Six Miles Deep

Memory Work

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Memory work is the deliberate practice of recovering, preserving, and transmitting stories, documents, and understandings that have been suppressed or forgotten. It includes archival digging, oral history, community teaching, website building, and creative work that makes hidden histories visible again.

Six Miles Deep is explicitly memory work around Haldimand, Dorchester, Simcoe, and the Queen Anne alliance. By gathering texts, maps, committee minutes, and genealogies, and then explaining them in accessible language, the project pushes back against a long-term pattern of selective forgetting.

This memory work is not nostalgic; it is strategic. Once people remember what the Crown actually promised and how systems were supposed to work, it becomes harder for governments to dismiss Haldimand as “just history” and easier to demand legal, criminal and political responses.

126 words

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About Benjamin Doolittle U.E.

listen to BLOODLINE

“Bloodline” follows the Haldimand Proclamation from its original promise to the present fight to have it honoured. The track moves through Crown grants, broken commitments, and the legal and political road back to enforcement, asking listeners to hear the Proclamation not as a relic of the past, but as a living obligation that still binds the Crown to the Mohawk Nation of Grand River.

Artist: One Way Current
Writer: Benjamin Doolittle UE
Producer: One Way Current
Publisher: Corn Press Publications
Affiliation: Six Miles Deep / Mohawk Nation of Grand River

Six Miles Deep