What Is the National Register? - National Trust for Historic ...
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National Trust for Historic Preservation
National Register. ... At that time a private owner (or majority of private owners if several are involved) can object. Even if the forms are processed and the ...
HowStuffWorks "10 Reasons to Start a Trust"
money.howstuffworks.com/personal.../10-reasons-to-start-a-trust.htm
Find out the 10 reasons to start a trust in this article from howstuffworks.com. ... There are two main ways to challenge the legitimacy of a trust. .... This means your assets and whom you leave them to are kept private. ... Also, in some states, you may have toregister a trust if it contains such items as real estate and securities, ..
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delaware_statutor GAALT - The Biggest Conspiracy of All
http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread348499/pg6
HERE IS THE LINK AND CONNECTION BETWEEBN THE SPRINGS AND THE BEATTYS --
LANCASTER COTTON MILLS, SOUTH CAROLINA
www.gaalt.com...
Heritage of GAALT Industries
GAALT Model WA623-1-RC77 is the patented electronic device selected to set the standards for the development for computers to be connected to the telephone wire and/or radio paths everywhere on earth. This is typically referred to as the pin functions for the computer connection RS232C and also known as a modem.
Carolina Emergency Services and Security Company is the amalgamation of the heritage from ancestors of the same blood-line commencing with William Brewster of the Mayflower Compact in 1620 and from Louis Charles Bourbon Capet from February 6, 1778 to organize and finance the American Revolutionary War for the benefit of the United States of North America and for the blood-line family as detailed in the premise.
In 1865 this family business was in both Lancaster, South Carolina to build a cotton mill that became the largest cotton mill business on Earth, and to organize Birmingham, Alabama for the manufacturing of railroad equipment and railway cars for the transportation of cotton back to Lancaster, South Carolina, under the terms of the 37th United States Congress, Acts of treason against the so-called Confederate States of America. In 1872 its headquarters were established in both Lancaster and in Birmingham where they remain today in any and all businesses permitted under the provisions of the premise from the beginning of the United States. It specializes in para-legal research and development of old and new corporations from the beginning of the United States and for Tomorrow, and leasing the assets of same to others, generally under 1, 5, 49, 99, and 999 - year leases for the betterment of man kind.
Continuing from www.fabrics.net...
Indian Head Connection
1901 - Leroy purchases Luna Cotton Mills for weaving of chambrays and twills and renames it White Plant. He becomes a major force in the American cotton industry. By 1907at age 46 he is president of four cotton mills, five mercantile companies, two banks, a railroad, a cotton compress company, water power company and director of eight SC banks and the Southern Railroad.
1911 - Capt. White dies; Leroy is named president of Fort Mill company which is renamed Plant 1
1912 - Leroy buys Kershaw Cotton Mill to eventually produce shade goods and lawn.
1913 - Fort Mill expanded; 600 new Draper looms to produce sheeting. Mills produce fabrics under names of Lynwood, Kanawah, Ivanhoe, Trossach, Winton, Equity, First Equity, Saranac, Scarsdale and Kenwood.
1914 -Leroy's Lancaster Mills assumes control of Fort Mill Manufacturing Company. Lancaster now has weave room with 3,016 looms, slasher room spooler rooms, tying room and large cloth room; covers 8-1/2 acres.
1919 - Leroy operates five textile mills in South Carolina as separate companies - Fort Mill Plant, White Plant, Lancaster Plant, Kershaw Plant and Eureka Plant.
1923 - Boll weevil epidemic shuts down many cotton plants; some work every other week.
1924 - Lyman plant is built.
1927 - Leroy requests son Elliot to leave New York City and return to learn mill business. Elliot refuses at first as he is earning $50,000 plus royalties annually as one of the country's best magazine writers but returns in 1928 as company treasurer-secretary.
1931 - Upon the death of his father Leroy, Elliott White Springs inherits six cotton mills with 5,000 employees, 7,500 looms, and 300,000 spindles valued at $7,250,000. But equipment is outdated and creditors are at the doors. Many doubt mill's future based on Elliot's playboy reputation and Depression economy.
