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CHAPTER
5 - The House of Rothschild
The success of the Federal Reserve Conspiracy will raise many questions in
the minds of readers who are unfamiliar with the history of the United
States and finance capital. How could the Kuhn, Loeb-Morgan alliance,
powerful though it might be, believe that it would be capable, first, of
devising a plan which would bring the entire money and credit of the
people of the United States into their hands, and second, of getting such
a plan enacted into law?
The capability of devising and enacting the "National Reserve Plan", as
the immediate result of the Jekyll Island expedition was called, was
easily within the powers of the Kuhn, Loeb-Morgan alliance, according to
the following from McClure's Magazine, August 1911, "The Seven Men" by
John Moody:
"Seven men in Wall Street now control a great share of the fundamental
industry and resources
of the United States. Three of the seven men, J.P. Morgan, James J. Hill,
and George F. Baker,
head of the First National Bank of New York belong to the so-called Morgan
group; four of them,
John D. and William Rockefeller, James Stillman, head of the National City
Bank, and Jacob H.
Schiff of the private banking firm of Kuhn, Loeb Company, to the so-called
Standard Oil City Bank group... the central machine of capital extends its
control over the United States... The
process is not only economically logical; it is now practically
automatic."32
Thus we see that the 1910 plot to seize control of the money and credit of
the people of the United States was planned by men who already controlled
most of the country's resources. It seemed to John Moody "practically
automatic" that they should continue with their operations.
What John Moody did not know, or did not tell his readers, was that the
most powerful men in the United States were themselves answerable to
another power, a foreign power, and a power which had been steadfastly
seeking to extend its control over the young republic of the United States
since its very inception. This power was the financial power of England,
centered in the London Branch of the House of Rothschild. The fact was
that in 1910, the United States was for all practical purposes being ruled
from England, and so it is today. The ten largest bank holding companies
in the United States are firmly in the hands of certain banking houses,
all of which have branches in London. They are J.P. Morgan Company, Brown
Brothers Harriman, Warburg, Kuhn Loeb and J. Henry Schroder. All of them
maintain close relationships with the House of Rothschild, principally
through the Rothschild control of international money markets through its
manipulation of the price of gold. Each day, the world price of gold is
set in the London office of N.M. Rothschild and Company.
Although these firms are ostensibly American firms, which merely maintain
branches in London, the fact is that these banking houses actually take
their direction from London. Their history is a fascinating one, and
unknown to the American public, originating as it did in the international
traffic in gold, slaves, diamonds, and other contraband. There are no
moral considerations in any business decision made by these firms. They
are interested solely in money and power.
Tourists today gape at the magnificent mansions of the very rich in
Newport, Rhode Island, without realizing that not only do these "cottages"
stand as a memorial to the baronial desires of our Victorian millionaires,
but that their erection in Newport represented a nostalgic memorialization
of the great American fortunes, which had their beginnings in Newport when
it was the capital of the slave trade.
The slave trade for centuries had its headquarters in Venice, until
Seventeenth Century Britain, the new master of the seas, used its control
of the oceans to gain a monopoly. As the American colonies were settled,
its fiercely independent people, most of whom did not want slaves, found
to their surprise that slaves were being sent to our ports in great
numbers.
For many years, Newport was the capital of this unsavory trade. William
Ellery, the Collector of the Port of Newport, said in 1791:
"...an Ethiopian cld as soon change his skin as a Newport merchant cld be
induced to change so
lucrative a trade.... for the slow profits of any manufactory."
John Quincy Adams remarked in his Diary, page 459,
"Newport's former
prosperity was chiefly owing to its extensive employment in the African
slave trade."
The pre-eminence of J.P. Morgan and the Brown firm in American finance can
be dated to the development of Baltimore as the nineteenth century capital
of the slave trade. Both of these firms originated in Baltimore, opened
branches in London, came under the aegis of the House of Rothschild, and
returned to the United States to open branches in New York and to become
the dominant power, not only in finance, but also in government. In recent
years, key posts such as Secretary of Defense have been held by Robert
Lovett, partner of Brown Brothers Harriman, and Thomas S. Gates, partner
of Drexel and Company, a J.P. Morgan subsidiary firm. The present Vice President, George Bush, is the son of
Prescott Bush, a partner of Brown Brothers Harriman, for many years the
senator from Connecticut, and the financial organizer of Columbia
Broadcasting System of which he also was a director for many years.
To understand why these firms operate as they do, it is necessary to give
a brief history of their origins. Few Americans know that J.P. Morgan
Company began as George Peabody and Company. George Peabody (1795-1869),
born at South Danvers, Massachusetts, began business in Georgetown, D.C.
in 1814 as Peabody, Riggs and Company, dealing in wholesale dry goods, and
in operating the Georgetown Slave Market. In 1815, to be closer to their
source of supply, they moved to Baltimore, where they operated as Peabody
and Riggs, from 1815 to 1835. Peabody found himself increasingly involved
with business originating from London, and in 1835, he established the
firm of George Peabody and Company in London. He had excellent entree in
London business through another Baltimore firm established in Liverpool,
the Brown Brothers. Alexander Brown came to Baltimore in 1801, and
established what is now known as the oldest banking house in the United
States, still operating as Brown Brothers Harriman of New York; Brown,
Shipley and Company of England; and Alex Brown and Son of Baltimore. The
behind the scenes power wielded by this firm is indicated by the fact that
Sir Montagu Norman, Governor of the Bank of England for many years, was a
partner of Brown, Shipley and Company.* Considered the single most
influential banker in the world, Sir Montagu Norman was organizer of
"informal talks" between heads of central banks in 1927, which led
directly to the Great Stockmarket Crash of 1929.
