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Hittin' the Bricks with Kathleen

Hittin' the Bricks with Kathleen

Auteur(s): Kathleen Brandt
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A "brick-wall" DIY genealogy podcast that features your questions and Kathleen Brandt's answers. She wants your stories, questions, and “brick walls”. But be ready to add to your "to-do" list. As Kathleen always says, this is a Do it yourself (DIY) genealogy podcast. “I'll show you where the shovel is, but I'm not digging up your family.”
Maybe, you have no idea where to start searching for an ancestor. Or, perhaps you want to know more about your family folklore. Host Kathleen has 20 years in the industry and is the founder of a3genealogy. She's able to dispense genealogy research advice and encouragement in understandable terms that won't get you lost in genealogy jargon. Along with her husband and co-host, John, she helps you accomplish "do-it-yourself" research goals, learn some history, and have a bit of fun along the way. Light-hearted and full of detailed info, Hittin' the Bricks is your solution for your brick-wall research problems.

© 2026 Hittin' the Bricks with Kathleen
Épisodes
  • New Year: Old Ancestors, New Eyes
    Jan 19 2026

    Let us know what you think!

    Episode Overview

    Hittin’ the Bricks with Kathleen is a podcast focused on genealogy, local history, and practical methods for turning scattered records into meaningful family narratives. In this episode, host Kathleen Brandt shifts the focus from collecting as many names as possible to building one strong ancestral branch by revisiting familiar records with sharper questions and better research tools.

    Using the guiding principle “one ancestor, one record, three questions,” this episode demonstrates how focused analysis can transform disconnected documents into a coherent and readable life story.

    In This Episode, You’ll Learn

    • Why choosing a single ancestor can accelerate genealogical breakthroughs
    • How focusing on one record group reveals deeper patterns and inconsistencies
    • What three questions to ask of every document you find
    • How timelines, checklists, and re-reading notes expose overlooked clues
    • Ways to turn raw data into stories your family can actually read

    Topics Covered

    • Selecting one ancestor to study for an extended period
    • Focusing on a single record group (pensions, land, or census)
    • Asking new analytical questions of familiar documents
    • Building timelines and using simple research checklists
    • Re-reading old notes to surface missed details
    • Applying the FAN method to track friends, associates, and neighbors
    • Translating research data into narrative form
    • Case study: James Nelson Strader and Civil War pension records
    • Setting monthly research goals and sharing progress

    Episode Discussion & Key Moments

    Kathleen explains how genealogists often stall by spreading their efforts too thin across many names. By intentionally narrowing the scope to one ancestor at a time, researchers can ask better questions and recognize patterns that are invisible in broad family trees.

    The episode walks through practical techniques such as building timelines, using checklists, and applying the FAN method to witnesses and neighbors. Kathleen also revisits the value of re-reading old research notes, demonstrating how previously overlooked clues can emerge when viewed through a new analytical lens.

    A detailed case study of James Nelson Strader illustrates how Civil War pension records can be mined repeatedly to reconstruct a fuller, more accurate life story.

    Key questions examined include:

    • What changes when you focus on depth instead of breadth?
    • How can a single record group support long-term research?
    • What makes genealogical work understandable to non-researchers?

    Resources & Research Tools Mentioned

    • Civil War pension files
    • Census, land, and pension record groups
    • FAN (Friends, Associates, Neighbors) method
    • Research timelines and checklists

    Why This Episode Matters

    This episode encourages a sustainable and disciplined approach to genealogy—one that prioritizes understanding over accumulation. By focusing deeply on one ancestor, researchers can create accurate, readable histories that preserve meaning for future generations, not just data.

    About the Podcast

    Hittin’ the Bricks with Kathleen helps listeners break through genealogy brick walls by c

    Be sure to bookmark linktr.ee/hittinthebricks for your one stop access to Kathleen Brandt, the host of Hittin' the Bricks with Kathleen. And, visit us on YouTube: @HTBKRB with Kathleen John and Chewey video recorded specials.

