Anonymous ID: 881067 April 14, 2021, 5:29 p.m. No.13427062   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7220

>>13426991 (lb)

 

keystone

 

bridge

 

looky what anon found…

 

In 1865, financed by Brown Brothers, Andrew Carnegie founded theKeystone BridgeCompany in Pittsburgh.

 

Mark Twain called the time after the Civil War the Guilded Age. It was a time of unprecedented economic growth and massiveRoman Catholicimmigration from Europe. It was also the time that the robber barons created huge industrial combines.

 

Robber barons like Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller, and J.P. Morgan became fantastically wealthy after the Civil War.

 

In 1865, financed by Brown Brothers, Andrew Carnegie founded theKeystone BridgeCompany in Pittsburgh.

 

In 1870, financed by Brown Brothers,Rockefellerfounded the Standard Oil Company, in Cleveland, Ohio.

 

By 1911, the Standard Oil Company was a colossus, so the Supreme Court ordered that the company be dissolved into 34 divisions. The octopus was broken up, but all the division still banked with Brown Brothers. 2 of the divisions later became Standard Oil of New Jersey (Esso), and Standard Oil of New York ( Mobil). Those 2 companies later merged and became known as ExxonMobil

 

J.P. Morgan's vast financial web was also financed by Brown Brothers.

 

Morgan tried to keep the entire world in the dark by sabotaging Nikola Tesla's alternating current.

 

Edward Harriman was a lesser known robber baron, whose son Averell, added the Harriman name to the Brown Brothers Bank.

 

A lesser known robber baron was a railroad tycoon named Edward Henry Harriman. By being discreet, he was able to keep his nefarious financial misdeeds out of the newspapers.

 

Brown Brothers became Brown Brothers Harriman in 1931

 

much moar at

 

http://www.reformation.org/brown-brothers-harriman-bank-exposed.html

Anonymous ID: 881067 April 14, 2021, 5:52 p.m. No.13427208   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7283 >>7390 >>7421 >>7692

dafuq?! is this BS, anons?

 

Averell Harriman financed the Presidential campaign of his daughter Hillary Clinton

 

Averell Harriman first met courtesan Pamela Churchill in 1941, when he was working to enlist the U.S. as an ally of Britain against Winston's cousin Adolf Hitler.

 

Pamela got pregnant in April 1946, and then she sailed to New York to have the baby. Amazingly, the baby was adopted by a couple named Hugh and Dorothy Rodham, who lived in Scranton, Pennsylvania. Scranton Pennsylvania just happens to be a Jesuit stronghold.

 

Hugh and Dorothy then handed baby Hillary over to their son Hugh, and his wife Dorothy, who lived in Chicago, Illinois. 3 years later the Rodhams had enough money to buy a house in an upscale suburb named Park Ridge.

 

Pamela Digby Churchill Hayward Harriman was the real mother of Hillary Clinton, and bankster Averell Harriman was her real father.

 

The couple first met in London in 1941, but they were not officially married until 1971.

 

Baby Hillary was born around January 1947 and then adopted by the Rodhams.

 

Right after the '92 "election," the Clintons visited Pamela's Georgetown mansion to thank her for putting them in the White House.

 

The Harriman mansion in Georgetown was campaign HQ for the 1992 Clinton Presidential campaign.

 

After the election, a grateful Hillary visited her mother in Georgetown.

 

Bill was full of fulsome praise for his mother-in-law and her PamPAC.

 

At that time, Pamela and Hillary realized that the job was only half done when Bill was President and Hillary was just First Lady. Both of them knew that Brown Brothers Harriman had enough "filty lucre" to reverse the roles, and make Hillary the first female President.

 

sauce: http://www.reformation.org/brown-brothers-harriman-bank-exposed.html

 

cites:

 

Abramson, Rudy. Spanning the Century: The Life of W. Averell Harriman, 1891–1986. William Morrow & Co., New York, 1992.

 

Baker, Russ. Family of Secrets: The Bush Dynasty, America's Invisible Government, and the Hidden History of the Last Fifty Years. Bloomsbury Press, New York, 2009.

 

Kouwenhoven, John A. Partners in Crime: A Historical Portrait of a Great Private Bank Brown Brothers Harriman & Co., 1818–1968. Doubleday & Co., New York, 1968.

 

Ogden, Christopher. Life of the Party: The Biography of Pamela Digby Churchill Hayward Harriman. Little Brown & Company, Boston, 1994.

 

Smith, Sally Bedell. Reflected Glory: The Life of Pamela Churchill Harriman. Simon & Schuster, New York, 1996.