He astounds everyone with his financial acumen and business strategy, consolidating and modernizing during his 28-year reign to make company one of the foremost industrial giants. Goals are a Springmaid ad campaign and establishment of a selling ho
Continuing ... The Torch passes to Hugh William Close
As a way to rebuff magazines which would not carry these ads, Elliot issues Clothes Make the Man, a compilation of some of his short stories, brief histories of Springs plants and other assorted literature. First printing of 100,000 sells out immediately, 40,000 more printed and there are still requests for this booklet. With such consumer endorsement, ad industry yields..
1946 - Elliot gains a son in law when daughter Anne marries Hugh "Bill" Close who will inherit company reins in 1959.
1946 - New York-based Springs Mills, Inc. is established as the textile-selling house for the Springs Cotton Mills.
broken up, see page for mnor details
1956 - Is first company to install computers and data processing department.
1958 - Springsteen Plant gets an additional 76,000 sq. feet for $3 million; will run high-grade pima.
1959 - Elliot dies. During his tenure he took a down-turn company in the Depression worth $7.25 million and turned it into a $104. 5 million empire; from 5,000 employees to 12,000; from 7,500 looms to 17,000; from 30,000 spindles to 836,000; and spent $95 million on expansion and modernization.
Upon the death of his father-in-law Elliott Springs, H.W. Close, 39, becomes president of The Springs Cotton Mills and Springs Mills, Inc. He builds a new generation of plants, broadens the product line, takes the company public, and tells the American textile story to a wide variety of audiences.
1960 - Springs becomes the world's largest supplier of sheets and pillow cases.
1961 - New cotton mill, Elliot Plant, is built. Is new type of facility with straight run-through production flow of goods from opening room to cloth room. Twin structure, Francis Plant, isbuilt beside it for Springmaid sheets and pillowcases. Total cost is $15 million.
1962 - Springs Mills, Inc. completes a 21-story office building in midtown New York. New location enables Springs to better attract buyers from department stores.
Always the innovative advertiser, Springs has its new Springcale sheets get an approval from J. Fred Muggs on one of the early Dave Garroway shows. - Courtesy The Springs Story
The first Draper shuttleless looms were installed at the Lancaster Plant in 1962. - Courtesy The Springs Story
1963 - Company observes 75th anniversary. Is the largest industrial taxpayer in SC; issues Story of Springs Cotton Mills booklet..
1963 - Consumer line expands into kitchen and bath domestics with the purchase of Morgan Jones and Scotland Mills in NC. Morgan Jones, est. 1872, has six plants for producing woven bedspreads, thermal blankets and kitchen cotton items.
This is a significant year as Springs, five years behind other textile firms, finally gives in to producing synthetic poly/cotton blends due the vast technological improvements. Uses Eastman's new Kodel IV 65% poly/35% cotton under the name Avanti. Grace Plant expands again for $7 million, making it the world's largest finishing plant.
1964 - Screen printing machines installed; begins joint overseas marketing programs.
1965 - Becomes first company to achieve an all-cotton permanent press fabric called Spring-set. However, as chemicals weaken fibers only made in heavier weight fabrics for slacks, sportswear and outwear. But can't compete with blends and eventually production is pulled. Acquires Carolina Carpets of York.
1966 -- Springs becomes a publicly traded company; stock sells within 24 hours. Gains financial clout as member of NY Stock Exchange. Now has 19 plants, 18,000 employees and textile sales of $250 million. Leroy Plant is first U.S. manufacturing plant designed to solely produce cotton/poly blends in broadcloth and batiste.
1968 - Kathleen plant construction begins along with other plant modernization. Fashion craze causes colored shirts to outsell white. Grace Plant runs 18 shirting colors in 50/50 blend.
1969 - Springs enters the knit fabric market with purch
then Close dies.
1982 - The company is renamed Springs Industries, Inc. to reflect its diversity. $175 million spent to replace 6,600 older looms with 1,160 air jet weaving machines. Fort Mill, Gayle and Springsteen plants phased out.
