Ingersoll Lockwood trained as a lawyer, although his first position was as a diplomat. In 1862 he was appointed Consul to the Kingdom of Hanover by Abraham Lincoln. At the time he was the youngest member of the U.S. consular force and served in that post for four years. On his return he established a legal practice in New York City with his older brother Henry.
https://www.usa.gov/federal-agencies/bureau-of-consular-affairs
In 1884, he married Winifred Wallace Tinker, a graduate of Vassar College and aspiring author. They were divorced in 1892.
Lockwood spent his retirement years as a recluse in Saratoga Springs, New York where he published his last book, a collection of poetry entitled In Varying Mood, or, Jetsam, Flotsam and Ligan in 1912. It opens with juxtaposed photographs of Lockwood at age 35 and at age 70. In the preface, he wrote:
The end has almost come. I'm only waiting for the signal to push off and begin my voyage to the Isles of the Blest in the far Western Seas. I was troubled in my mind at first, for my little bark, staunch though it may be, sat too deep in the water. It was overladen with conceits that wouldn't be current and merchandise that wouldn't be saleable in the Isles of the Blest. Overboard with it! Now that I have lightened ship I feel better.
Lockwood died in Saratoga Springs five years later, in 1918, at the age of 77. He had no children or surviving relatives
He wrote children's novels, including the Baron Trump novels (1889/93), as well as the dystopian novel, 1900: or; The Last President, a play, and several non-fiction works. He wrote some of his non-fiction under the pseudonym Irwin Longman.
Family History
Ingersoll was born to Munson Lockwood and Sarah Lewis (née Smith) Lockwood.
Munson Lockwood [Ingergsoll's father]
- like his brothers was a lawyer.
- achieved prominence during his military service and civic activism.
- He was a general in the New York State Militia and commandant of its 7th Brigade.
- one of the founders of Ossining's first bank and Dale Cemetery
- served as the Warden of Sing Sing prison from 1850 to 1855.
- Munson's mother was Sarah Ingersoll
his father was Stephen Lockwood
He had two wives, Sara Lewis Smith and Amelia Jane Havell [Amelia unknown death date]
Sing Sing Correctional Facility, formerly Ossining Correctional Facility
a maximum-security prison operated by the New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision in the village of Ossining, New York.
housed the execution chamber for the State of New York until the abolition of capital punishment in New York in 2004.
The name "Sing Sing" was derived from the Sintsink Native American tribe from whom the land was purchased in 1685, and was formerly the name of the village.
There are plans to convert the original 1825 cell block into a period museum.
The prison property is bisected by the Metro-North Railroad's four-track Hudson Line.
It is about 30 miles (48 km) north of New York City on the east bank of the Hudson River.
It holds about 1,700 inmates.
name came from the Wappinger (Native American) words sinck sinck which translates to 'stone upon stone'.
When it was opened in 1826, it was considered a model prison because it turned a profit for the state. By October 1828 Sing Sing was completed. Lynds employed the Auburn system, which imposed absolute silence on the prisoners; the system was enforced by whipping and other punishments. It was John Luckey, the Prison Chaplain around 1843, who held the Principal Keeper of Sing Sing, Elam Lynds, accountable to New York Governor William H. Seward and President of the Board of Inspectors, John Edmonds, to have Lynds removed.
The original 1825 cell block is no longer used and in 2002 plans were announced to turn it into a museum. In April 2011 there were talks of closing the prison to take advantage of its valuable real estate.
a new Death House was built in 1920 and began executions in 1922. High profile executions in Sing Sing's electric chair, nicknamed "Old Sparky", include Julius and Ethel Rosenberg on June 19, 1953, for espionage for the Soviet Union on nuclear weapon research; and Gerhard Puff on August 12, 1954, for the murder of an FBI agent.
The last person executed in New York state was Eddie Lee Mays, for murder, on August 15, 1963.
Plans to turn a portion of Sing Sing into a museum date back to 2002, when local officials sought to turn the old powerhouse into the museum, linked by a tunnel to a retired cell block, for $5 million.
The expression "up the river" to describe someone in prison or heading to prison derives from the practice of sentencing people convicted in New York City to serve their terms in Sing Sing, which is located up the Hudson River from the city. The slang expression dates from 1891.
