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Hittin’ the Bricks with Kathleen is the genealogy podcast that features your questions and her answers, with a focus on clear reasoning, historical context, and practical research methods. In this episode, Kathleen and John Brandt are joined by guest Denise Cross to explore how a one-place study transforms scattered historical records into a working model of a town—and how that model can be used to solve difficult genealogy problems.
Denise shares practical methods for defining research scope, mapping census visitation routes to historical land parcels, and linking neighbors, deeds, taxes, wills, church, and newspaper records to uncover relationships that traditional research approaches often miss.
In This Episode, You’ll Learn
• How to define a one-place study and choose a manageable scope
• How to build a full-town research spreadsheet using census, deeds, probate, church, tax, and newspaper records
• How neighbors and associates can help identify missing women in the historical record
• How to map census visitation order to historical parcel maps
• How to research frontier communities using indirect evidence
• How place-based research supports surname studies and resolves endogamy challenges
Topics Covered
• One-place studies as a genealogy research method
• Linking community networks to uncover family relationships
• Mapping households to land ownership and movement
• Frontier research with limited records
• Endogamy and surname studies through place context
• Registering and sharing one-place studies on WikiTree and research directories
• Resources, webinars, and collaboration strategies
Episode Discussion & Key Moments
Denise explains how building a place-based research framework allows genealogists to move beyond individual ancestors and instead understand entire communities. By organizing census, tax, probate, land, and church records into a town-level model, researchers can identify patterns, relationships, and identity clues that would otherwise remain hidden.
The conversation also highlights how mapping census routes to historical land parcels helps clarify neighbor relationships, track movement over time, and provide indirect evidence—especially in frontier eras or communities with thin documentation.
Key questions examined include:
• How can a one-place study help solve identity problems?
• What role do neighbors and associates play in genealogical proof?
• How do researchers work effectively in communities with limited documentation?
Why This Episode Matters
When records are incomplete or identities unclear, understanding the place can be just as important as understanding the person. This episode demonstrates how community-level research strengthens genealogical conclusions and supports evidence-based reasoning.
About the Podcast
Hittin’ the Bricks with Kathleen is hosted by Kathleen and John Brandt and helps listeners turn scattered historical records into meaningful family narratives using modern research tools and practical methodology.
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Hittin' the Bricks is produced through the not-for-profit, 501c3 TracingAncestors.org.