THIS IS HOW THE K.G.C. AND O.A.K. USED THE U.S. GOVERNMENT

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L.C. BAKER

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Sep 9, 2012
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La Abra Silver Mining Co. v. United States - 175 U.S. 423 (1899)

Look at the records of this company, and the names of the owners, and then look at all of the litigation over the matter. Finally look at the fact that the litigation over the matter was a K.G.C./ O.A.K. scheme from it's very beginning in 1865. Pay close attention throughout the years to what administrations the funds from Mexico were paid (under a fraudulent K.G.C. claim using the United States to strong arm the Mexicans out of their money). It is because of this famous case that the U.S. law was changed and does not protect U.S. citizens engaged in private business with a foreign country.

S.F. Nuckolls
H.P. Benet http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiram_Pitt_Bennet "For those Colorado K.G.C. / O.A.K. hunters."

For those that may be interested in more information about S.F. Nuckolls and H.P. Benet :http://www.amazon.com/The-Ones-That-Got-Away/dp/1499593694

L.C. Baker:thumbsup:
 

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:laughing7: L.C. you have got a lot of fire under that wash pot buddy. she's at the point of boiling now. got some red devil lye to throw in? :coffee::coffee:
 

:laughing7: L.C. you have got a lot of fire under that wash pot buddy. she's at the point of boiling now. got some red devil lye to throw in? :coffee::coffee:

Ok, I might as well go for broke 10claw. These guys were sneaky about getting what they wanted to pass. There are several aspects to the La Abra Silver Mining Company scheme that would come to light. This is the thing I found to be most surprising.


The authority of the President to approve bills during a recess of the Congress, but within the time fixed by the Constitution, has been sustained by this Court. La Abra Silver Mining Co. v. United States, 175 U.S. 423. It appeared in that case that on December 22, 1892, two days after presentation of the bill to the President, the Congress had taken a recess until January 4, 1893. The bill was signed by the President on December 28, 1892. The Court expressly reserved the question, as one not before the court, whether the President could approve a bill "after the final adjournment of Congress for the session." But the reasoning of the opinion applies with as much force to the case of an adjournment, whether it is at the close of a session or is the final adjournment of the Congress, as to the case of a recess for a specified period.

The Court effectively answered the opposing contention based upon the legislative character of the President's function in approving or disapproving bills. See Smiley v. Holm, 285 U.S. 355. The fact that it is a legislative function does not mean that it can be performed only while Congress is in session.


http://books.google.com/books?id=pe...t of united states December 28, 1892&f=false
 

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What needs to be addressed is how the KGC/OAK had the power to use the US government.
When the 15th Amendment was passed,giving the newly made freemen the right to vote,while the 14th Amendment,Sec3 prevented anyone who was part of the Confederacy to vote or hold public office,the KGC still got their men elected.Armed "REGULATORS"would surround courthouses on election day to ensure that only the "right" men voted.This affected local,and state governments,and in the case of Hayes against Tilden,a Presidential election.
When the freemen were given the vote,many of the former CSA states gained additional voes in the Electorial College,but by limiting who could vote or whose vote was counted,the KGC/OAK controlled who won.
President Hayes ended Reconstruction,removed Federal troops from the former CSA states,which reverted to "home rule".
 

What needs to be addressed is how the KGC/OAK had the power to use the US government.
When the 15th Amendment was passed,giving the newly made freemen the right to vote,while the 14th Amendment,Sec3 prevented anyone who was part of the Confederacy to vote or hold public office,the KGC still got their men elected.Armed "REGULATORS"would surround courthouses on election day to ensure that only the "right" men voted.This affected local,and state governments,and in the case of Hayes against Tilden,a Presidential election.
When the freemen were given the vote,many of the former CSA states gained additional voes in the Electorial College,but by limiting who could vote or whose vote was counted,the KGC/OAK controlled who won.
President Hayes ended Reconstruction,removed Federal troops from the former CSA states,which reverted to "home rule".

Not all trappers wear fir hats. They were a very diverse organization L.C. :thumbsup:
 

It is a fact that the judicial system of the country was greatly effected by the K.G.C. Franklin Pierce appointed 19 federal judges during his presidency. The first and last president to ever to appoint those positions in history. If judicial foundations were being built at that time....and they were......then our entire judicial system stems from those foundations. How else could racism survive on a government level until the late 1960's in this country? Through many generations of children we would eventually grow into Americans, but it wasn't ascertained by the narrow paths that are described in history books.

L.C.
 

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It wasn't actually ratified until 1920 that men and women of all races, regardless of prior slavery, could vote in some states of the early United States, such as New Jersey, provided that they could meet other requirements, such as property ownership. Just because they say it's a rule...doesn't necessarily mean everyone follows the rules. Especially if they are the rule makers! We all know what went on for those years....it wasn't a pretty picture. It all came out in the wash eventually and now here we are.

L.C.
 

