EPISODE · Apr 21, 2026 · 29 MIN
Tracing Ancestors Who ‘Went West’: Hidden Records Along the Trails
from Hittin' the Bricks with Kathleen · host Kathleen Brandt
Let us know what you think!Episode OverviewHittin’ the Bricks with Kathleen is the genealogy podcast that features your questions and her answers, focusing on how place, movement, and records intersect. In this episode, host Kathleen Brandt speaks with Melissa Brown from the National Frontier Trails Museum about why Independence, Missouri became a primary jumping-off point for westward migration—and how that context changes real genealogy research.Together, they show how to move from family lore about “going west” to documented evidence using museum resources, diaries, historic maps, and the OCTA Paper Trail index.In This Episode, You’ll LearnWhy Independence, Missouri became a central departure point for multiple western trailsHow river landings and shifting routes affect where records and clues appearHow to use diaries, maps, and museum collections to verify migration storiesWhere the OCTA Paper Trail index fits into trail-based researchWhy preparation with census and other records improves on-site research resultsTopics CoveredThe five major trails interpreted in Independence and why the river mattersThe Santa Fe Trail as commerce and trade, not just settlementShifting river landings and movement toward Westport and beyondThe Merle J. Mattis Research Library: diaries, letters, maps, artifactsResearch appointments and how targeted requests save timeUsing OCTA’s Paper Trail index to search names in trail diariesPreparing with census and foundational records before archival visitsUsing historic maps to identify landowners, neighbors, and family connectionsThe diversity of people who traveled westFree admission, current Santa Fe programming, and family activitiesEpisode Discussion & Key MomentsKathleen and Melissa explain how understanding place-based context—especially transportation routes and economic drivers—can transform vague migration stories into traceable research paths. Independence’s role as a convergence point for trails means that records may be scattered across local, regional, and trail-specific sources, not just standard census or vital records.Melissa outlines what researchers can expect from the Merle J. Mattis Research Library, including firsthand accounts and material culture that provide context often missing from official documents. The conversation also emphasizes preparation before archival visits, showing how prior work in census and other records allows researchers to ask more precise questions and locate relevant materials faster.Key questions examined include:How do trail routes and river access shape where records are found?What sources move a family story from tradition to evidence?How can researchers use maps and diaries together to confirm identity and movement?Resources & Research Tools MentionedMerle J. Mattis Research Library (National Frontier Trails Museum)OCTA (Oregon-California Trails Association) Paper Trail indexHistoric maps and plat mapsTrail diaries and letter collectionsCenSupport the showBe 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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Tracing Ancestors Who ‘Went West’: Hidden Records Along the Trails
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