Patrick Scrivener

Back, Batshit, and still TL;DR as ever

Patrick Scrivener #conspiracy reformation.org

Francis Cabot Lowell was the "Father" of the U.S. textile industry. A graduate of Harvard College, Lowell, Massachusetts, is named after him.

Francis Cabot Lowell was descended from the Pilgrim Fathers who reestablished Israel in 1620. Abraham Lincoln was just one of the "Chosen People" who are descended from the illustrious pioneers of Israel in the Wilderness.

Francis Cabot Lowell was the "Father" of the U.S. textile industry which launched the U.S. Industrial Revolution.

He was the Nikola Tesla of the textile industry.

Unfortunately, no image exists of the pioneer of U.S. industry because he was poisoned by the British Secret Service at the young age of 42.

His beloved wife Hannah also succumbed to the poison cup, leaving her husband with 4 young children.

One of the resident British Secret Service agents in Boston at that time was named Kirk Boott. Boott became very close "friends" with the Lowells.

Paul Moody was a brilliant mechanic who designed the first all under one roof power loom factory in the world.

Cotton went in on one side and finished fabric emerged on the other side. It was a quantum leap over any factory in Britain.

Even though he was a devout Christian, he didn't know that the name JOSHUA of Nazareth was the antidote to every kind of poison.

Here is a report of the death of Paul Moody from a very rare biography of Francis Cabot Lowell:

In Lowell he developed the system of leather belts and pulleys to power the machines throughout the factory, replacing the shaft and gear system imported from Britain. His mechanical wizardry is credited for the efficiency and profitability of the Waltham and Lowell factories. He married Susannah Morill of Amesbury, who bore him five children. There is a Moody Street in Waltham and one in Lowell. Paul Moody stayed close to his roots. He believed in public education for boys and girls and was charitable to those less fortunate than himself. On the morning of July 5, 1831, he felt ill. By afternoon he was desperately sick and was dead the following day. He was fifty-four years old and was buried in the family tomb in Byfield. (Rosenberg, The Life and Times of Francis Cabot Lowell, 1775–1817, p. 311).

Indeed the poison cup was overflowing at the birth of the U.S. Industrial Revolution.

The Lowell factory was a "city set on a hill"

The Lowell factory–built by the Chosen People–was indeed a city set on a hill (Matthew 5:14). When the mill opened, girls from the surrounding farms flocked to work there. The New England girls made most of the clothes for their growing families and they were very adept at working the homespun loom.

The Lowell mill was built to show the rest of the world how a factory should be operated.

Unlike the Dickensian sweatshops in Britain, no children were forced to work there.

Most of the girls worked there for about 5 years, and then married, so that they could increase the population of the Chosen People.

The Lowell mill girls were so productive that after 5 years they could pay off any debts on their parents' farms and and also support them in old age.

After their period of employment ended, most of them chose the career that the Almighty ordained for them, namely having children and taking care of the household.

The "workers paradise" did not last long because tares soon joined the wheat.

Sarah George Bagley was a British Secret Service agent sent to stop production at the mill.

Sarah the spy led the first strike in 1836.

Today, the country's first textile factory, which revolutionized U.S. industry, is now a MUSEUM.

By 1850, the New England mill girls began to be replaced by Papal Irish fleeing the famine in that country. That was the real reason why the ancestors of the Kennedys came to this country. There was also an influx of Papal French Canadians from Quebec. It was all downhill from that time onward for the garment industry.

The mill closed in 1930, and was turned into a MUSEUM in 1978. At that time the building was occupied by the Salvation Army which is a cover for the British Secret Service.


[...]

The Pemberton Mill disaster was a precursor to 9/11

From the very beginning, Britannia declared an all out war on all the New England textile mills.

The Pemberton Mill was a large factory in Lawrence, Massachusetts, which collapsed without warning on January 10, 1860, in what is likely "the worst industrial accident in Massachusetts history" and "one of the worst industrial calamities in American history." An estimated 145 workers were killed and 166 injured.

The Pemberton Mill, built in 1853, was a five story building 280 feet long and 84 feet wide. Its chief engineer was Charles H. Bigelow, and its construction was financed by John A. Lowell, and his brother-in-law, J. Pickering Putnam, at a cost of $850,000, "a fortune for those times." John A. Lowell was a nephew of Francis Cabot Lowell.

During a financial panic in 1857, Lowell and Putnam sold the mill to George Howe and David Nevins, Sr. for a $350,000 loss. The new owners jammed more machinery into their factory attempting to boost its profits. The mill ran with great success, earning $1,500,000 per year, and had 2,700 spindles and 700 looms in operation at the time of the disaster.

On January 10, 1860, the 5 story Pemberton textile mill collapsed like the Twin Towers.

One of the 2 owners, David C. Nevins, was a British Secret Service agent.

600 people were employed at the mill, with 145 killed and 166 injured.

An account of that tragedy, written right after the event, just stated that the mill was DESTROYED but didn't state who did it:

The DESTRUCTION of the Pemberton Mills at Lawrence, with its attendant appalling loss of life, and injury to the living, is an event calamitous beyond precedent in the list of American casualties, and has stirred the public heart to its swiftest pulsations of sympathy and grief. The memorable scenes of that terrible night at Lawrence, can never be effaced from the minds of those who witnessed them, while the thrilling records of the events given to the world have met and bedewed the eyes of millions. (An Authentic History of the Lawrence Tragedy, Embracing a Description of the Pemberton Mill, p. 5).

The building was solidly constructed and that probably saved the lives of the rest of the employees. The sudden collapse of the building, with the loss of all the state of the art textile machinery, was a horrible act of industrial sabotage.

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