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Keep in mind that the La Abra mining scheme didn't get rolling until 1865 and it was chump change compared to fraudulent government contracting by the Secretary (s) of War. Before the mining scheme there were many other avenues to wealth like the U.S. Mail, the transcontinental telegraph and the transcontinental railroad, all of which had a common denominator (KNIGHT) not to mention oil, which we would become quite fond of about the same time that the combustion engine was invented. Insurance was a big money maker as well as the stock market and banking early on and after the federal reserve came about. If an organization monopolized the bulk of the commodity market, then they could control the futures. Insider trading had to be invented before it was outlawed!

$$$$$$ L.C.
 

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"President Buchanan, tipped to upcoming problems for Secretary of War John Floyd, requests his resignation.
As requested, John Floyd tenders his resignation as Secretary of War. Charges come out later in the day that he had misdirected funds to contractors and guns to the South. Neither charge will be fully investigated and his guilt (or innocence) is still a hotly debated subject".........until now. :thumbsup:


L.C.
 

Look closely at the names on this list http://www.biblebelievers.org.au/m$t1912.htm

Membership - 1912 Money Trust*

Name Particulars:

A. Iselin & Co. M$T
F.H. Prince & Co. M$T
Francis Henshaw & Co. M$T
Higginson & Co. M$T
J.P. Morgan & Co. M$T
Kidder, Peabody & Co. M$T
P.J. Goodhart & Co. M$T
Robert Winthrop & Co. M$T
S.B. Chapin & Co. M$T
Zeiler, Fairman & Co. M$T
United States Trust Co. (NY) M$T
James Strange Alexander M$T1912 (2)
Charles Herbert Allen M$T1912 (3)
Charles Wesley Allen M$T
Nathan Topliff Allen M$T
Samuel Waters Allerton M$T1912 (2)
L. E. Anderson M$T
Jonathan Ogden Armour M$T1912 (5)
William Waldorf Astor M$T MC
Mary Williamson Averell M$T
Frederick Ayer M$T
Robert Ogden Bacon M$T UC 1918
George Fisher Baker M$T1912 (20) MC
George Fisher Baker, Jr. M$T1912 (4)
Stephen Baker M$T1912 (3) UC
William Barbour M$T
Catherine Barker M$T
Adolphus Clay Barlett M$T1912 (2)
James C. Bell M$T
Grace C. Berquist M$T
Edward Julis Berwind M$T1912 (5) MC
John Charles Black M$T1912 (2)
Clinton Ledyard Blair M$T1912 (2)
Henry Augustus Blair M$T1912 (4)
James A. Blair M$T1912 (2)
Emilie K. Boisot M$T1912 (2)
O. T. Boyton M$T1912 (3)
George Warren Brown M$T
Paul Brown M$T
William Liston Brown M$T1912 (3)
Edwin Muhlenberg Bulkley M$T1912 (1)
Daniel Hudson Burnham M$T
James Gay Butler M$T
James Campbell M$T
Henry White Cannon M$T
James Graham Cannon M$T1912 (2)
Augustus A. Carpenter M$T1912 (2)
William Thorton Carter M$T
George Bowen Case M$T1912 (4)
William James Chalmers M$T1912 (2)
Henry B. Clarke M$T
Springfield Fire and Marine Ins. Co M$T
Thomas Frederick Cole M$T
James Colby Colgate M$T1912 (3)
Illinois Life Insurance Company M$T
Mutual Life Insurance Company M$T
Edmund Cogswell Converse M$T1912 (6)
Northern Finance Corporation M$T
Alfred Cowles II M$T
Robert E. Craig, Jr. M$T
W.R. Craig M$T
David Mark Cummings M$T1912 (2)
D.M. Cummins M$T
Thomas De Witt Cuyler M$T1912 (10)
Henry Pomeroy Davison M$T1903
Henry Pomeroy Davison M$T1912 (5)
Robert Weeks de Forest M$T1912 (2)
Charles Henry Deere M$T
J. B. Dennis M$T1912 (1)
Cleveland Hoadley Dodge M$T1912 (1)
James Mackie Donald M$T
Lewis David Dozier M$T
George A. Draper M$T
R. J. Dunham M$T1912 (2)
Albert John Earling M$T1912 (4)