1983 - Bill Close dies. Company acquires L&N Custom Designs which makes waterbed sheets, mattress covers and accessories.
New presidents Walter Elisha, shown with artist Georgia O'Keefe at a Springs-sponsored art show in 1983, and Paul Tippett who succeeded Elisha in 1985. - Courtesy The Springs Story
1985 - W. Paul Tippett, president of American Motors, is appointed Springs' seventh president. Due to consumer demand, sheet content changed to 60% cotton, 40% poly; Wamsutta remains no-iron cotton.
1985 - Springs Industries acquires Lowenstein Corporation for $286 million; purchase helps to make Springs one of the largest companies in the U.S. textile industry. Gains Wamsutta and Pacific brands and 93% interest in Clark & Schwebel Fiber Glass Corp, largest producer of woven fiber glass in the country. Adds 9,000 employees and brings plant total to 43.
Lowenstein, an old and respected manufacturer, deserves historical mention. See end of column for its story and the solution to the kettlecloth question.
1987 - Springs observes a year-long 100th anniversary by opening copper box time capsule from the cornerstone of the 100-year-old Fort Mill manufacturing facility and publishing The Springs Story which details history of the company to that date. Celebration coincides with company being chosen as the model mill by Textile World magazine.
1988 - Centennial Year ends with planting of 50-year time capsule under a marker in front of the Fort Mill executive office.
1988 - Springs continues to modernize with a $370 million latest technology program for facilities; restructures Finished Fabrics Group and closes Rock Hill and two other plants; acquires Andre Richard Co. and Uniglass Division of United Merchants and Manufacturers Co. for $68 million.
Boatphone
posted on Nov, 14 2008 @ 10:26 PM
link
Can anyone on ATS confirm that this is a hoax? I mean, it's really out there...
How could a company of this nature escape the notice of almost all Americans?
- Boat
ezziboo
posted on Nov, 14 2008 @ 11:34 PM
link
Just a few things I found interesting:
1) On pg. 82 of the OP's original link, a paragraph ends with the phrase "under Dieu, Le Roi", which is French for "under God, the King."
2) Somewhere in that HUGE link, mention is made of tethered blimps being used for enhancing communication. There WAS a tethered blimp in St. Mary Parish, Louisiana (along the coast of the Gulf of Mexico)....highly visible. Local law enforcement said it was used to monitor drug smuggling...not sure if it's still there or not.
3) Somewhere else in that link, there's a letter to Mr. & Mrs. Curl, essentially telling them they have no rights to the property they purchased. If I understand the info in the link, it sounds like lots of property in the Southern US "belongs" to the railroad, unbeknownst to the buyers...."buyer beware", "caveat emptor," and all that....
Though the link has many mentions of the Carolinas, Georgia, Florida, & Alabama, I saw only one mention of Louisiana. Louisiana operates under Napoleonic Code...unique to all the USA. I'm REALLY simplifying this, but when you purchase something in Louisiana, the law under Napoleonic Code is pretty much "SELLER beware"...meaning, the seller is responsible for any funkiness or foolishness that goes on with a particular transaction...so, merci beaucoup for that, Bonaparte. So, if you believe the OP, move to Louisiana...the economy is still good here, and man, do we know how to party!
(A little REAL American History...mais oui, I am French...Acadian (aka Cajun), to be exact, meaning my ancestors were driven out of Acadie by the English during the "Grande Derangement," boarding diseased ships headed for ??? Some settled along the East Coast, but culturally assimilated (for the most part) with English settlers, losing their Acadian cultural practices in the process.
Those who settled in Louisiana found that it was pretty much just them & the local native Americans, and they were held in about the same regard as "indentured servants" by the PTB at that time. French Acadian culture has been maintained to this day (my mother and father spoke only French as children...they learned English at school, but continued to speak French at home). )
pillarofsalt
posted on Nov, 15 2008 @ 04:42 AM
link
reply to post by Maxmars
I noticed the similarities to Atlas Shrugged immediately; the name Gaalt itself and the technology and railway connections. Interesting, especially given Ayn Rands alleged "Illuminati" connections!
truthwarrior7
posted on Nov, 15 2008 @ 03:28 PM
link
Originally posted by pillarofsalt
reply to post by Maxmars
I noticed the similarities to Atlas Shrugged immediately; the name Gaalt itself and the technology and railway connections. Interesting, especially given Ayn Rands alleged "Illuminati" connections!
