Anonymous ID: 29a4d7 Oct. 11, 2020, 11:40 a.m. No.11026571   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6825 >>6939

>>11026216

>>11026310

 

Some past individuals connected to the Smithsonian in the earlier days:

 

In 1853, Randall Lee Gibson entered into the Scroll and Key society. He would be a Democrat member of U.S. Congress and the Senate from Louisiana, and a brigadier general in the Confederate Army, and a regent of the Smithsonian.

 

In 1865, entering into the Scroll and Key Society, John Dalzell would be a U.S. congressman from Pennsylvania in 1886, re-elected another dozen times, and serving as chairman of the House Committee on Pacific Railroads, and the Committee on Rules, and also on the powerful Ways and Means Committee from 1891 to 1913, as well as a Regent of the Smithsonian from 1906 to 1913. He worked very closely with President Theodore Roosevelt, as well as with Harrison and McKinley before him.

 

In 1920, the widow Emily Thorn Vanderbilt married Henry White, the former U.S. Ambassador to France and Italy, and a signer of the Treaty of Versailles. As a boy, White had met President Pierce, and during the Civil War, his family were pro-Confederacy. When the war ended the White's moved to France, and he finished his education in Paris. During the Franco-Prussian War, after Napoleon III fell, they moved to Britain. White became an avid fox hunter, meeting the elites of Britain. White's former wife had been Margaret "Daisy" Stuyvesant Rutherfurd whom he had married in 1879, after which he returned to the states, and used his contacts in Europe and his wife's family to get a position in 1883 on the U.S. legation in Vienna, under U.S. diplomat Minister Alphonso Taft. He was soon promoted to second secretary of the U.S. legation in London, later promoted to first secretary of the legation, in 1886, despite being a Republican during a Democrat administration, working under, for one, Robert T. Lincoln (related to Abraham Lincoln) until 1893. He then returned to the states to live in DC, he and his wife members of the British intellectual group, The Souls, but now hobnobbing in DC, friends of Theodore Roosevelt, Henry Cabot Lodge, among others. During President McKinley's term of office in 1896, White was once again in the diplomatic corp, again as first secretary at the London embassy, where his friend John Hay was the ambassador. After Hay was recalled to be Secretary of State, he was the acting charge d'affaires, and led the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty negotiations. He was given an honorary degree from the University of St. Andrews in 1902 when Andrew Carnegie was made Lord Rector. In 1905, President T. Roosevelt appointed him ambassador to Italy, and mediated the 1906 Algeciras Conference which prevented war between France and Germany over Morocco. In 1906, Roosevelt made him U.S. ambassador to France until Taft became president in 1909. However, he accompanied former President Roosevelt on his European tour in 1910 as his de facto chief of staff during visits to Paris and Berlin and during Roosevelt's service as the U.S. special representative to the funeral of King Edward VII. During this tour, they met every leader in Europe except Tsar Nicholas II. In 1910, Taft enlisted White to lead the U.S. delegation to the Pan-American Conference in Buenos Aires, when he recommended better relations with Latin American diplomats. He became a member of the Pan-American Society after Buenos Aires. When in DC, he built a mansion, the White-Meyer House, today part of the Meridian International Center, near foreign embassies, the ambassadors with whom White socialized. White's daughter, Margaret Muriel, married Count Graf (Ernst Hans Christoph Roger) Hermann von Seherr-Thoss, a German, in 1909, and White was in Germany visiting them when WWI started in 1914. In 1918, after the Armistice, President Wilson invited him to serve as an American Peace Commissioner to head to France to form the peace treaty with Germany, and he smoothed relations, as a Republican, between Wilson and his fellow Senate members led by his friend Lodge so they would accept Wilson's peace plan (they rejected it in 1920). White also led the delegation working the peace treaties with Austria-Hungary and Bulgaria until 1919. With the rejection of the treaty, White retired as a diplomat. It was at this time he married Vanderbilt-Sloane. He was a trustee for the National Geographic Society, and the Smithsonian, among others, and was a member of the Knickerbocker Club. He died in 1927. Among Emily Thorn Vanderbilt Sloane White's grandchildren are actor Timothy Olyphant and Alice Frances Hammond, who was married to Benny Goodman, and John Henry Hammond II a talent scout.

Anonymous ID: 29a4d7 Oct. 11, 2020, 12:04 p.m. No.11026845   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>11026297

 

Unholywood is all about worshiping themselves, so…..seems watching anything they make is sitting in their church before their altar, whether it's a movie theater or a room in a personal abode.

Anonymous ID: 29a4d7 Oct. 11, 2020, 12:12 p.m. No.11026935   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>11026577

 

"Church" is a later adaptation. What Christ Jesus leads as the High Priest of the Heavenly Tabernacle is a Congregation. Think about that word "congregation", a gathering of people. Christ Jesus is the Shepherd who gathers His flock, which is His Congregation.