Bernard Albert Eckhart M$T1912 (2)
David Eiseman M$T
Louisine Waldron Elder M$T
Rudolph Ellis M$T1912 (4)
William Endicott, Jr. M$T1912 (1)
Harris Charles Fahnestock M$T1912 (2) UC
Charles Stebbins Fairchild M$T
E. Hayward Ferry M$T1912 (1)
Joseph N. Field M$T
James Berwick Forgan M$T1912 (3)
James M. Fowler M$T
Arnold Fox M$T
Walter Edwin Frew M$T1912 (1)
Henry Clay Frick M$T1912 (8)
Mary G.Thompson M$T
Sarah T. Gardiner M$T
Charles T. Garland M$T
James A. Garland M$T
Elbert Henry Gary M$T1912 (11)
Robert Walton Goelet, Jr. M$T'12 (7) MC
George Jay Gould M$T1912 (5)
Joseph Peter Grace M$T1912 (1)
Henry Griesedieck, Jr. M$T
Daniel Guggenheim M$T1912 (5)
B.S. Guinness M$T1912 (4)
William Pierson Hamilton M$T1912 (1)
Charles William Harkness M$T1912 (3)
Edward Stephen Harkness M$T
John F. Harris M$T
Mrs. Eleanor S. Harris M$T
Benjamin Hart M$T
Deering Harvester Co. M$T
Frederick Tudor Haskell M$T1912 (1)
Henry Osborne Havemeyer M$T
Augustus Hemenway M$T
Alexander Julian Hemphill M$T1912 (2) MC
Alonzo Barton Hepburn M$T1912 (4) MC
Henry Lee Higginson M$T1912 (3)
James Jerome Hill M$T1912 (6)
Francis Lyman Hine M$T1912 (11)
Henry H. Hitchcock M$T1912 (2)
Henry Hornblower M$T
Horace F. Howland M$T
Marvin Hughitt M$T1912 (6)
Frank W. Hunt M$T
Bessemer Investment Co. M$T
Arthur Curtiss James M$T1912 (5) MC
James M. Jarvie M$T
Edward Turner Jeffrey M$T1912 (7)
Frederick Beach Jennings M$T1912 (3)
Walter Jennings M$T1912 (2)
W. A. Johnston M$T1912 (1)
Kate Allerton Johnstone M$T
Curtis J. Judd M$T
Augustus D. Julliard M$T1912 (5) MC
Otto Hermann Kahn M$T1912 (3)
John Grenville Kane M$T
Chauncey Keep M$T1912 (6)
William Vallandigham Kelley M$T1912 (2)
Sidney A. Kent M$T
R.C. Kerens M$T
Charles B. King M$T
Darwin Pearl Kingsley M$T1912 (3)
W.J. Kinsella M$T
Gardiner Martin Lane M$T1912 (6)
Livi Z. Leiter M$T
Frederick E. Lewis M$T
Percy P. Lewis M$T
John Crerar Library M$T
Robert Todd Lincoln M$T1912 (4)
H. G. Lloyd M$T1912 (2)
Timber Loan Co. M$T
William Logan M$T1903
William J. Louderback M$T1912 (3)
George D. Markham M$T
Edgar L. Marston M$T1912 (4)
John D. Marston M$T
J. B. Martindale M$T1912 (3)
Levy Mayer M$T
Harold H. McCormick M$T1912 (3)
Henry F. McCormick M$T1912 (3)
R. W. McElves M$T1912 (2)
Mrs. Elizabeth S. McElwee M$T
Robert H. McElwee M$T
Gates White McGarrah M$T1912 (2)
Walter McKittrick M$T
C.M. McMillam M$T
Samuel McRoberts M$T1912 (6)
Emily Eames McVeagh M$T
Franklin McVeagh M$T
Darius Miller M$T1912 (2)
Jennie M. Mitchell M$T
John James Mitchell M$T1912 (7)
Mary A. I. Mitchell M$T
William Hamilton Mitchell M$T
William Moffitt M$T
William Henry Moore M$T1912 (6)
John Pierpont Morgan M$T1912 (5) MC UC
John Pierpont Morgan, Jr. M$T1912 (4) MC
Edward Morris M$T1912 (2)
Ira N. Morris M$T
John Reynolds Morron M$T1912 (2)
Charles Hosmer Morse, Jr. M$T1912 (2)
Joy Morton M$T1912 (3)
Levi Parsons Morton M$T12 (2) MC UC
Catherine T. Moulton M$T
A. E. Newbold M$T1912 (1)
Edward T. Nichols M$T
Samuel Nickerson M$T
Charles Dyer Norton M$T1912 (2)
Malvina Belle Ogden M$T
Washington Irving Osborne M$T1912 (2)
Stephen Squires Palmer M$T1912 (4)
James A. Patten M$T
Charles Augustus Peabody M$T1912 (10)
Frank Everett Peabody M$T1912 (1)
George Walbridge Perkins M$T1912
William Walter Phelps M$T
Eugene S. Pike M$T1912 (2)
D. E. Pomeroy M$T1912 (3)
Henry H. Porter, Jr. M$T1912 (2)
William H. Porter M$T1912 (5)
Edwin A. Potter M$T1912 (2)
Andrew W. Preston M$T
Frederick Henry Prince M$T
J. S. Prippe M$T 1912 (3)
Seward Prosser M$T1912 (2)
Moses Taylor Pyne M$T1912 (4) MC
