Citizens and Nationals: Researching Overseas Territories Podcast By  cover art

Citizens and Nationals: Researching Overseas Territories

Citizens and Nationals: Researching Overseas Territories

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Episode Overview

Hittin’ the Bricks with Kathleen is the genealogy podcast that features your questions and her answers, focusing on how law, place, and history shape the records we rely on. In this episode, host Kathleen Brandt breaks down what “territory” really means in a genealogical context—and why your ancestor’s rights, status, and documentation can change overnight when laws change.

Using examples from Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa, and the Philippines, this episode explains how legal status determines where records are kept, what rights were granted, and why incorrect assumptions often create genealogy brick walls.

In This Episode, You’ll Learn

  • What “territory” means and how it differs from colony status in records
  • Why citizenship status affects where and how records were created
  • How legal changes alter the paper trail across generations
  • Where to find records across federal, territorial, and local systems
  • Why assumptions about U.S. affiliation often lead to research errors

Topics Covered

  • Colony vs. territory definitions and their impact on record trails
  • Puerto Rico citizenship after 1917 and where to research before that date
  • Key inhabited U.S. territories for genealogy research
  • U.S. citizen vs. U.S. national distinctions
  • Record locations: federal archives, territorial archives, naval records, church registers, civil registration
  • Guam’s citizenship timeline and unequal territorial treatment
  • Military service and draft records vs. proof of citizenship
  • Common research mistakes tied to legal assumptions
  • Using FamilySearch as a catalog and checklist tool

Episode Discussion & Key Moments

Kathleen explores how the concept of “territory” is often misunderstood in genealogy, leading researchers to expect records and rights that did not exist at the time. She demonstrates how shifts in legal status—especially under U.S. governance—can dramatically alter what records were created, where they are stored, and how individuals were classified.

The episode highlights case examples from Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa, and the Philippines to show how citizenship, nationality, and governance differed across regions. Kathleen also explains why military service or draft registration does not automatically prove citizenship, and why careful interpretation of legal context is essential.

A key takeaway is the importance of abandoning assumptions—particularly the belief that being “under the U.S. flag” guarantees uniform rights or record systems. Instead, researchers must follow the legal framework in place at the time their ancestors lived.

Key questions examined include:

  • How do changing laws affect the records your ancestors leave behind?
  • Where should you look when records are not where you expect?
  • What legal distinctions matter most for accurate genealogy research?

Resources & Research Tools Mentioned

  • Federal and territorial archives
  • Naval and military records
  • Church registers and civil registration systems
  • FamilySearch catalog as a research checklist

Why This Episode Matters

Understanding legal status is critical to accurate genealogy. This episode shows how misinterpreting terms like “t

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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