„His book and murder still have the Masons making
excuses and lies“
Some Masons honestly admit he was murdered
THE STORY OF CAPTAIN MORGAN
Captain William Morgan, who had reached a high degree within the
freemasonry and had a central position in the order, discovered some
of the terrible masonic secrets in his Lodge No. 433 in Batavia, New
York. He travelled around the United States to warn the other masonic
lodges.
In 1826, he explained that it was his duty to warn the public of the
secret plans of the freemasons. Morgan wanted to expose the shady
activities of the masonic elite in a book. He signed a contract with
the publisher Colonel David C. Miller. The book, "Freemasonry
Exposed", was published in August 1826.
This brought the members of the concerned lodges to the verge of
a nervous breakdown. At that time there were 50.000 freemasons in
the United States.
Warnings against Morgan were quickly spread. In the newspapers
were published advertisements, like this one in Canandaigua, New
York, on 9 August 1826:
" I f a man calling himself William Morgan had come to the society,
should everyone be on their guard, particularly THE BROTHERHOOD
OF THE FREEMASONS... Morgan is considered a swindler and a
dangerous man."
The freemasons in Batavia and the Illuminati in America and in
Europe were worried. They decided to punish him for breaking his
oath and betraying his brothers. Richard Howard, an English
Illuminatus, was sent to America to murder Morgan (Michael di
Gargano, "Irish and English Freemasons and their Foreign Brothers",
London, 1878, p. 73).
The freemasons trapped Morgan into a plot to murder him. Some
freemasons went to Morgan's house and kidnapped him on 11
September 1826, claiming that he owed them money and that they
were entitled to hold him in custody until he paid off the debt of two
dollars and 68 cents. The freemason who came up with the idea of
the debt was Nicholas Chesebro. The freemasons also claimed that
Morgan had stolen a shirt. On 13 September 1826, the freemason
Lotan Lawson went to the jail in Canandaigua, about 50 miles east of
Batavia, and said that he was a friend of Morgan and had come to
pay off his debt and obtain his release. Out in the street, Lawson
invited Morgan to enter his carriage but Morgan refused. Two other
freemasons, Chesebro and Edward Sawyer, then appeared and they
and Lawson forced the struggling Morgan into the carriage. People
standing in the street heard Morgan cry: "Help! Murder!" as the
carriage drove off.
One night between 17 and 21 September they took him out on the
Niagara River in a boat, fastened metal weights onto his feet, and
threw him into to the river, where he drowned.
The idea was to put fear into other freemasons and force them into
submission. One of the conspirators, John Whitney, confessed the
murder to his physician on his deathbed in 1860.
Morgan's publisher, David Miller, on 13 September was also caught
in the masonic claws but managed with the aid of the authorities to
escape. On 4 October, Miller printed 5000 leaflets that in heavy
lettering described the kidnapping of Morgan and requested public
help. It was well known, however, that the freemasons threatened
people for revealing their secrets. Some masonic sources claimed that
Morgan had received 500 dollars and a horse to flee to Canada never
to return.
New York governor De Witt Clinton appointed several commissions
to enquire into Morgan's fate. On 1 January 1827, the freemasons
Lotan Lawson, John Sheldon, Nicholas Chesebro and Edward Sawyer
were charged with kidnapping and murder. Later additional ten
freemasons were sentenced to prison for accessory to the crime.
The freemasons once again struck back by falsifying Morgan's book
and published it with distorted contents in December 1826, typical
for those that do not want the truth to come out. The printer that
printed Morgan's book was subjected to arson in August 1826.
The American historian Emanuel M. Josephson revealed in his book
"Roosevelt's Communist Manifesto" (New York, 1955, p. 24) that the
Columbian Lodge of the Illuminati was founded in New York City in
1785. Its first leader was Governor De Witt Clinton.
There was a lot of negative publicity about the Morgan case. All
over the Midwest and north-eastern United States the freemasons
were isolated. The public demanded that teachers and other prominent
people should leave the Order or lose their jobs. Freemasons
were banned from jury service. They were insulted in the streets. The
Morgan case aroused public resentment against secret societies in
general and the freemasons in particular. Politicians in favour of
freemasonry cut their ties to the Order. As many as 141 anti-masonic
publications soon appeared.