"There is an informal understanding that a director of Brown, Shipley
should be on the Board of the Bank of England, and Norman was elected to
it in 1907." Montagu Norman, Current Biography, 1940.
Soon after he arrived in London, George Peabody was surprised to be
summoned to an audience with the gruff Baron Nathan Mayer Rothschild.
Without mincing words, Rothschild revealed to Peabody, that much of the
London aristocracy openly disliked Rothschild and refused his invitations.
He proposed that Peabody, a man of modest means, be established as a
lavish host whose entertainments would soon be the talk of London.
Rothschild would, of course, pay all the bills. Peabody accepted the
offer, and soon became known as the most popular host in London. His
annual Fourth of July dinner, celebrating American Independence, became
extremely popular with the English aristocracy, many of whom, while
drinking Peabody's wine, regaled each other with jokes about Rothschild's
crudities and bad manners, without realizing that every drop they drank
had been paid for by Rothschild.
It is hardly surprising that the most popular host in London would also
become a very successful businessman, particularly with the House of
Rothschild supporting him behind the scenes. Peabody often operated with a
capital of 500,000 pounds on hand, and became very astute in his buying
and selling on both sides of the Atlantic. His American agent was the
Boston firm of Beebe, Morgan and Company, headed by Junius S. Morgan,
father of John Pierpont Morgan. Peabody, who never married, had no one to
succeed him, and he was very favorably impressed by the tall, handsome
Junius Morgan. He persuaded Morgan to join him in London as a partner in
George Peabody and Company in 1854. In 1860, John Pierpont Morgan had been
taken on as an apprentice by the firm of Duncan, Sherman in New York. He
was not very attentive to business, and in 1864, Morgan's father was
outraged when Duncan, Sherman refused to make his son a partner. He
promptly extended an arrangement whereby one of the chief employees of
Duncan, Sherman, Charles H. Dabney, was persuaded to join John Pierpont
Morgan in a new firm, Dabney, Morgan and Company. Bankers Magazine,
December, 1864, noted that Peabody had withdrawn his account from Duncan,
Sherman, and that other firms were expected to do so. The Peabody account,
of course, went to Dabney, Morgan Company.
John Pierpont Morgan was born in 1837, during the first money panic in the
United States. Significantly, it had been caused by the House of
Rothschild, with whom Morgan was later to become associated.
In 1836, President Andrew Jackson, infuriated by the tactics of the
bankers who were attempting to persuade him to renew the charter of the
Second Bank of the United States, said, "You are a den of vipers. I intend
to rout you out and by the Eternal God I will rout you out. If the people
only understood the rank injustice of our money and banking system, there
would be a revolution before morning."
Although Nicholas Biddle was President of the Bank of the United States,
it was well known that Baron James de Rothschild of Paris was the
principal investor in this central bank. Although Jackson had vetoed the
renewal of the charter of the Bank of the United States, he probably was
unaware that a few months earlier, in 1835, the House of Rothschild had
cemented a relationship with the United States Government by superseding
the firm of Baring as financial agent of the Department of State on
January 1, 1835.
Henry Clews, the famous banker, in his book, Twenty-eight Years in Wall
Street33, states that the Panic of 1837 was engineered because the charter
of the Second Bank of the United States had run out in 1836. Not only did
President Jackson promptly withdraw government funds
from the Second Bank of the United States, but he deposited these funds,
$10 million, in state banks. The immediate result, Clews tells us, is that
the country began to enjoy great prosperity. This sudden flow of cash
caused an immediate expansion of the national economy, and the government
paid off the entire national debt, leaving a surplus of $50 million in the
Treasury.
The European financiers had the answer to this situation. Clews further
states, "The Panic of 1837 was aggravated by the Bank of England when it
in one day threw out all the paper connected with the United States."
The Bank of England, of course, was synonymous with the name of Baron
Nathan Mayer Rothschild. Why did the Bank of England in one day "throw
out" all paper connected with the United States, that is, refuse to accept
or discount any securities, bonds or other financial paper based in the
United States? The purpose of this action was to create an immediate
financial panic in the United States, cause a complete contraction of
credit, halt further issues of stocks and bonds, and ruin those seeking to
turn United States securities into cash. In this atmosphere of financial
panic, John Pierpont Morgan came into the world. His grandmother, Joseph
Morgan, was a well to do farmer who owned 106 acres in Hartford,
Connecticut. He later opened the City Hotel, and the Exchange Coffee Shop,
and in 1819, was one of the founders of the Aetna Insurance Company.
George Peabody found that he had chosen well in selecting Junius S. Morgan
as his successor. Morgan agreed to continue the sub rosa relationship with
N.M. Rothschild Company, and soon expanded the firm's activities by
shipping large quantities of railroad iron to the United States. It was
Peabody iron which was the foundation for much of American railroad tracks
from 1860 to 1890. In 1864, content to retire and leave his firm in the
hands of Morgan, Peabody allowed the name to be changed to Junius S.
Morgan Company. The Morgan firm then and since has always been directed
from London. John Pierpont Morgan spent much of his time at his
magnificent London mansion, Prince's Gate.
Continue
chapter 5B
Foreword
to Secrets of the Federal Reserve
Chapter
1
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2 -
3 -
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5 -
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ADDENDUM
BIBLIOGRAPHY
BIOGRAPHIES
INDEX
Taking Back Your Power
by Allen Aslan Heart
WHAT CAN YOU DO? Stop playing THEIR game. Take back
your power. Stop paying taxes that are not legal or lawful. Stop paying
bills you don't really owe. Stop using THEIR money. There ARE ways if you
open your mind and look for the gaps in their fences that keep the sheeple
in their pasture. Are you chattel or a real person? You are the one who
makes that choice.
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