Which came first though, Atlas Shrugged or the Registration of the name GAALT...???
truthwarrior7
posted on Nov, 15 2008 @ 03:52 PM
link
Originally posted by Boatphone
Can anyone on ATS confirm that this is a hoax? I mean, it's really out there...
How could a company of this nature escape the notice of almost all Americans?
- Boat
To the best of my knowledge this is NOT a hoax.
First you have to be familiar with the Book, "Holy Blood, Holy Grail". That book delves into the mysterious bloodline of the Merovingians, and their secret society connections going backl to the time Rome invaded Jerusalem.
The "Family" were ousted from Jerusalem and they claim the original lineage to King David. The Davidic Throne. The Lion of Judah. The lost kingdom of Zion. (Notice the Lion is always with Zion) (Reggae, Rastafarianism, Twelve Tribes, Anglo-Israelism, British Israelism, Mormonism, Masonry)
According to the books like Holy Blood, Holy Grail, Pandoras Box, Bloodline of the Grail, Grail Kings, etc. the family has been trying to regain the throne through intermarriage for the last 2000 years. The Rothschilds are one of the most important families, along with the Royalty of France, England (really Germany) and many other countries. Apparently, according to the story, the family 's last name going back to the 1700's was the "Payseurs", as in Lewis Cass Payseur. This family held the fortune and the knowledge of the Priory of Sion and the Alchemists, Rosicrucians, and Knowledge of the Library of Alexandria, (trans-continental flight, anti-gravity, etc.) -- They secretly lived in America and still do to this day.
The family of trustees, headed by Leroy Springs, the Springsteens, Springs Cotton Mills etc., stole / embezzeled the family's fortune and there is an ongoing dispute to this day about who owns what.
The Lady who wrote Pandoras Box, Rio Pheigh (Alex Christopher), has been in contact with the family of Donald Croom Beatty Jr. for a few years now. She claims he is a powerless old man who tries to intimidate people, but he is actually harmless. She also claims that she is the main one who did the research and contacted the family to inform them of their hidden and vast wealth. The tried and tried to get it back but to no avail.
When Josh posted those article titles on freedomdomain.com, he had no knowledge of the connection to the book Pandoras Box, although he owned it at the time.
The character Donald Croom Beatty contacted Josh threatening him if he did not remove the articles that named the telecom bill and eavesdropping apperatus, used by the phone companies AT & T etc.
Upon reviewing the contents of these two articles, Josh realixed this was all tied into the "Family" discussed in Pandoras Box. Josh then went on to look up details in Pandoras Box and found the page that shows the family tree and the current trustees and owners of the family corporation "United States of America" and all the railroads, corporations and land underneath.
Thew box that shows the family tree leaves out the main character but references him by initials, Donald C. (Blank) Jr. -- and the name on the threatening letter was form Donald Croom Beatty Jr.
This is where shock must have set into Josh's mind because this is where he found the connection between everything. The corporation was GAALT and there was plenty of information in the two articles to link everything together. Most of that information I would guess has already been posted on the pages on freedomdomain.
Years later Josh decided to upload the articles to his site along with the threatening letter, and then posted it on ATS for publicity. He also posted it to a few other conspiracy forums as well.
This is where things stand today.
I believe that when the OP went live on ATS that the company has removed their website entirely. Now it appears it has been put back up.
There was much speculation that since the website was removed the whole thing was a sham or a hoax but now that the website is back up, this will be interesting to find out if we can get more info on this.
It seems like Quebecor and Videotron have very HIGH contacts to get awards like these. They appear to be VERY HIGH UP in the chain. How do ordinary companies get this far?
www.cbc.ca...
