With American steel being an important topic with President Trump, I thought Andrew Carnegie's Keystone Bridge Company may be something Q was pointing anons to, as well.
I will attach the link to the Wikipedia pages for the company and for Andrew Carnegie. He was from Scotland. Uncle and cousin were George Lauder, Sr and Jr, and his Mother's maiden name was Morrison. Carnegie sold his company to J.P. Morgan in 1901, making him the richest fella in America for a few years, surpassing even Rockefeller.
Is Lauder or Morrison linked to the evil families?
Since y'all were on a St. Louis dig, I thought I'd highlight this: "Keystone is perhaps best remembered for the Eads Bridge in St. Louis, completed in 1874, which survives to this day."
"The Keystone Bridge Company, founded in 1865 by Andrew Carnegie, was an American bridge building company. It was one of the 28 companies absorbed into the American Bridge Company in 1900. The company advertised its services for building steel, wrought iron, wooden railway and road bridges. It held a patent for wrought iron bridges and also supplied wrought iron columns for buildings."
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keystone_Bridge_Company
"He built Pittsburgh's Carnegie Steel Company, which he sold to J. P. Morgan in 1901 for $303,450,000.[6] It became the U.S. Steel Corporation."
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Carnegie
Did you know that our great President's mother was a maid in Carnegie's wife's home?! Craziness!
"Mary Macleod, the mother of the President of the United States, Donald Trump, was a maid in the home of Louise Whitfield Carnegie,[1] at age 18 within a year of her immigration to the United States in 1930."
Is Whitfield a cabal-linked name?
It would appear that Carnegie is a very interesting man. He seems to be on the right side of things, politically and philanthropy-wise, judging by what I've read. Curiously, he was laid to rest in the Sleepy Hallow Cemetery with some very interesting, not-so-good names, so who knows. He does have many buildings named after him, but all in the name of charity, of course, as he donated a whole lot of money for seemingly-good causes.