Do they have information on emigration to Canada
Carole -
It's been awhile since I've looked at Glazier & Filby. They do include most ports in the U.S (Boston, New York, Baltimore, New Orleans, Galveston among others). I don't remember if they also include Canadian ports.
However, I've just discovered another wonderful source of information. It is the Immigrant Genealogical Society, 1310 West Magnolia Blvd. Burbank, CA (P.O. Box 7369, Burbank, CA 91510) tel. 818-848-3122.
websites: http://cefha.org/igs/igs-fp.html http://feefhs.org/igs/frg-igs.html
They maintain a library open to the public 3 days a week, can refer you to professional researchers, or their volunteers will conduct a mail search for a small fee. They have a Pommern Special Interest Group (PSIG), a Mecklenburg Immigrants Database, several hundred Ortssippenbooks for German towns. Their volunteers will conduct a search for German Immigrants from Bremen to New York (1847-1871), Glazier and Filby 63 volumes 1850-1892, Glazier & Filby Series II, various volumes from Jan 1840 to Jun'94 (incomplete series).
They also have surname books, for various European groups, a village search for all of Germany, Italians to America, Immigrants to New England 1620-1635, Irish famine immigrants, German Marriage Abstracts, German Town and Country Emigrants, Mecklenburg Emigrants Database, Buergerbooks for Mecklenburg & Niedersachsen, variously listed from 1529-1919, and Mecklenburg Marriages 1604-1800. Finally, they have Mecklenburg-Schwerin census indexes for 1819, 1751 and 1704. Their "volunteers can list each time one surname appears in the index volumes, list the place of residence, and provide the code to locate the person/family on the census microfilm rolls." The fee for this service is $11 US. For Canada you might have better luck consulting the emigrants lists.
I suggest you contact them.
Karl Schwerin
Albuquerque, NM