Here is Munson's family tree
Back to Ingersoll Lockwood, Muson's son,
He wrote some of his non-fiction under the pseudonym Irwin Longman.
He also wrote. . .
Lockwood had two brothers, Henry Clay Lockwood and Howard Lockwood.(1839 - 1903)
https://digitalworks.union.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1054&context=alumnifiles_1835
https://digitalworks.union.edu/alumnifiles_1835/60/
Brother of Ingersoll Lockwood [half], Mary Latourette Lewis Lockwood, Howard Lockwood, Catharine Louise Lockwood, Fanny Lockwood and Robert Havell Lockwood
[spouse(s) unknown]
[children unknown]
Died 1903 at about age 64 [location unknown]
Same title and thought process? You decide!
Abolish the presidency
David Colborne
October 4th, 2020 at 2:00 AM
It wasn’t supposed to be like this.
Though the Cato Institute’s Gene Healy oversells the case a bit (ceremonially, the president’s always had a bigger role than that of a “chief magistrate,” even if some of our first presidents were intentionally self-deprecating), we the people weren’t originally supposed to care overly much about the president at all. Originally, the president’s primary job was to ensure Congress’s laws were executed in a less immediately political fashion than they perhaps would have been if individual members of Congress were responsible for administering the laws they passed. Even now, we still don’t directly elect them — that’s what the Electoral College is for.
Unfortunately, it doesn’t matter whether your central planners are nationally revered Founding Fathers or Soviet bureaucrats — social planning is always destined to fail in the long run. Given enough time, someone will invariably pursue whatever benefits them up to the limits of whatever power they might individually possess. When you’re talking about the President of the United States, whom even the Founding Fathers granted an entire branch of the federal government to, it’s quite a lot of power indeed.
Besides, even when chief executives don’t have much power on paper, people still naturally grant them symbolic and ceremonial powers.
See more here,
https://thenevadaindependent.com/article/abolish-the-presidency
An Article from TRT World,
Nov. 2, 2020
Comedy is America’s doomsday bunker, the refuge in which its citizens have been able to weather crises big and small. Last month, Chris Rock, in his opening monologue on the return Saturday Night Live’s new love shows, outlined some glaring problems.
He did not express excitement about US President Donald Trump’s challenger, former Vice President Joe Biden potentially winning the office, as polls suggest. But rather that Biden’s term should represent an end of era of US presidents.
‘’I think we need to renegotiate our relationship to the government. Does it work? I think Joe Biden should be the last president ever. We need a whole new system. Do we need a president president? Or just figure out a new way to do the job. What job do you have for four years no matter what. If you hired a cook and he was making people vomit everyday, do you sit there and say ‘He’s got a four year deal, we just gotta vomit for four more years.’’’
Rock continued by criticising how the legislature works. Members of the US lower house, called representatives or congresspeople, serve for two year terms. Senators serve for six years. They can be in office indefinitely. A challenger trying to unseat a senator must raise millions and millions of dollars to have a shot at doing so.
“The senate and congress does it work? It doesn’t work. It doesn’t work because they need term limits. We’ve agreed in the United States that we cannot have kings. But we’ve got dukes and duchesses in the congress making decisions for poor people. Rich people making decisions for poor people. That’s like your handsome friend giving you dating advice.’’
Democracy and the White House
Reforming congress is a topic for a different article, but Rock’s characterization of the senate as a collection of ‘’dukes and duchesses’’ speaks to the problems with the executives. Rather than having a head of government, Americans now have a God-King for hire. And with technological changes unforeseeable at the start of the republic, the presidency has taken on almost superhuman responsibilities that no human can safely discharge.
See more inside of here,
https://www.trtworld.com/perspectives/to-save-democracy-should-the-us-abolish-the-presidency-41101
Stated in Google Books. . .
...The entire East Side of New York City is in a state of uproar. Mobs of vast size are organizing under the lead of anarchists and socialists, and threaten to plunder and despoil the houses of the rich who have wronged and oppressed them for so many years." --From The Last President, 1896
1900, or The Last President, by INGERSOLL LOCKWOOD, is a surrealistic 1896 novel, where Americans are protesting a corrupt election process while the president's hometown of New York City is fearing the collapse of the republic after the transition of presidential power. If this reminds you of the attitudes after the 2016 Trump presidential win, you are not the alone. During 2017, this book, as well as Lockwood's two children's books, The Travels and Adventures of Little Baron Trump and His Wonderful Dog Bulger (1890) and Baron Trump's Marvellous Underground Journey (1893), drew attention due to its uncanny connections with President Trump and his family.