Epes D. Randolph M$T1912 (2)
Samuel Roberson Read M$T1912 (7)
Norman Bruce Ream M$T1912 (13)
Daniel Gray Reid M$T1912 (8)
George M. Reynolds M$T1912 (2)
Thomas A. Reynolds M$T
Edward Payson Ripley M$T1912 (2)
Alexander Martin Robertson M$T1912 (2) ?
John Davison Rockefeller M$T
William D. Rockefeller M$T1912 (10) MC
J. B. Rogan M$T
R. W. Roloson M$T
Gusta Morris Rothschild M$T
Frank A. Ruf M$T
Albertina T. Russell M$T
Edward Perry Russell M$T1912 (2)
John D. Ryan M$T1912 (4)
Thomas Fortune Ryan M$T MC
Charles Hamilton Sabin M$T1912 (5)
J. Sanford Saltus M$T
A.H. Sanford M$T
Jacob Henry Schiff M$T1912 (1)
Mortimer L. Schiff M$T1912 (4)
Grant Barney Schley M$T1912 (6)
Maud Morris Schwab M$T
Harry Scullin M$T
John Scullin M$T
Sussex Securities Co. M$T
John Graves Shedd M$T1912 (7)
William A. Simonson M$T1912 (1)
Charles Sleele M$T1912 (11)
Samuel Sloane M$T1912 (3)
William Douglas Sloane M$T1912 (1) MC
J. J. Slocum M$T1912 (2)
Harry O. Smith M$T
Valentine P. Snyder M$T1912 (3)
Elizabeth Clarke Spaulding M$T
James Joseph Speyer M$T1912 (8)
John Alden Spoor M$T1912 (3)
Equitable Life Assurance of United State M$T
National Life Ins. Co. of United States M$T
E.S. Steinam M$T
John William Sterling M$T1912 (3)
James W. Stevens M$T1912 (2)
Charles Chauncey Stillman M$T
Ernest G. Stillman M$T
James Stillman M$T1912 (6)
James Alexander Stillman M$T1912 (1)
Webster & Stone M$T
James Jackson Storrow M$T1912 (2)
Edward Townsend Stotesbury M$T1912 (8) MC
Benjamin Strong, Jr. M$T1912 (8)
John S. Sullivan M$T
Bernard Edward Sunny M$T1912 (3)
Edward Fletcher Swinney M$T1912 (2)
J. T. Talbert M$T1912 (2)
Henry A. Colt Taylor M$T1912 (2) MC
Katherine W. Taylor M$T
Moses Taylor M$T1912 (2) MC
Egbert E. Thomas M$T
Charles G. Thompson M$T
Elizabeth Thompson M$T
Ferris S. Thompson M$T
J. F. Thompson M$T1903
Mary Clark Thompson M$T
Charles Hedges Thorne M$T1912 (2)
William Van Schoonhoven Thorne M$T1912 (4)
Frederick Thornley, Jr. M$T
Mercantile Trust Co. M$T
Merchants Loan & Trust Co. M$T
Edward Tuck M$T
H. McKinley Twombley M$T
Patrick Anderson Valentine M$T1912 (2)
Ralph Van Vechtem M$T1912 (2)
William Kissam Vanderbilt M$T (3) MC
Frank Arthur Vanderlip M$T1912 (11)
Festus John Wade M$T
J. S. Walker M$T
Mrs. Jessie S. Walker M$T
Paul Mortiz Warburg M$T1912 (6)
John Isaac Waterbury M$T1912 (4)
Emily A. Watson M$T
William James Watson M$T1912 (2)
Frank G. Webster M$T1912 (1)
Hornblower & Weeks M$T
John Wingate Weeks M$T
Frank O. Wetmore M$T1912 (2)
Frederick Edward Weyerhaeuser M$T1912 (3)
Justin Du Pratt White M$T1903
Harry Payne Whitney M$T1912 (1) MC
George Whittell M$T
Albert H. Wiggin M$T1912 (12)
George West Wilson M$T UC
Myron Henry Wilson M$T
Daniel Gould Wing M$T
Sidney Wilmot Winslow M$T
Robert Winsor M$T1912 (5)
Hans Winterfeldt M$T1912 (2)
G.G. Woodin M$T
William Herrick Woodward M$T
William Woodworth M$T
Clarence Mott Woolley M$T1912 (2)
Samuel Woolverton M$T1903
Howard A. Wrenn M$T
Mutual Life of New York M$T
Edward Faitoute Condit Young M$T1903
Otto Young M$T
Source: Money Trust Investigation: Investigation of the Financial
and Monetary Conditions in the United States Under House Resolutions
NOS. 429 and 504 Before A Subcommittee of the Committee on Banking
and Currency (1913) (Y4.B22/1:M74/2/pt. 20-26) Exhibit 134-A
(December 18, 1912).
M$T1912=Listed on 1912 interlocking directorate wall chart. Number in parenthesis is number of directorships.
M$T=Listed in hearings as stockholder in a Money Trust bank.
MC=Metropolitan Club member (incomplete)
UC=Union Club member (incomplete)

