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Behind the Bricks: Preface

Behind the Bricks
Preface
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table of contents
  1. Contents
  2. List of Figures
  3. List of Tables
  4. List of Abbreviations
  5. Preface
  6. Introduction
  7. The Russ Moses Residential School Memoir
  8. Part 1
    1. 1 - “To Shake Off the Rude Habits of Savage Life”:1 The Foundations of the Mohawk Institute to the Early 1900s
    2. 2 - “The Difficulties of Making an Indian into a White Man, Were Not Thoroughly Appreciated”: The Mohawk Institute, 1904 to the Present
  9. Part 2
    1. 3 - The Indian Normal School: The Role of the Mohawk Institute in the Training of Indigenous Teachers in the Late Nineteenth Century
    2. 4 - Teaching Control and Service: The Use of Military Training at the Mohawk Institute
    3. 5 - “New Weapons”: Race, Indigeneity, and Intelligence Testing at the Mohawk Institute, 1920–1949
  10. Part 3
    1. 6 - A “Model” School: An Architectural History of the Mohawk Institute
    2. 7 - The Stewardship, Preservation, and Commemoration of the Mohawk Institute
  11. Part 4
    1. 8 - Ten Years of Student Resistance at the Mohawk Institute, 1903–1913
    2. 9 - ęhǫwadihsadǫ ne:ˀhniˀ gadigyenǫ:gyeˀs ganahaǫgwęˀ ęyagǫnhehgǫhǫ:k / They Buried Them, but They the Seeds Floated Around What Will Sustain Them
  12. Part 5
    1. 10 - A Model to Follow? The Sussex Vale Indian School
    2. 11 - Robert Ashton, the New England Company, and the Mohawk Institute, 1872–1910
    3. 12 - The Lands of the Mohawk Institute: Robert Ashton and the Demise of the New England Company’s “Station,” 1891–1922
  13. Part 6
    1. 13 - Life at the Mohawk Institute During the 1860s
    2. 14 - Collecting the Evidence: Restoration and Archaeology at the Mohawk Institute
    3. 15 - Collective Trauma and the Role of Religion in the Mohawk Institute Experience
    4. 16 - Concluding Voices: Survivor Stories of Life Behind the Bricks
  14. Closing Poems
  15. Appendix 1 - History of Six Nations Education
  16. Appendix 2 - Mohawk Institute Students Who Became Teachers
  17. Suggested Reading
  18. Acknowledgements
  19. Contributors
  20. Index

Preface

Richard W. Hill, Sr.

Black and white photograph: Outside view of the front of the school building, which is a large, wide, brick building with three storeys, with sizeable pillars holding up the multi-storey front porch. Approximately eighty Indigenous students ranging in age are formally posed in rows in front of the school. On the left are boys in a dark uniform and on the right are female students, also in a uniform that is a bit lighter in colour.  Teachers are also in the photograph.

Figure 0.1. Staff and students of the Mohawk Institute (possibly the 1920s)

Source: Richard Hill Collection

The brick-covered building that still stands in Brantford, Ontario, housed the third version of the Mohawk Institute. It is a place of traumatic memory for many of the survivors. Behind the bricks of this former residential school rest many personal stories about life in the school, most of which are not to be found in the written record. There are also many stories from the nearly two-hundred-year history of the Mohawk Institute, including the years that it operated as a school, and its subsequent years when it had an ongoing impact on the people who went there. We cannot share all the stories of this place. That would take several books. Of those we do share, we hope that you will continue to learn from them.

The story of the Mohawk Institute includes the writings of school officials, government agents, and church authorities. It is found in government policy and dusty records of the New England Company, as well as within the records of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy Council of Chiefs. The story is found in newspaper articles, handwritten notes, academic research, and dinner table conversations around the Six Nations community. It is also found in the informal documentation of some of the teachers and principals. In addition, there are those stories that, up until quite recently, have remained locked up in the hearts and minds of the survivors. Some were too ashamed to tell their stories. Some tried to forget. Some even pretended that they had no stories to tell. Some never survived to tell their stories. However, some have been brave enough to share their stories so that, for once, we can get a real glimpse behind the bricks of the Mohawk Institute.

One survivor, Doug George, from Akwesasne said, “We left our DNA in that building.” Their stories became the DNA of school, a twisted matrix of facts, reports, memories, rumours, and fears. For some people that DNA also reflects good times, some great opportunities, and many personal successes. Some memories are found in what students stuffed behind the walls or under the floorboards. Some were scratched into the red bricks on the back side of the building. Some children did so as inmates of the school; others left their names when they returned to this place of memory, many years after they walked out the front door.

These red bricks have become our version of the Wailing Wall. People have stood before the bricks in honour of the victims of the school, shedding tears and praying for the souls of classmates or family members. Reading the names or initials etched on the bricks was a way of reclaiming a connection to the students. The officers of the school stripped them of their names and gave them numbers instead. They took away their clothing and forced them to wear handmade uniforms. They took away their hair. They tried to remake their minds, to transform their identities and beliefs. The brick wall continues to stand, offering a way for students to speak back to those in power and to leave evidence of their existence.

One young girl turned to the red bricks as a plea for help. She was being repeatedly molested by the officers of the Institute. Every time she was alone after swimming in the pool, she scratched the word “HELP” in the bricks. At first, her message was quite faint. Each time she did it, the word became bolder and bolder. Her one word was also a prayer that, somehow, something or someone would intervene to stop those who were hurting her. She survived her experiences at the school and returned to tell her story. She was not unscathed, and once we hear the story of the Mohawk Institute, we, too, will become marked by the power of this place.

As we were writing this book, the news came of the suspected graves of 215 students that were uncovered at the Kamloops Indian Residential School. It caused a national pause that forced Canadians to realize that, yes, it was real children who experienced this trauma. Yes, religious people reacted in a very cold and secular manner. Some children died, but their spirits have reached us from beyond the unmarked grave. Another voice to get our attention.

My ancestors say that we cannot carry the burden of grief into our future lives. We had ceremony by which that burden was lifted from our minds. We had to have someone step forward to remove the tears from our eyes to restore our vision so we can see hope more clearly. We had to have someone clear our ears so that we could restore our hearing so that the voices of the past would not be lost. Someone had to offer us a refreshing drink to wash away the dust of trauma that clogs our throats and stifles our speech. We need all of this to recover our humanity.

The purpose of this book is to better comprehend the reality of this place. Facing the people who operated the school and facing the students who once lived behind the bricks is our way of wiping away our collective tears so we can see the truth of what actually happened. The words and the historical photographs will help to clear our ears from the historical dust that have interfered with our understanding. The refreshing part is more difficult. As we search for hope, listen carefully to what the survivors have had to say, read carefully what the scholars have written, and then make up your own mind about the legacy of the Mohawk Institute, Canada’s oldest and longest-running Indian Residential School. What does this place tell us about ourselves? How does this book help us better understand why reconciliation is necessary? It is something we just can’t get over that easily. For reconciliation to happen, we first need to hear the truth of the Mohawk Institute. This is our effort to share truth as we have come to know it.

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© 2025 Richard W. Hill, Sr., Alison Norman, Thomas Peace, and Jennifer Pettit
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