    Hittin' the Bricks is produced through the not-for-profit, 501c3 TracingAncestors.org.

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    17 min
  • Seeds of Revolution: The French, the British and the Indians
    Jan 6 2026

    Let us know what you think!

    Episode Overview

    Hittin’ the Bricks with Kathleen is a podcast centered on genealogy, local history, and understanding how large historical events leave long shadows in family records. In this episode, host Kathleen Brandt examines how the French and Indian War (1754–1763) created ripple effects that appear decades later as mystery migrations, unexpected pensions, and land grants that confuse modern researchers.

    This episode focuses on how early military service, shifting alliances, and uneven record-keeping before the American Revolution shaped family trees in ways that are often misattributed or overlooked.

    In This Episode, You’ll Learn

    • Why the French and Indian War explains many unexplained family movements
    • How service records before 1775 differ from Revolutionary War documentation
    • The distinctions between provincial troops, militias, and British regulars
    • Where to find overlooked military and civil records tied to early service
    • How land grants and pensions often trace back to this earlier conflict

    Topics Covered

    • French and Indian War timeline and geographic scope
    • Fragmented colonial record-keeping before 1775
    • Provincial troops vs. militia vs. British regular forces
    • Native nations as military allies and the unequal rewards they received
    • African American service, injury, and paths to manumission
    • Muster rolls, pay lists, council minutes, and court records
    • George Washington’s papers as an early name index
    • Bounty land in Virginia and North Carolina
    • Interpreting Revolutionary War pension files
    • Population movement before formal paperwork exists

    Episode Discussion & Key Moments

    Kathleen traces how the French and Indian War laid the groundwork for later political revolution while quietly reshaping families across colonial America. She explains why records from this period often appear scattered, incomplete, or indirect—and why researchers must widen their search beyond standard military files.

    The episode breaks down practical strategies for locating provincial troop records, militia references, council decisions, and court mentions, as well as how to use George Washington’s papers as a gateway to otherwise hidden names. Kathleen also addresses how Native nations and African Americans participated in the conflict, often receiving delayed, unequal, or poorly documented compensation.

    Key questions examined include:

    • Why do some ancestors appear to surface suddenly in Revolutionary records?
    • How did earlier wars move families long before pensions or land grants were issued?
    • What kinds of documents quietly preserve evidence of service?

    Resources & Research Starting Points

    • Provincial troop muster rolls and pay lists
    • Colonial council and court minutes
    • George Washington’s papers
    • Virginia and North Carolina bounty land records
    • Revolutionary War pension files (read every page)

    Why This Episode Matters

    Many genealogical puzzles attributed to the American Revolution actually begin earlier. Understanding the French and Indian War helps researchers correctly interpret migration, land ownership, military service, and delayed benefits—allowing family histories to be

    Be sure to bookmark linktr.ee/hittinthebricks for your one stop access to Kathleen Brandt, the host of Hittin' the Bricks with Kathleen. And, visit us on YouTube: @HTBKRB with Kathleen John and Chewey video recorded specials.

    Hittin' the Bricks is produced through the not-for-profit, 501c3 TracingAncestors.org.

    Voir plus Voir moins
    26 min
  • Serial Killers And Family Trees
    Dec 14 2025

    Let us know what you think!

    We share how to research suspected ties between family history and serial killers, balancing DNA with records and community context.

    Check out:
    killer.cloud

    Do you have a genealogical question for Kathleen? Drop us a line at hitting the bricks at gmail.com and Let us know.

    Be sure to bookmark linktr.ee/hittinthebricks for your one stop access to Kathleen Brandt, the host of Hittin' the Bricks with Kathleen. And, visit us on YouTube: @HTBKRB with Kathleen John and Chewey video recorded specials.

    Hittin' the Bricks is produced through the not-for-profit, 501c3 TracingAncestors.org.

    Voir plus Voir moins
    20 min
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