Home› Welcome to the FamilySearch Community!› Ask a Question› Get Involved/Indexing

US-ILLINOIS NAT RECORDS

Lisa Kay Horlacher
Lisa Kay Horlacher ✭✭✭
September 19, 2024 edited February 7 in Get Involved/Indexing

This is the 3rd batch that had the OOA in 2 different images. They are duplicate documents. Is there any reason I should index it twice?

https://www.familysearch.org/indexing/batch/f2092f6d-7da0-40e2-97bf-1dbec0737f1c

0

Answers

  • erutherford
    erutherford ✭✭✭✭✭
    September 19, 2024

    Do not index a second, duplicate OOA. Like this batch, Image 2 could contain a DEC or a PET.

    0
  • Jeanne Cybulski
    Jeanne Cybulski ✭
    September 20, 2024

    Newbie here…could you tell me what a DEC and a PET are?

    0
  • erutherford
    erutherford ✭✭✭✭✭
    September 20, 2024 edited September 20, 2024

    A DEC is a DEClaration of Intention. This is the first step in the Naturalization project. The applicant is declaring his/her intent to become an US Citizen. The will have the earliest date in the Naturalization process and will have the earliest date.

    A PET is a PETition for Naturalization. This is Part 1 of the second step in the Naturalization process. A DEC is usually filed a few years after the DEC and will have the "middle" date.

    An OOA is an Oath Of Allegiance, which is Part 2 of the second step. This is when the applicant becomes a naturalized citizen. The OOA date is the final—most recent—date in the process.

    The entire naturalization process took 3-7 years, on average from DEC to OOA, and the applicant had to live stateside for a period of time (I think it was 1-3 years) before starting the process and without leaving the country. The only exemptions were during, and right after, both WWI and, to a lesser extent, WWII. WWI was a boon for immigration, since the US Government pretty much told immigrants that were in the US "hey, come fight for us and we'll fast-track your citizenship." The military was in dire need of personnel at the time and a lot of immigrants took advantage of this. WWII wasn't that great for citizenship, both civilian and military, because the government had crazy quotas and restrictions, especially those who came from Germany, Japan, Italy or were an Eastern European Jew.

    1
This discussion has been closed.
Clear
No Groups Found

Categories

  • All Categories
  • 42.7K Ask a Question
  • 3.3K General Questions
  • 570 FamilySearch Center
  • 6.7K Get Involved/Indexing
  • 640 FamilySearch Account
  • 6.5K Family Tree
  • 5.2K Search
  • 998 Memories
  • 2 Suggest an Idea
  • 473 Other Languages
  • 62 Community News
  • Groups