After the trial and publication of Morgan's book, 45.000 freemasons
left their lodges. Nearly 2000 lodges were closed. Many of the
remaining lodges cancelled their activities. In the state of New York
alone, there were 30 000 freemasons. When Morgan's book was
published, the number of members decreased to 300 (William J.
Whalen, "Christianity and American Freemasonry", 1987, p. 9).
One of those that left freemasonry at this time was a young
lawyer, Millard Fillmore, in 1850 to become the 13th president of the
United States. He also began warning against the freemasons.
John Quincy Adams (1825-1829), president of the United States,
was a determined opponent of the secret society and fraternity of
freemasonry. He thought, "Masonry ought forever to be abolished".
Adams stated: "It is wrong - essentially wrong - a seed of evil, which can
never produce any good... The existence of such an order is a foul blot
upon the morals of a community." (Wiliam G. Sibley, "The Story of
Freemasonry", 1913)
Adams wrote three letters to the historian Colonel William Leet
Stone, a high-ranking freemason, a Knight Templar and editor of The
New York Commercial Advertizer, in which he exposed how Thomas
Jefferson was using masonic lodges for subversive Illuministic purposes.
The letters are in the Whittenburg Square Library in Philadelphia.
The Illuminati punished him by ruining his chances for re-election.
Adams was totally destroyed in the press that was already controlled
by the Illuminati. He was going to expose them in a book, but the
manuscript was stolen.
Because of the Morgan case David C. Bernard, David Miller and 41
former freemasons founded the Anti-Masonic Society in Le Roy, New
York, in the spring of 1828, later to be called the Anti-masonic Party.
They wanted to ban freemasonry and organized protests in the East
Coast cities. Millard Fillmore became a member of the party in 1828.
[from „Architects of Deception“ by Juri Lina]
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WILLIAM LYNE – INCARNATION OF CAPT. WILLIAM MORGAN
Many of you, reading these lines, never heard of William Lyne - American author in the field of conspirology. The why and wherefore of this, well, read further...
William Lyne was born in Big Spring, Texas on June 14, 1938. Besides being a conspirology writer, he is as well alternative physicist and inventor. In his youth he shown interest for experimental aircrafts, and constructed some models on his own. He had plans about becoming an aeronautical engineer, but at the age of 17 he left the highschool, to regulate the army service, so to avoid the possibility to be drafted for a new war. He was trained at the air base Lackland. Soon he became the member of Air Force secret service. As he has shown considerable talent for drawing, he worked as illustrator. As nobody could train him at the base, he went to evening courses at Collumbus College of Art and Design.
The reason for which he was alloted to secret service could be his masonic backgorund, as both of his parents, as well as uncle were freemasons, and, as it's well known, ones stemming from such families are always at the top regarding the selection of human resources. In the first half of the 60s Lyne studied art at Sam Houston State University, and later also at University of Austin.
By the beginning of 70s he moved to New Mexico (Lamy, in vicinity of Santa Fe), where he worked as sculptor and painter. Then, for some time he lectured art at White Sands Missile Range. Later, he moved onto real estate business, but had some difficulties with secret services, who tried to bribe him with some properties.
In mid 70s William Lyne began his researches of alternative methods of energy production, based on supposition that inexhaustible amount of energy could be drawn from the environment. His aim was to discover how to receive „free energy“ from nature. He also pursued with researches, that he began already in his youth, concerning electricity and magnetism. He collected a vast amount of materials and knowledge in connection with work of Nikola Tesla, for whom he shown always greatest recpect.
But, regarding his books - he didn't stand a chance of being published, not until the beginniong of 1990s and the end of so called „Cold War“. He published a book about the extraterrestrials and UFO called „Pentagon Aliens“ in 1993, and „Occult Ether Physics“, on alternative physics, two years later
Post je objavljen 02.12.2017. u 08:50 sati.