L.C.
 

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Source: Money Trust Investigation: Investigation of the Financial
and Monetary Conditions in the United States Under House Resolutions
NOS. 429 and 504 Before A Subcommittee of the Committee on Banking
and Currency (1913)

BUT...who controlled the judicial system that looked into this matter? $$$$$$$$$ $$$$$$$$$$ was the name of the controlling party.

AND....if one went down, they all went down, and that would have collapsed the U.S.A.'s federal reserve beyond repair and in effect destroyed the whole country in a nut shell.

Just my 100 zillion cents, L.C. Baker
 

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It started unraveling in 1902....the same year that J.S. Morton died.

Mark Morton and his second-eldest brother, Joy, were lifelong business partners. In 1885, he and Joy Morton co-founded the Joy Morton Lumber Co. They later co-founded the Morton Sand and Gravel Company.

Morton salt purchased Richmond and Company, a salt distributor in 1886 and renamed it Joy Morton and Company. Mark Morton was the company's vice president and one of its directors from its founding until his retirement in 1922. The company became the International Salt Company in 1902. Morton was forced to testify in federal court in 1903 after government investigators accused the company of antitrust violations. The company was incorporated in Illinois as the Morton Salt Company in 1910.
 

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During the War of 1812, salt brine was used to pay soldiers in the field, as the government was too poor to pay them with money.[citation needed] Before Lewis and Clark set out for the Louisiana Territory, President Jefferson in his address to Congress mentioned a mountain of salt supposed to lie near the Missouri River, which would have been of immense value, as a reason for their expedition
Monopolies over salt production and trade were essential aspects of government revenue in imperial China and most of the 20th century.
They were still fighting about a salt monopoly in 1950 http://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/338/632/
 

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Americans love to eat meat..... and the ate it by the train load back then and still do today!!!!!!:thumbsup:

Frederick H. Prince Union Stock Yards - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Armour and Company - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mark Morton in 1890 was made superintendent of the main plant of the Nebraska City Packing Co. Later in life, he was also president of the Western Cold Storage Company (a major builder and provider of refrigerated storage facilities and railroad cars for the meatpacking industry.



L.C.
 

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LC. Was under the impression and I have done no reading on it that Western Cold Storage was a firm out of Omaha, Neb. or Council Bluffs,Iowa Not much difference there. That was the head quarters of the U.P. in the early days. Grenville Dodge and company. I remember as a kid that Western Cold Storage had a big building in the meat packing park down across from the Sioux City Stockyards. The Armour company was a major player in the Ft. Worth Stockyards. Swift packing company was on one side the street and Armour on the other. A fire burned down the Swift plant almost to the ground the offices at Armour is about all that is left there. Will P.M you later with some information.

S.D.
 

S.D. the O.A.K. sprouted from the acorns planted in the proper speculations. Omaha was not supposed to be the capitol of Nebraska. The K.G.C. wanted the capitol to be Nebraska City. The transcontinental railroad and telegraph would have came to the capitol city exploding their property values and making them millions and millions, but it all worked out for them in the end. On August 16, 1856,the original bill to the 34th Congress by the Select Committee on the Pacific Railroad and Telegraph by President Franklin Pierce / Sec. of War Jefferson Davis. It would be President Lincoln who forced the Northern rout of the rails into Council Bluffs and Omaha which was at that time the capitol city.
They black balled Nebraska City to shut out the K.G.C. speculators who had showed their hand by then. The first railroad built in Nebraska, from Nebraska City, was the old Midland Pacific from Nebraska City to Lincoln, the new capital of the state; which was finished, equipped and put into operation in April 1871. In 1874 Nebraska City voted and issued $75,000 in bonds, to aid in the extension of the Midland Pacific from Nebraska City to Brownville, since which time it has further extended to Tecumseh and Beatrice. This company was composed almost entirely of Nebraska City citizens. The Midland Pacific was bought out by the Burlington and Missouri Railroad, which road, in the year 1868 began work on a line from Red Oak, Iowa, to Nebraska City and finished the following year, thus in 1869 giving a through line from Chicago to Denver via Red Oak and Lincoln through Nebraska City, direct connection East and West. The Kansas City, St. Joseph & Council Bluffs Railroad finished their road from Kansas City to Omaha in 1870, coming up on the Iowa side of the river; the depot being situated directly opposite the city a little over a mile from the river. In September 1888, the B. & M. having completed their new $1,000,000 steel bridge across the Missouri River at this point, on which both trains and teams could cross, formally opened the bridge to the public with appropriate ceremonies, at which the greatest crowd ever gathered within the city was present. It has been variously estimated, at from 20,000 to 35,000 people. This gave direct communication with the railroad across the river and the surrounding country. It was acquired by the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad in 1872 and served a large area, including the states of Colorado, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Wisconsin and Wyoming, and New Mexico and Texas via subsidiary railroads. Its primary connections included Chicago, Minneapolis–Saint Paul, St. Louis, Kansas City and Denver. It grew until it extended from the Great Lakes to the Rocky Mountains. In 1901 James J. Hill bought control and sought to combine it with his Great Northern Railway and with J.P. Morgan’s Northern Pacific Railway, but in 1904 the U.S. Supreme Court, in the Northern Securities case, declared the scheme illegal under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act.
More trouble for the k.G.C. monopolies.........Northern Securities Company - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

James Jerome Hill, (James Jerome Hill M$T1912 (6) from the 1912 trust list) was a Canadian-American railroad executive. He was the chief executive officer of a family of lines headed by the Great Northern Railway, which served a substantial area of the Upper Midwest, the northern Great Plains, and Pacific Northwest. Because of the size of this region and the economic dominance exerted by the Hill lines, Hill became known during his lifetime as The Empire Builder. Hill (and his B.L.F.)undertook to establish a monopoly of the steamboat business; he was monopolizing coal, socializing with bankers, and buying other businesses at the same time. Hill noted that the secret to success was, "Work, hard work, intelligent work, and then more work." He was part of the original syndicate that went on to create the Canadian Pacific Railway

With all of that buying and selling and merging and litigation.......just remember it most likely was the K.G.C. spreading out their funds among different buyers and shuffling the deck to keep from being recognized as a single unit (Secret Brotherhood with the same goal...."create an Empire" and rule it).