Ingersoll's other brother Howard, [Wikipedia only mentions 2 brothers, but Munson Lockwood had more than 2 sons according to https://www.ancestry.com/genealogy/records/munson-ingersoll-lockwood-24-22tv38n].
Howard Lockwood
Born 9 Mar 1846 in White Plains, Westchester, New York, United Statesmap
ANCESTORS ancestors
Son of Munson Ingersoll Lockwood and [mother unknown]
Brother of Henry Clay Lockwood, Ingersoll Lockwood [half], Mary Latourette Lewis Lockwood, Catharine Louise Lockwood, Fanny Lockwood and Robert Havell Lockwood
Husband of Carrie Baker — married 25 Oct 1882 [location unknown]
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Lockwood-4183
See more in here,
Notice it says, The American Play Held by the Enemy
Richard Robert Donnelley established his company in downtown Chicago, which in 1870 became the Lakeside Printing and Publishing Company. The business was destroyed in the Great Chicago Fire of 1871. After a series of reorganizations and expansions, Donnelley built the Lakeside Press Building on Plymouth Court, and in 1902 began construction of the R.R. Donnelley and Sons Co. Calumet Plant on 21st Street and Calumet Avenue. The company aimed to produce books and periodicals with impressive modern design and mass printed commercial and reference materials. Lakeside Press produced Encyclopædia Britannica, Time Magazine, Life Magazine, promotional literature for the Model T Ford, catalogs for Sears Roebuck, among others.
Donnelley was the official printer for the 1933–1934 World's Fair, "A Century of Progress," which took place on the Lake Michigan lakefront just to the east of the plant. The company designed and printed official tickets, postcards, posters, brochures, and magazines which displayed the company's distinctive modernist design. The company eventually became a global provider of printing and print-related services.
R.R. Donnelley's cartographic production facility grew to be one of the largest custom mapmaking companies in the United States. In the early 1990s, the division successfully integrated routing technology with its digital map databases and launched a separate company, Geosystems, which several years later became MapQuest.
The Calumet Plant was closed in 1993, following the cancellation of the Sears catalog.
He was determined to open a program modeled on the apprentice training program at the Chaix Printing Company in Paris, France, which combined instruction and practical experience. "The whole plant," in the words of one official description, "is the laboratory of the school"
From Atlas Obscura,
Chicago fought hard to host the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition. The competition was steep—New York and D.C. were also top contenders—and the city was still recovering from the Great Chicago Fire two decades earlier. But after they won the bid, city organizers pulled out all the stops. The “White City” they built on six hundred acres of filled-in swamp ran for six months and drew people from 46 countries. Overall, 27 million people came through its turnstiles and ticket booths to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Christopher Columbus landing on American shores.
After it was over—when the temporary buildings began to come down, the sounds of the demonstrations died away, and the birds picked at the concession crumbs—fairgoers just had a few tokens to remember it by. Luckily, they were very well-designed tokens, taking the symmetrical, grandiose aesthetic of the entire fair and shrinking it down to pocket size. Below, a collection of 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition souvenirs that might have ended up in your memory box, had you been a 19th-century fairgoer.
See more here,
https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/your-ticket-to-the-1893-columbian-exposition
and here,
#ChicagoWorldsFair, #ColumbianExposition, #Chicago, #Burnham, #Holmes, #BurnhamVsHolmes
Chicago World's Fair Near the Turn of the Century. The Columbian Exposition. Daniel Burnham, John Root and a close friend Millet who was on the Titanic and the other on the Sister Ship the Olympia. Juxtaposition of Burnham and Holmes the serial killer!
#TheDevilInTheWhiteCity, #HHHolmes, #SerialKillers, #HolmesSerialKiller, #WhiteCity
H.H. Holmes Serial Killer History, Murder Castle with secret passages, tunnels and a cadaver workshop basement. Would Daniel Burnham the considered Hero architect of the Chicago World's Fair and Devil in the White City have known Holmes?
