Name | Age | Gender | DoB | Race | Arrival Date | Port of Departure | Ship Name | Friend's Name | Last Residence
----------------|-----|--------|------|----------|--------------|-------------------|-----------|----------------|---------------
Anna Fedorzuk | 25 | Female | 1878 | Polish | 27 Jun 1903 | Bremen, Germany | Koln | Jozef Fedorzuk | Malasowka
Josef Fedorzuk | 7 | Male | 1896 | Polish | 27 Jun 1903 | Bremen, Germany | Koln | Jozef Fedorzuk | Malasowka
Sofia Fedorzuk | 4 | Female | 1899 | Polish | 27 Jun 1903 | Bremen, Germany | Koln | Jozef Fedorzuk | Malasowka
Emilia Fedorzuk | 2 | Female | 1901 | Bohemian | 27 Jun 1903 | Bremen, Germany | Koln | Jozef Fedorzuk | Malasowka
[Digital transcription of Galveston Immigration Manifest, 27 June 1903]

Notes:
1) The column for a local relative contact clearly says "husband, Jozef
Fedorzuk, [some address], father".
2) It's hard to make out the relative's contact address, but the first
placename is likely Hartshorne, one of the next towns immediately south-east
of Dow, Oklahoma. Dow is what Joseph Fiedorczyk Sr. listed as his residence
in his Declaration of Intention [to naturalize], and Dow is recorded as the
birthplace for Walter Fiedorczyk. (Peter Fiedorczyk's birthplace is
Oklahoma, though I can't find any documents recording the town. The two
youngest sisters were born years later in Wisconsin.)