L.C. Baker
 

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Look closely at the names on this list http://www.biblebelievers.org.au/m$t1912.htm

Membership - 1912 Money Trust*

Name Particulars:

A. Iselin & Co. M$T
F.H. Prince & Co. M$T
Francis Henshaw & Co. M$T
Higginson & Co. M$T
J.P. Morgan & Co. M$T
Kidder, Peabody & Co. M$T
P.J. Goodhart & Co. M$T
Robert Winthrop & Co. M$T
S.B. Chapin & Co. M$T
Zeiler, Fairman & Co. M$T
United States Trust Co. (NY) M$T
James Strange Alexander M$T1912 (2)
Charles Herbert Allen M$T1912 (3)
Charles Wesley Allen M$T
Nathan Topliff Allen M$T
Samuel Waters Allerton M$T1912 (2)
L. E. Anderson M$T
Jonathan Ogden Armour M$T1912 (5)
William Waldorf Astor M$T MC
Mary Williamson Averell M$T
Frederick Ayer M$T
Robert Ogden Bacon M$T UC 1918
George Fisher Baker M$T1912 (20) MC
George Fisher Baker, Jr. M$T1912 (4)
Stephen Baker M$T1912 (3) UC
William Barbour M$T
Catherine Barker M$T
Adolphus Clay Barlett M$T1912 (2)
James C. Bell M$T
Grace C. Berquist M$T
Edward Julis Berwind M$T1912 (5) MC
John Charles Black M$T1912 (2)
Clinton Ledyard Blair M$T1912 (2)
Henry Augustus Blair M$T1912 (4)
James A. Blair M$T1912 (2)
Emilie K. Boisot M$T1912 (2)
O. T. Boyton M$T1912 (3)
George Warren Brown M$T
Paul Brown M$T
William Liston Brown M$T1912 (3)
Edwin Muhlenberg Bulkley M$T1912 (1)
Daniel Hudson Burnham M$T
James Gay Butler M$T
James Campbell M$T
Henry White Cannon M$T
James Graham Cannon M$T1912 (2)
Augustus A. Carpenter M$T1912 (2)
William Thorton Carter M$T
George Bowen Case M$T1912 (4)
William James Chalmers M$T1912 (2)
Henry B. Clarke M$T
Springfield Fire and Marine Ins. Co M$T
Thomas Frederick Cole M$T
James Colby Colgate M$T1912 (3)
Illinois Life Insurance Company M$T
Mutual Life Insurance Company M$T
Edmund Cogswell Converse M$T1912 (6)
Northern Finance Corporation M$T
Alfred Cowles II M$T
Robert E. Craig, Jr. M$T
W.R. Craig M$T
David Mark Cummings M$T1912 (2)
D.M. Cummins M$T
Thomas De Witt Cuyler M$T1912 (10)
Henry Pomeroy Davison M$T1903
Henry Pomeroy Davison M$T1912 (5)
Robert Weeks de Forest M$T1912 (2)
Charles Henry Deere M$T
J. B. Dennis M$T1912 (1)
Cleveland Hoadley Dodge M$T1912 (1)
James Mackie Donald M$T
Lewis David Dozier M$T
George A. Draper M$T
R. J. Dunham M$T1912 (2)
Albert John Earling M$T1912 (4)
Bernard Albert Eckhart M$T1912 (2)
David Eiseman M$T
Louisine Waldron Elder M$T
Rudolph Ellis M$T1912 (4)
William Endicott, Jr. M$T1912 (1)
Harris Charles Fahnestock M$T1912 (2) UC
Charles Stebbins Fairchild M$T
E. Hayward Ferry M$T1912 (1)
Joseph N. Field M$T
James Berwick Forgan M$T1912 (3)
James M. Fowler M$T
Arnold Fox M$T
Walter Edwin Frew M$T1912 (1)
Henry Clay Frick M$T1912 (8)
Mary G.Thompson M$T
Sarah T. Gardiner M$T
Charles T. Garland M$T
James A. Garland M$T
Elbert Henry Gary M$T1912 (11)
Robert Walton Goelet, Jr. M$T'12 (7) MC
George Jay Gould M$T1912 (5)
Joseph Peter Grace M$T1912 (1)
Henry Griesedieck, Jr. M$T
Daniel Guggenheim M$T1912 (5)
B.S. Guinness M$T1912 (4)
William Pierson Hamilton M$T1912 (1)
Charles William Harkness M$T1912 (3)
Edward Stephen Harkness M$T
John F. Harris M$T
Mrs. Eleanor S. Harris M$T
Benjamin Hart M$T
Deering Harvester Co. M$T
Frederick Tudor Haskell M$T1912 (1)
Henry Osborne Havemeyer M$T
Augustus Hemenway M$T
Alexander Julian Hemphill M$T1912 (2) MC
Alonzo Barton Hepburn M$T1912 (4) MC
Henry Lee Higginson M$T1912 (3)
James Jerome Hill M$T1912 (6)
Francis Lyman Hine M$T1912 (11)
Henry H. Hitchcock M$T1912 (2)
Henry Hornblower M$T
Horace F. Howland M$T