In light of a more "current thought" or where we seem to be on the #TimeContinuum. . .check out this book and think about how we are all at a TIME or period in our journey where we are trying to heal past trauma. How we have been dealing with all the ways the nefarious traffic and perpetuate evil through a breakdown of the family, sex abuse including children, domestic violence, drug abuse. . .you name it.
In Light of that, do you find this interesting?
Another brother of Ingersoll was Robert H. Lockwood.
One of the Ingersoll brothers of the Watch company was Robert H. Ingersoll same one? Let's have a look and you decide.
Now Ingersoll Lockwood's brother was Robert Havell Lockwood and you can trace a Robert Havel, who was an artist and did a bird collections with John James Audubon as an engraver. [Remember Ingersoll Lockwood's dad, Munson had two wives. 2nd one was Amelia Jane Havell]
The other interesting point is he was from Ossining, NY and this article in the New York Times talks about the Havell house, which is interesting because Ingersoll Lockwood was also born in Ossining.
Remember. . .Lockwood Ingersoll's father Munson was a general in the New York State Militia and commandant of its 7th Brigade.
As far as the other Ingersoll brother named for the watch co. I find this title and what it is about Interesting is all. . . [especially in light of the fact that we are all supposed to be healing from past pain and trauma].
There is more verification as to full names in the British Museum online that states,
Watchmakers; the Ingersoll watchmaking company was set up by Robert Hawley and Charles Henry Ingersoll in 1881 to sell watches by mail order, the company continued to trade in America until 1922 when it was taken over by the Waterbury Clock Company. The Ingersoll name was used in America until 1951when the new name Timex came into being, although the Ingersoll…
https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/term/BIOG77491
Purdue partners with US Space Force to provide manpower, research
The university will help provide manpower and research to the military branch.
Gen. David Thompson, himself a Purdue alum, signed the official agreement along with Purdue University President Mitch Daniels in front of Hovde Hall.
“As we envisioned what we needed in the Space Force, the ability to operate, to have leaders who understood the challenges – physically and technically from a science and engineering standpoint – we knew we needed to relook at how we train and educate our force and how we pursue the research and science and technology required to be able to do that,” said Thompson. “And when you think about all those things and you think about the connection to space, you can imagine that the first university on the list we sought to engage was Purdue University.”
Also in 1871, brothers Addison Rand and Jasper Rand, Jr. established Rand Drill Company with its main manufacturing plant in Tarrytown, New York. Rand drills cleared New York's treacherous Hell Gate channel and were used in the construction of water aqueducts for New York City and Washington, D.C., and tunnels in Haverstraw and West Point, New York, and in Weehawken, New Jersey.
Robert Gardner founded the Gardner Governor Company in 1859 in Quincy, Illinois and introduced the first effective speed controls for steam engines.[5] This innovation, known as the flyball governor, helped pave the way to later production of other industrial products such as air compressors. By the turn of the century, the company sold more than 150,000 governors across the United States and Canada.
The Gardner Governor Company merged with the Denver Rock Drill Company in1927 to form Gardner-Denver.
In April 2019, Ingersoll-Rand Plc and Gardner Denver Holdings, Inc. jointly announced an agreement through which Ingersoll Rand's Industrial segment would be spun-off and merged with Gardner Denver in a Reverse Morris Trust transaction. The merger transaction was completed on February 29, 2020.
When Gardner Denver completed its initial public offering in May 2017, it granted deferred stock units to substantially all permanent employees. The grant had a value of approximately $100 million.
Following the merger in 2020, the company granted stock units worth approximately $150 million to substantially of its 16,000 global employees that had not already received equity-based incentive awards. The amount of the equity grant, equal to approximately 20% of its employee's pay, was one of the largest equity grants ever given to employees in an industrial company.
Platinum Equity was founded in 1995 by Tom Gores. The firm's first acquisition was LSI, a company that generated computer graphics to re-create accidents for courtroom testimony. After purchasing it for $200,000, Platinum Equity focused on servicing existing customers and returning the company to profitability.
Over the next five years, between July 1996 and September 2001, the firm made 32 acquisitions with $226 million, and realized $940 million on those investments. These acquisitions included a call center (Foresight Software), networking gear (Racal Electronics), and voice and data service (Williams Communications). BusinessWeek ranked the firm number 10 on its 1999 list of the country’s top 20 private IT organizations, based on 1998 revenues.
