The mission of The Brewer Files is to protect the historical record of anomalous phenomena with honesty, discipline, and care.
The archive exists to document investigations, protect witness testimony, encourage careful skepticism, and keep important historical records from being lost to time. Its purpose is not to force conclusions, but to ensure that evidence, testimony, research, criticism, and unresolved questions remain available for future examination.
The Brewer Files seeks to protect a broad historical record connected to anomalous phenomena and the human response to unresolved mystery.
That record extends beyond individual cases. Witness testimony, investigative reports, photographs, official records, skeptical analysis, historical documents, field observations, regional history, and oral accounts all form part of a larger landscape that can easily become fragmented, scattered, or lost over time.
For that reason, The Brewer Files maintains material connected to witness testimony, historical investigations, active field research, skeptical review, government and public records, photographs, animal mutilation investigations, missing persons resources, regional folklore, oral history, and the broader conversation surrounding these subjects.
The archive also recognizes that responsible preservation requires balance. Extraordinary claims, conventional explanations, skepticism, uncertainty, criticism, and competing interpretations all belong to the record. The Brewer Files seeks to protect that complexity honestly while leaving room for future investigation, debate, and discovery.
The purpose of this work is not to create certainty. Its purpose is to ensure that future generations retain access to the evidence, testimony, questions, and records that might otherwise disappear with time.
The Brewer Files was never intended to exist as a temporary website, a short-term media project, or a platform built around one person. From the beginning, it was envisioned as a long-term archive designed to endure across future generations.
Important records connected to anomalous phenomena often disappear slowly. Witnesses grow older. Investigators pass away. Case files become fragmented. Websites vanish, videos are deleted, photographs are lost, and entire investigations fade from public memory. The long-term vision of The Brewer Files is to help protect those records before they disappear.
The archive seeks to create a stable historical repository where future generations can continue examining investigations, witness testimony, skeptical analysis, historical documents, field research, and unresolved questions long after the original participants are gone.
The Brewer Files also recognizes that protecting the record requires continuity. For that reason, it was intentionally structured around long-term custodianship, constitutional governance, investigative standards, and guiding principles designed to protect it from corruption, institutional drift, attention-seeking, and the gradual erosion of historical integrity.
The archive does not seek to become an authority over unresolved phenomena. Its purpose is documentation, responsible inquiry, and the careful maintenance of a historical record that remains accessible to future investigators, researchers, skeptics, witnesses, and curious observers.
The Brewer Files believes that mystery itself is part of the human experience. Whether future generations discover new answers, new evidence, or entirely new questions, they deserve access to the record that came before them.
The long-term vision of The Brewer Files is to protect that record honestly, responsibly, and across generations.