yes
In the early 20th Century, immigrants were "processed" at Ellis Island in the port of New York City. They arrived in passenger & cargo ships.
they used ships
They bought the tickets.
nah
There were hundreds of different ships that travelled from Italy to Ellis Island. You would have to search the records to identify a specific ship.
Aboard ships
Many ships came to Ellis Island, from different locations overseas and using different modes of power. So, there is no true answer to this question.
The names were Alexandra and Clabrian ship and Alexandra was expensive
The names were Alexandra and Clabrian ship and Alexandra was expensive
They took ships from Europe and came into Ellis Island in NYC harbor.
There were three passengers classes on most ships: first and second, which were cabin classes, meaning the passenger or family recieved a cabin or its own on board ship, and steerage class, where passengers slept in the hold (belowdecks) of the ship on bunks about 1/2 feet by 6 feet, with no privacy and no personal floor space or storage space. All steerage class passengers had to go to Ellis Island and pass medical tests and answer questions such as whether they were an anarchist.
"The American Family Immigration History Center® opened which allows visitors to the Center and its website www.ellisisland.org to explore the extraordinary collection of records of the more than 25 million passengers and members of ships' crews who entered the United States through Ellis Island and the Port of New York between 1892 and 1924. The online database has had twelve billion hits since it was launched." Taken from the Ellis Island website.