During this period of acquisition growth, additional partners joined the firm and several other joined through key acquisitions starting in 1999.
Ingersoll Rand Acquires Houdstermaatschappij Jorc B.V.
02 February 2022
Yet Another interesting Ingersoll in light of this book written by Ingersoll Lockwood titled the Laconics of Cult that was written by Ingersoll Lockwood
What is known. . .
Sixteen ancient symbols to cover.
There is but one form of human enslavement more villainous and detestable than the chains of the tyrant or the shackles of the despot. That is the enslavement of the human mind under ecclesiastical tyranny. Whose cowering and crouching victims at the crack of the priestly lash are driven from the cultivation of their own intelligence, from the custody of their own thoughts, from the guardianship of their own souls. And who, like whipt dogs, trembling and whining in abject submission at the feet of the oppressor, lick the very hand that wields the lash. I'm well aware what a thankless task it is to attack the established order of things, theological, political or ethical, for in my long life I have often heard raised the old cry in different form: Great is Diana of the Ephesians! but I make no excuse or apology for this little book." - Ingersoll Lockwood
Now check out the history of this Lockwood named,
Robert Green Ingersoll (August 11, 1833 – July 21, 1899) was an American lawyer, writer, and orator during the Golden Age of Free Thought, who campaigned in defense of agnosticism. He was nicknamed "The Great Agnostic".
Robert Ingersoll was born in Dresden, New York. His father, John Ingersoll, was an abolitionist-sympathizing Congregationalist preacher, whose radical opinions caused him and his family to relocate frequently. For a time, Rev. John Ingersoll substituted as preacher for American revivalist Charles G. Finney while Finney was on a tour of Europe. Upon Finney's return, Rev. Ingersoll remained for a few months as co-pastor/associate pastor with Finney. The elder Ingersoll's later pastoral experiences influenced young Robert negatively, however, as The Elmira Telegram described in 1890:
In his beliefs and teachings Finney departed from traditional Reformed theology by teaching that people have free will to choose salvation.
Finney was best known as a flamboyant revivalist preacher from 1825 to 1835 in the Burned-over District in Upstate New York and Manhattan.
Together with several other evangelical leaders, his religious views led him to promote social reforms, such as
- abolitionism and equal education for women and African Americans.
- From 1835 he taught at Oberlin College of Ohio, which accepted students without regard to race or sex.
- He served as its second president from 1851 to 1865, and its faculty and students were activists for abolitionism, the Underground Railroad, and universal education.
after the American Revolutionary War, Finney never attended college. His leadership abilities, musical skill, 6'3" height, and piercing eyes gained him recognition in his community. He and his family attended the Baptist church in Henderson, New York, where the preacher led emotional, revival-style meetings.
The Baptists and the Methodists displayed fervor in the early 19th century. He "read the law", studying as an apprentice to become a lawyer under Benjamin Wright. In Adams, New York, he entered the congregation of George Washington Gale and became the director of the church choir.
After a dramatic conversion experience and baptism into the Holy Spirit he gave up legal practice to preach the Gospel. As a young man Finney was a Master Mason, but after his conversion, he left the group as antithetical to Christianity and was active in Anti-Masonic movements.
He moved to New York City in 1832, where he was minister of the Chatham Street Chapel and took the breathtaking step of barring from communion all slave owners and traders.
Finney was active as a revivalist from 1825 to 1835 in Jefferson County and for a few years in Manhattan. In 1830-1831, he led a revival in Rochester, New York, that has been noted as inspiring other revivals of the Second Great Awakening. A leading pastor in New York who was converted in the Rochester meetings gave the following account of the effects of Finney's meetings in that city: "The whole community was stirred. Religion was the topic of conversation in the house, in the shop, in the office and on the street. The only theater in the city was converted into a livery stable; the only circus into a soap and candle factory. Grog shops were closed; the Sabbath was honored; the sanctuaries were thronged with happy worshippers; a new impulse was given to every philanthropic enterprise; the fountains of benevolence were opened, and men lived to good."