Quebecor launching new cellphone network
Quebecor Inc. CEO Pierre Karl Péladeau says his company is making good on a promise it delivered in spring 2007 to launch a new cellphone network. (Ian Barrett/Canadian Press)
Quebec residents will have another cellphone provider to choose from in 12 to 18 months, when Quebecor Inc. launches a wireless network to compete with incumbents Bell, Rogers and Telus.
The Montreal-based company announced on Wednesday that it plans to spend between $800 million to $1 billion, which includes the $554 million it paid to acquire wireless spectrum last summer, over four years to build its network, which will offer services through its Vidéotron subsidiary.
The network will use high-speed packet access (HSPA) technology, a derivative of the global system for mobile communications (GSM) standard, and will be built by Nokia Siemens Networks.
"This project is of more than technical interest. It is a watershed event in the history of Quebecor Media and Vidéotron," said Pierre Karl Péladeau, Quebecor's chief executive, in a statement. "What we are announcing is not just the building of a new telecommunications network.… We are laying the foundations of a new business model for Quebecor Media and all its subsidiaries.”
The company did not announce pricing details, but Vidéotron president Robert Dépatie said services will be low cost and include high-speed data. Vidéotron intends to offer wireless internet speeds of up to three megabits per second, which will help it deliver a converged media strategy.
"Our intention is to come up with a very simple plan. We will be very aggressive on price," he told CBCNews.ca. "Our plan is obviously based on voice but our plan is also about convergence of technology... We're going to focus a lot on data, on content and on advanced services. There's no doubt that will be one of our biggest strategies."
Continue Article
Dépatie also said the company's rollout plan, which will create 1,000 new jobs, is provincewide and will not be limited to big cities.
Quebecor currently offers wireless services to Vidéotron customers by reselling airtime it purchases from Rogers Communications Inc. Dépatie said those customers will be moved onto the new network when it is built at no charge to them.
New spectrum, new competitors
Quebecor was one of the big winners in the federal government's spectrum auction, which raised more than $4.2 billion for the public purse over the summer. The auction was conducted with special rules in place for new entrants after the government concluded last year that the Canadian wireless industry was uncompetitive and rife with high prices and poor service.
One of the auction's other big winners, Toronto-based Globalive Communications Inc. — which operates the Yak brand of long-distance calling and internet services — announced in September that it planned to launch a national network in the second half of 2009.
Globalive and Quebecor were lively opponents in the auction, bidding fiercely for spectrum licences in Quebec. Quebecor ended up shutting out Globalive, which will have a hole in its national coverage unless it can strike a deal with the company.
Other big auction winners included Bragg Communications Inc., which runs Maritimes cable provider Eastlink, Calgary-based Shaw Communications Inc., and Toronto-based Data & Audio-Visual Enterprises, a company set up by local entrepreneur John Bitove.
None of those companies has announced wireless plans, and spokespeople for Shaw and DAVE not be reached for comment on Wednesday. A spokesperson for Bragg said the company had nothing new to announce, but is planning to go public with its wireless plans in about six to eight weeks.
truthwarrior7
posted on Nov, 15 2008 @ 04:11 PM
link
More on Videotron (The last paragraph is particularly interesting.)
findarticles.com...
Videotron Integrates CF Cable TV
Business Wire, August 22, 1997
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MONTREAL--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aug. 22, 1997--VIDEOTRON (ME;TSE VDO) "We have been waiting a long time to integrate CF Cable TV and its subsidiaries within Videotron. Starting today, we can begin to implement our business plans and take advantage of the strategic benefits provided by the CF Cable TV operations, especially in the Greater Montreal region." said Mr. Claude Chagnon, President and Chief Operating Officer of Groupe Videotron, as he commented the CRTC decision allowing Le Groupe Videotron ltee to exercise control of CF Cable TV, acquired in May 1996. The CRTC decision follows the regulator's approval of the sale of CFCF-TV to a consortium formed by WIC and the Caisse de depot et placement du Quebec as well as the sale of TQS to a consortium in which Quebecor is the main player.
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