Marvin Hughitt M$T1912 (6)
Frank W. Hunt M$T
Bessemer Investment Co. M$T
Arthur Curtiss James M$T1912 (5) MC
James M. Jarvie M$T
Edward Turner Jeffrey M$T1912 (7)
Frederick Beach Jennings M$T1912 (3)
Walter Jennings M$T1912 (2)
W. A. Johnston M$T1912 (1)
Kate Allerton Johnstone M$T
Curtis J. Judd M$T
Augustus D. Julliard M$T1912 (5) MC
Otto Hermann Kahn M$T1912 (3)
John Grenville Kane M$T
Chauncey Keep M$T1912 (6)
William Vallandigham Kelley M$T1912 (2)
Sidney A. Kent M$T
R.C. Kerens M$T
Charles B. King M$T
Darwin Pearl Kingsley M$T1912 (3)
W.J. Kinsella M$T
Gardiner Martin Lane M$T1912 (6)
Livi Z. Leiter M$T
Frederick E. Lewis M$T
Percy P. Lewis M$T
John Crerar Library M$T
Robert Todd Lincoln M$T1912 (4)
H. G. Lloyd M$T1912 (2)
Timber Loan Co. M$T
William Logan M$T1903
William J. Louderback M$T1912 (3)
George D. Markham M$T
Edgar L. Marston M$T1912 (4)
John D. Marston M$T
J. B. Martindale M$T1912 (3)
Levy Mayer M$T
Harold H. McCormick M$T1912 (3)
Henry F. McCormick M$T1912 (3)
R. W. McElves M$T1912 (2)
Mrs. Elizabeth S. McElwee M$T
Robert H. McElwee M$T
Gates White McGarrah M$T1912 (2)
Walter McKittrick M$T
C.M. McMillam M$T
Samuel McRoberts M$T1912 (6)
Emily Eames McVeagh M$T
Franklin McVeagh M$T
Darius Miller M$T1912 (2)
Jennie M. Mitchell M$T
John James Mitchell M$T1912 (7)
Mary A. I. Mitchell M$T
William Hamilton Mitchell M$T
William Moffitt M$T
William Henry Moore M$T1912 (6)
John Pierpont Morgan M$T1912 (5) MC UC
John Pierpont Morgan, Jr. M$T1912 (4) MC
Edward Morris M$T1912 (2)
Ira N. Morris M$T
John Reynolds Morron M$T1912 (2)
Charles Hosmer Morse, Jr. M$T1912 (2)
Joy Morton M$T1912 (3)
Levi Parsons Morton M$T12 (2) MC UC
Catherine T. Moulton M$T
A. E. Newbold M$T1912 (1)
Edward T. Nichols M$T
Samuel Nickerson M$T
Charles Dyer Norton M$T1912 (2)
Malvina Belle Ogden M$T
Washington Irving Osborne M$T1912 (2)
Stephen Squires Palmer M$T1912 (4)
James A. Patten M$T
Charles Augustus Peabody M$T1912 (10)
Frank Everett Peabody M$T1912 (1)
George Walbridge Perkins M$T1912
William Walter Phelps M$T
Eugene S. Pike M$T1912 (2)
D. E. Pomeroy M$T1912 (3)
Henry H. Porter, Jr. M$T1912 (2)
William H. Porter M$T1912 (5)
Edwin A. Potter M$T1912 (2)
Andrew W. Preston M$T
Frederick Henry Prince M$T
J. S. Prippe M$T 1912 (3)
Seward Prosser M$T1912 (2)
Moses Taylor Pyne M$T1912 (4) MC
Epes D. Randolph M$T1912 (2)
Samuel Roberson Read M$T1912 (7)
Norman Bruce Ream M$T1912 (13)
Daniel Gray Reid M$T1912 (8)
George M. Reynolds M$T1912 (2)
Thomas A. Reynolds M$T
Edward Payson Ripley M$T1912 (2)
Alexander Martin Robertson M$T1912 (2) ?
John Davison Rockefeller M$T
William D. Rockefeller M$T1912 (10) MC
J. B. Rogan M$T
R. W. Roloson M$T
Gusta Morris Rothschild M$T
Frank A. Ruf M$T
Albertina T. Russell M$T
Edward Perry Russell M$T1912 (2)
John D. Ryan M$T1912 (4)
Thomas Fortune Ryan M$T MC
Charles Hamilton Sabin M$T1912 (5)
J. Sanford Saltus M$T
A.H. Sanford M$T
Jacob Henry Schiff M$T1912 (1)
Mortimer L. Schiff M$T1912 (4)
Grant Barney Schley M$T1912 (6)
Maud Morris Schwab M$T
Harry Scullin M$T
John Scullin M$T
Sussex Securities Co. M$T
John Graves Shedd M$T1912 (7)
William A. Simonson M$T1912 (1)
Charles Sleele M$T1912 (11)
Samuel Sloane M$T1912 (3)
William Douglas Sloane M$T1912 (1) MC
J. J. Slocum M$T1912 (2)
Harry O. Smith M$T
Valentine P. Snyder M$T1912 (3)
Elizabeth Clarke Spaulding M$T
James Joseph Speyer M$T1912 (8)
John Alden Spoor M$T1912 (3)
Equitable Life Assurance of United State M$T
National Life Ins. Co. of United States M$T