Finney "had a deep insight into the almost interminable intricacies of human depravity.... He poured the floods of gospel love upon the audience. He took short-cuts to men's hearts, and his trip-hammer blows demolished the subterfuges of unbelief."
So if Robert Ingersoll's father was great friends with Finney who was clearly for equality, then why was this written and why was Robert so against his father's beliefs?
The elder Ingersoll's later pastoral experiences influenced young Robert negatively, however, as The Elmira Telegram described in 1890. . .
Though for many years the most noted of American infidels, Colonel Ingersoll was born and reared in a devoutly Christian household. His father, John Ingersoll, was a Congregationalist minister and a man of mark in his time, a deep thinker, a logical and eloquent speaker, broad minded and generously tolerant of the views of others. The popular impression which credits Ingersoll's infidelity in the main to his father's severe orthodoxy and the austere and gloomy surroundings in which his boyhood was spent is wholly wrong. On the contrary, the elder Ingersoll's liberal views were a source of constant trouble between him and his parishioners. They caused him to frequently change his charges, and several times made him the defendant in church trials. His ministerial career was, in fact, substantially brought to a close by a church trial which occurred while he was pastor of the Congregational Church at Madison, Ohio, and at which his third wife appeared as the prosecutor.
He was known for his innovations in preaching and the conduct of religious meetings, which often impacted entire communities. They included having women pray out loud in public meetings of mixed sexes; development of the "anxious seat," where those considering becoming Christians could sit to receive prayer; and public censure of individuals by name in sermons and prayers. He was also known for his extemporaneous preaching.
Interesting?
Ingersoll was married, February 13, 1862, to Eva Amelia Parker (1841–1923). They had two daughters. The elder daughter, Eva Ingersoll-Brown, was a renowned feminist and suffragist.
He accepted the deputy clerk position with John E. Hall, the county clerk and circuit clerk of Gallatin County, and also a son-in-law of John Hart Crenshaw. On November 11, 1856, Ingersoll caught Hall in his arms when the son of a political opponent assassinated his employer in their office.
Ingersoll was involved with several major trials as an attorney, notably the Star Route trials, a major political scandal in which his clients were acquitted. He also defended a New Jersey man charged with blasphemy. Although he did not win the acquittal, his vigorous defense is considered to have discredited blasphemy laws and few other prosecutions followed.
For a time, Ingersoll represented con artist James Reavis, the "Baron of Arizona", pronouncing his Peralta Land Grant claim valid.
Susan Jacoby credits Ingersoll for the revival of Thomas Paine's reputation in American intellectual history, which had decreased after the publication of The Age of Reason published during 1794–95. Paine postulated that men, not God, had written the Bible
Now let's look at Ingersoll's mother,
Ingersoll Lockwood's Uncle, Ralph Ingersoll Lockwood One of Munson's brothers.
He also wrote The Insurgents. Philadelphia: Carey, Lea and Blanchard (1835)
A lead in to Shays Rebellion from the History Channel.
Are they giving an accurate account? You decide!
Shays’ Rebellion was a series of violent attacks on courthouses and other government properties in Massachusetts that began in 1786 and led to a full-blown military confrontation in 1787. The rebels were mostly ex-Revolutionary War soldiers-turned farmers who opposed state economic policies causing poverty and property foreclosures. The rebellion was named after Daniel Shays, a farmer and former soldier who fought at Bunker Hill and was one of several leaders of the insurrection.
The farmers who fought in the Revolutionary War had received little compensation, and by the 1780s many were struggling to make ends meet.
Businesses in Boston and elsewhere demanded immediate payment for goods that farmers had previously bought on credit and often paid off through barter. There was no paper money in circulation and no gold or silver to be accessed by the farmers to settle these debts.
At the same time, Massachusetts residents were expected to pay higher taxes than they had ever paid to the British in order to assure that Governor James Bowdoin’s business associates would receive a good return on their investments.
With no means to move their crops and make money to pay off debts and taxes, Boston authorities began to arrest the farmers and foreclose on their farms.
See more here,
https://www.history.com/topics/early-us/shays-rebellion
How many of you heard about it in History Class?
He also wrote Rosine Laval
Ingersoll Lockwood's grandfather,
Stephen was born about 1768. He was the son of Silas Lockwood and Deborah Lockwood. He passed away in 1851.
