What "Brick Walls" Are in Genealogy and How Professionals Break Through Them
A “brick wall” in genealogy is the point where the documentary trail seems to vanish and the obvious records stop answering the question. In practice, it is almost never a true dead end. It is a signal that the easy sources have been exhausted and the problem now requires a different kind of research: reading records other people overlook, studying the people around your ancestor, and building a case from indirect evidence rather than a single tidy certificate.
The reasons a search stalls are surprisingly consistent. Records were destroyed. A name was spelled a dozen ways. An immigrant’s origin was written down as nothing more specific than “Germany.” A birth was never registered. What separates a hobbyist’s stalled tree from a professional’s solved case is not access to a secret database. It is method. Below is what these walls actually look like and the specific techniques genealogists use to get through them.
What causes a brick wall in the first place?
Most brick walls trace back to a handful of recurring causes, and naming the cause is the first step toward the fix. When you can identify why the trail went cold, you can choose the technique built for that exact obstacle rather than searching the same database a fourth time.
The common causes fall into a few groups. Records that never existed, because a jurisdiction did not require birth or death registration until a certain year. Records that existed and were destroyed, whether by a single catastrophic fire or the slow loss of a county courthouse. Records that exist but are hard to connect to your ancestor, because of name changes, anglicization, illegitimacy, or an origin recorded too vaguely to act on. Each cause has a different set of workarounds, which is why a professional starts by diagnosing the wall before trying to climb it.
| Type of wall | Typical cause | First-line technique |
|---|---|---|
| Missing vital record | Registration not yet required in that place and year | Substitute with church, census, and probate records |
| Destroyed records | Courthouse or archive fire, records purged | Locate surviving duplicates and derivative sources |
| Vague immigrant origin | Country written with no town or parish | Study the FAN club and later documents for the place name |
| Name variation | Spelling drift, anglicization, aliases | Search phonetically and by cluster, not exact spelling |
| Unknown parentage | Illegitimacy, adoption, no naming record | Combine indirect documentary evidence with DNA |
Is the destroyed 1890 census the most famous brick wall?
Yes. The 1890 United States federal census is the single most notorious record loss in American genealogy, and it creates a twenty-year gap for millions of families between the 1880 and 1900 counts. A fire on January 10, 1921 in the basement of the Commerce Department building in Washington destroyed most of the 1890 population schedules, and what the flames did not ruin, water and mold finished. Congress authorized destruction of the unsalvageable remainder in the 1930s.
Only a small fraction survives. According to the National Archives, the surviving general population fragments cover just over 6,160 individuals from ten states and the District of Columbia, alongside the more complete special schedule of Union Civil War veterans and their widows. The U.S. Census Bureau’s own account describes the director finding the basement ankle deep in water amid charred, soaked mounds of paper.
The workaround is to reconstruct the missing decade from other sources: state censuses taken in years like 1885 and 1895, city directories that were published annually, land and tax rolls, church registers, and voter lists. No single substitute replaces the census, but together they can place a family in a location year by year across the gap.
How does researching collateral lines break a wall?
Researching collateral lines, meaning the siblings, cousins, and in-laws of your direct ancestor, is the most productive single technique for breaking through. When your great-grandfather left no record of his origin, one of his brothers or sisters very often did. A sibling’s death certificate might name the parents your ancestor’s never did. A cousin’s obituary might name the specific village in Norway that your family’s records only called “Norway.”
This is the heart of what genealogists call cluster research, or the FAN principle: Friends, Associates, and Neighbors. The method was formalized by genealogist Elizabeth Shown Mills, whose QuickLesson on the FAN principle frames the core idea plainly, that when the people we study left no document supplying the fact we need, we often find it in the records created by the people around them. People did not live in isolation. They migrated with relatives, married the neighbor’s daughter, witnessed each other’s wills, and stood as godparents at each other’s baptisms. Tracing that whole cluster reveals the connections a single-person search never will.
To illustrate the point generically: a researcher stuck on an ancestor recorded only as born in “Ireland” traces his three brothers instead. Two also give only “Ireland,” but the third, who happened to apply for a passport late in life, named a specific parish in County Cork. That one document, found on a collateral line, unlocks the whole family’s origin.
What is indirect evidence, and how does it prove a fact?
Indirect evidence is information that does not answer a question directly but, when combined with other pieces, points to a single logical conclusion. When there is no birth certificate, you do not give up. You assemble the census ages, the marriage record, a land deed naming heirs, a probate file listing children, and a headstone, and you correlate them until only one answer fits.
