have a similar experience. Alas, not yet, but I'm anticipating that the National Archives will send me a response before the end of the month, and tell me how to place the actual order with my payment, to complete the transaction. Then I have to see how long NARA needs to actually send me the AR-2 file.
If all goes well, I'll blog again soon about what I learned from great aunt Jennie's AR-2 form. And of course I'll begin submitting additional requests.




