U.S., Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970, SAR Membership # 46938.
Ingersoll Lockwood's grandmother,
Notice the 1888 date,
https://thenevadaindependent.com/article/abolish-the-presidency
#IngersollLockwood, #TheLastPresident, ##RalphIngersoll, #TheInsurgents, #BaronTrumpsMarvellousUndergroundJourney, #MunsonIngersoll, #HenryClayLockwood, #TheAbolitionOfThePresidency, #IrwinLongman, #AmericanBookmaker, #HowardLockwoodCo, #AnAmericanPlay, #HeldByTheEnemy, #RRDonnelley, #ChicagoWorldsFair, #HHHolmes, #ColumbianExposition, #RevolutionaryFamilies
UPDATE
8.21.2022
See an interesting post covering this with some #Connections and #Synchronicity throughout Time!
Though as FB has pointed out I am shadow banned. . .
even THEIR da r pa based mods Cannot deny this IS interesting.
Remember. . .Melania is from Slovenia. Will drop her fam history for you to skim on comments on my page.
Ingersoll Rand acquired this company in 2022 which also has additional facilities in the US and SLOVENIA!
This from the Acquisition Announcement. I will drop an article where you can find some very interesting info and Full sources in the comments of this post on my page.
The Ingersoll is quite influential throughout history. Just did a vid report recently on the Timex corp which took over the production of Ingersoll. They have had a back and forth relationship and an interesting history including war times.
For instance. . . Were you AWARE, during World War II jewel bearings were one of the products restricted by the United States government War Production.
There is a reason my pen name is artistiquejewels on steemit.
Who was #prescottjoule?
His experiments about energy transformations were first published in 1843.
Will drop evidence in comments on my page.
Keep in mind the rest of my information can be seen on other non censoring platforms when the dar pa program goes belly up under Testing the Narrative. Think Gab, MeWe, TruthSocial, my Bithchute and Rumble Channel, Xephula and of course my steemit. Have backup channels ad contacts for one another.
Ingersoll Rand Acquires Houdstermaatschappij Jorc B.V.
02 February 2022
Expands portfolio through addition of highly complementary condensate management products
Attractive high-single digit Adjusted EBITDA purchase multiple expected to be reduced 50% by year three of ownership through identified growth and cost savings opportunities
Technologies complement existing group of innovations that deliver better performance and a better planet through energy and water efficiency
DAVIDSON, N.C.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Ingersoll Rand Inc. (NYSE:IR), a global provider of mission-critical flow creation and industrial solutions, acquired Houdstermaatschappij Jorc B.V. (“Jorc”) for an all-cash purchase price of €27 million. Jorc will join the Industrial Technologies and Services (ITS) segment.
Jorc is a world-leading manufacturer of condensate management products, primarily condensate drains, oil/water separators and air-saving equipment. The company is based in Heerlen, Netherlands and has additional facilities in the US and Slovenia. Jorc has approximately €13 million in 2021 annual sales and 2021 Adjusted EBITDA margins in excess of the ITS segment.
Thank you to all who Take the TIME to care and share out as has been demonstrated in a previous post with evidence. . . FB does not appreciated me keeping the public informed with the Truth as #TheTruthShallSetUsFree
Thank you to all Warriors who continue to spend their time #fightingthegoodfight #Godspeed
All evidence with source links for above news in here and hearkens back to a time where many thought the men of that Revolution were much older. . . but there were Quite young and Did indeed care about the Future of a Republic.
As #NikolaTesla said. . . "The present is theirs; the future, for which I really worked, is mine."
Find the thread link here,
https://www.facebook.com/melissa.mcgarity.14/posts/pfbid03738KKjXyLV4rTMrC7JBfNniEJwsxhiLishASz7SxHZg4HJzi9aUXDZtg4Z9zGbuJl
Link showing yet another time out of hundreds where FB unfairly targets, censors and silences even though I use even their very own corporate owned sources to back up what I say. I am BIG on evidence, sources and Proof!
So basically Zero reason except darpa KNOWS it's #EndGame for them and they want to make sure people don't get a heads up for the Upcoming Event!
Those who Want to know. . .also know Where to go when you want details and information controlled Ops can't remove! Stay safe out there!
#restricted again!
Not the Algorithm for that! Telling?