E.S. Steinam M$T
John William Sterling M$T1912 (3)
James W. Stevens M$T1912 (2)
Charles Chauncey Stillman M$T
Ernest G. Stillman M$T
James Stillman M$T1912 (6)
James Alexander Stillman M$T1912 (1)
Webster & Stone M$T
James Jackson Storrow M$T1912 (2)
Edward Townsend Stotesbury M$T1912 (8) MC
Benjamin Strong, Jr. M$T1912 (8)
John S. Sullivan M$T
Bernard Edward Sunny M$T1912 (3)
Edward Fletcher Swinney M$T1912 (2)
J. T. Talbert M$T1912 (2)
Henry A. Colt Taylor M$T1912 (2) MC
Katherine W. Taylor M$T
Moses Taylor M$T1912 (2) MC
Egbert E. Thomas M$T
Charles G. Thompson M$T
Elizabeth Thompson M$T
Ferris S. Thompson M$T
J. F. Thompson M$T1903
Mary Clark Thompson M$T
Charles Hedges Thorne M$T1912 (2)
William Van Schoonhoven Thorne M$T1912 (4)
Frederick Thornley, Jr. M$T
Mercantile Trust Co. M$T
Merchants Loan & Trust Co. M$T
Edward Tuck M$T
H. McKinley Twombley M$T
Patrick Anderson Valentine M$T1912 (2)
Ralph Van Vechtem M$T1912 (2)
William Kissam Vanderbilt M$T (3) MC
Frank Arthur Vanderlip M$T1912 (11)
Festus John Wade M$T
J. S. Walker M$T
Mrs. Jessie S. Walker M$T
Paul Mortiz Warburg M$T1912 (6)
John Isaac Waterbury M$T1912 (4)
Emily A. Watson M$T
William James Watson M$T1912 (2)
Frank G. Webster M$T1912 (1)
Hornblower & Weeks M$T
John Wingate Weeks M$T
Frank O. Wetmore M$T1912 (2)
Frederick Edward Weyerhaeuser M$T1912 (3)
Justin Du Pratt White M$T1903
Harry Payne Whitney M$T1912 (1) MC
George Whittell M$T
Albert H. Wiggin M$T1912 (12)
George West Wilson M$T UC
Myron Henry Wilson M$T
Daniel Gould Wing M$T
Sidney Wilmot Winslow M$T
Robert Winsor M$T1912 (5)
Hans Winterfeldt M$T1912 (2)
G.G. Woodin M$T
William Herrick Woodward M$T
William Woodworth M$T
Clarence Mott Woolley M$T1912 (2)
Samuel Woolverton M$T1903
Howard A. Wrenn M$T
Mutual Life of New York M$T
Edward Faitoute Condit Young M$T1903
Otto Young M$T
Source: Money Trust Investigation: Investigation of the Financial
and Monetary Conditions in the United States Under House Resolutions
NOS. 429 and 504 Before A Subcommittee of the Committee on Banking
and Currency (1913) (Y4.B22/1:M74/2/pt. 20-26) Exhibit 134-A
(December 18, 1912).
M$T1912=Listed on 1912 interlocking directorate wall chart. Number in parenthesis is number of directorships.
M$T=Listed in hearings as stockholder in a Money Trust bank.
MC=Metropolitan Club member (incomplete)
UC=Union Club member (incomplete)

L.C.


I spent a week on this list googling the names individually to research the people on it one by one......I was amazed at the conglomerated wealth these people had control of as a single unit, it was the largest (majority) controlling voice in this nation during their hay day and the amount of the companies on the 1912 list that are larger and still growing to this day and swallowing up more and more companies is staggering. .:happysmiley:
 

1865-1912...that is 47 years of controlled growth guided by insider trading and speculations, monopolies, dirty politics, and the ability to control the price of about anything Americans and their other customers consumed or used during that time, and many avenues of those conglomerates continue to this day.
1865-2014...that's 149 years of growth...imagine how long the train load of money would be now if they had to load it all up. Imagine the assets....it is mind boggling. The same way I refer to the K.G.C./O.A.K. as if it is one entity is the same way we live in the U.S.A./C.S.A. this very day.

Just my 2 cents, L.C.
 

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