A worked example: to establish a birth year with no birth record, a genealogist might line up the age stated on four consecutive censuses, the age on a marriage license, and the age at death carved on a stone. Each source alone is weak, and they rarely agree perfectly. Analyzed together, they narrow the birth to a single year and resolve the small conflicts by weighing which sources are more reliable. Records that seem mundane carry this weight. A probate file can name every child of the deceased and settle a parentage question no single birth record ever recorded.
This is not guesswork. Professional conclusions are held to the Genealogical Proof Standard, the framework maintained by the Board for Certification of Genealogists. Its five elements require reasonably exhaustive research, complete and accurate source citations, thorough analysis and correlation, resolution of any conflicting evidence, and a soundly reasoned written conclusion. Meeting that standard is what turns a pile of suggestive documents into a defensible finding.
| GPS element | What it requires |
|---|---|
| Reasonably exhaustive research | Search the full range of relevant sources, not just the convenient ones |
| Complete, accurate citations | Every fact is traceable to where it came from |
| Analysis and correlation | Compare sources against each other, not in isolation |
| Resolution of conflicts | Explain and reconcile evidence that disagrees |
| Soundly reasoned conclusion | Write a conclusion the evidence actually supports |
When does DNA break a wall that paper cannot?
DNA evidence can open doors that paper records permanently closed, which makes it the technique of last resort for the hardest walls: unknown parentage, adoption, illegitimacy, and misattributed relationships. When no document was ever created to record a biological link, autosomal DNA and the pattern of shared matches can reveal it anyway.
The method is not a magic answer from a test kit. It works by combining a DNA match list with traditional research: identifying how known matches connect to each other, reconstructing their shared trees, and triangulating toward the common ancestor who explains the pattern. A cluster of second and third cousins who all descend from one couple can point directly to a missing parent’s family even when the paper trail is silent. DNA is most powerful when it is analyzed alongside documents rather than instead of them, a process covered in more depth in how DNA fits into professional genealogical research. Used carefully, it confirms or corrects a documentary hypothesis and gives a conclusion the independent support the Genealogical Proof Standard rewards.
Why does breaking a wall take real time?
Breaking through a genuine brick wall is slow because it usually means abandoning the fast databases and going to sources that are not indexed, not digitized, or not searchable by name at all. Reading a county’s unindexed deed books page by page, ordering a probate file from a courthouse, or working through a handwritten parish register in another language is patient, manual work.
That is the honest reason this kind of research is measured in weeks and records rather than minutes and clicks, a reality explored further in why genealogy research takes time. A wall that stood for years rarely falls to a single search. It falls to a methodical plan: name the cause, identify the substitute and collateral sources, gather them, correlate the evidence, and, when the paper runs out, bring in DNA. The truth is usually still there. It is just hiding in the records nobody thought to open.
The bottom line on brick walls
A brick wall is a research problem, not a verdict. The trail feels like it disappears, but in most cases the evidence still exists in a form that requires more skill to reach: a sibling’s record, a substitute for a lost census, an indirect case built from ordinary documents, or a DNA pattern that no certificate ever captured. The families who break through are the ones who stop repeating the same search and start applying the right method to the specific wall in front of them. That is the difference professional training makes, and it is why a stalled tree is so often a solvable one.
The Bottom Line
A brick wall is a research problem, not a verdict. In most cases the evidence still exists in a harder-to-reach form: a sibling's record found through collateral or FAN research, a substitute for a destroyed source like the 1890 census, an indirect case correlated to the Genealogical Proof Standard, or a DNA pattern no certificate ever captured. Breaking through means diagnosing why the trail stalled and applying the specific method built for that cause, then doing the patient manual work in unindexed sources. That methodical approach, not access to a secret database, is what turns a stalled tree into a solved one.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is a brick wall in genealogy?
Why was the 1890 census destroyed, and how do genealogists work around it?
What is collateral or FAN research?
How can a genealogist prove a fact with no birth or death certificate?
Can DNA testing break a genealogy brick wall?
How long does it take to break through a brick wall?
About the Author
Jessica Schneider, Professional Genealogist
Jessica Schneider is a professional genealogist based in Minneapolis, Minnesota, serving families and attorneys nationwide. A member of the Association of Professional Genealogists and Vice President of its Colorado chapter, she specializes in heir search and estate research, Canadian citizenship by descent, tribal enrollment and Métis family history, and complex records research.
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