Patrick Scrivener #conspiracy reformation.org

The Conspiracy to Kill King George III Exposed At Last!!

[...]

The first attempt to murder the king happened in 1788

It was amazing how different father and son were. It almost seemed that the son had completely different parents.

The Prince of Wales ordered "physicians" Richard Warren and Sir George Baker to expedite his way to the throne.

The "doctors" poisoned the king, but our great JEHOVAH preserved his life, because he was a great king and a praying Christian.

When he refused to die, the "physicians" said that he had "gone mad."

Their poison having failed to kill the king, the physicians said that the king was mad and incapable of performing his royal duties. Parliament's answer was that the Prince of Wales should be appointed Regent:

By November it seemed likely that the twenty-eight-year reign of George III was coming to an end and that the Prince would become Regent. As such he would exercise royal power to construct governments, appoint and dismiss ministers, create peers and distribute patronage. It was assumed that within hours of taking over the Prince would dismiss Pitt and put the Opposition into power. The three great goals of eighteenth-century politics –the disposing of peerages, places and pensions–would be his at last. As for Maria, who could say what would happen to her? (Munson, Maria Fitzherbert, p. 213).

On the morning of November 29, 1788, the king was forcibly removed from Windsor Castle to the White House at Kew.

The king was removed from his family and placed in a restraining chair developed by "Dr." Benjamin Rush.

A fierce debate was then held in Parliament to make the Prince of Wales Regent and acting king.

The king was confined in a torture chair right out of a Spanish Inquisition dungeon.

The king was confined in a torture chair right out of a Spanish Inquisition dungeon designed by Revolutionary "patriot" Dr. Benjamin Rush. In the most unkindest cut of all, the torture chair was called a "tranquilizing chair:"

He was also confined in a specially made chair–his 'coronation chair' he called it–to ensure his 'compliance with whatever [was] thought proper'. And once, when he was tied in the chair to be given a severe lecture on his improper and repetitive remarks about Lady Pembroke, a handkerchief was stuffed in his mouth to keep him quiet until the reprimand was completed. (Hibbert, George III, p. 277).

People who brought up the illegal marriage of the Prince of Wales to Maria Fitzherbert were also imprisoned for libel.

Despite all the efforts of the 'doctors" to kill the king or drive him mad, they were abject failures. The king gradually recovered, and by March 1789, he was ready to resume his kingly duties:

On 14 March the King returned to his favourite residence, and at every village on the road crowds turned out to cheer him. He rode on horseback, and the warmth of his reception when he arrived quite overwhelmed him. 'All Windsor came out to meet the King', wrote Fanny Burney, and even the soldiers on guard at the Castle were in tears. He had a much quieter night, he wrote the next morning, than any he had experienced since his illness; 'and the joy that appears in every countenance and the good sense of my neighbours in not wishing to incommode cannot fail of having a due effect'. (Brooke, King George III, p. 342).

That Papal plot had been forestalled . . . for now....Exactly 10 years later, another watershed event occurred called the French Revolution.

[...]

The second attempt to murder the king happened in 1811

By 1811, Israel had been reestablished in the New World and the Louisiana Purchase had extended her boundaries to the mighty Mississippi River.

Parliament had given the green light to the invasion and occupation of New Orleans. The Christian king would never have countenanced such perfidy and Machiavellian double-dealing, so Parliament ordered his assassination by poison.

With the invasion of New Orleans imminent, Parliament ordered the king's doctors to poison him.

The "mad doctors" failed again to kill the king because he was divinely protected.

They only succeeded in having the 73-year-old king declared "insane."

This time nothing was left to chance and the big battalions were brought in:

A day or so later the King became so difficult to control that Dr Samuel Simmons, the mad-doctor, was summoned to Windsor. He went away again when he was given to understand that he was not to be given sole charge of the case; and thereafter the patient was left in the care of a whole succession of doctors who were already at Windsor or soon to go there–Sir Henry Halford, Matthew Baillie, Henry Reynolds, David Dundas, Robert Battiscombe, William Heberden, and Robert and John Willis. Also in attendance from time to time were John Meadows, a former surgeon-apothecary at St Luke's Hospital, and a Mr Briand, keeper of a madhouse at Kensington, who arrived with two formidable assistants. (Hibbert, George III, p. 397).

Their potent poison failed again but they did succeed in having the king declared "insane." That was enough for Parliament to make the Prince of Wales Regent.

The Prince of Wales was Regent during the momentous Battle of New Orleans.

Had that invasion succeeded, the king would have been strangled by his doctors and the Prince of Wales would have become king.

The mask would come off and Great Britain would have a Papal sovereign once again.

His wife Maria Fitzherbert would have been another Jezebel and Bloody Mary Tudor. Britannia owes a tremendous debt of gratitude to the heroic general Jackson.

King George received his great reward in Heaven in 1820

For the last 9 years of his life, the king had to endure the indignity of having his murderous son reign in his stead as Regent. Additionally, he endured a whole lifetime of persecution because of his Christian Faith.

Thanks to the doctors, the king went blind and deaf toward the end of his life.

A new term was invented for his "malady" called porphyria.

The king did torment his doctors by staying alive until 1820.

10 comments

Confused?

So were we! You can find all of this, and more, on Fundies Say the Darndest Things!

To post a comment, you'll need to Sign in or Register. Making an account also allows you to claim credit for submitting quotes, and to vote on quotes and comments. You don't even need to give us your email address.