FINAL WARNING: The Birth of Tyranny
a growing world.
THE MASONS SEPARATE THEMSELVES FROM THE ILLUMINATI
In 1826, Captain William Morgan, a journalist and stonemason from
Batavia, New York, who was a high degree mason in a local Masonic
lodge, wrote an exposé of the Masonic Order in a book called
Illustrations of Masonry, which revealed many of their secrets
concerning the first three degrees. Shortly afterward, he was arrested
and charged with stealing and indebtedness, and put in jail. The
Illuminati tried him in absentia, convicted him of treason, and ordered
five men, led by Richard Howard, an English Illuminist, to execute him.
When he was released from jail, he was warned about the plot, and he
attempted to flee to Canada. Howard caught him at the border, and
took him to Fort Niagara, where he was held for a couple of days. The
Freemasons that accompanied Howard, carried him off in a boat, and
drowned him in the Niagara River.
This event was verified by the sworn statement of Avery Allen (said to
be on file at the New York City Archives), who heard Howard give a
report of the incident at a meeting of the Knights Templar at St. John’s
Hall in New York City. One of the three men who carried out the
assassination, confessed on his deathbed in 1848.
Masonic leaders refused to cooperate with the lengthy investigation,
which didn’t get anywhere, since many of the police officers were
Masons. The general consensus was that Morgan accidentally
drowned himself in Lake Ontario. However, the press, religious
leaders, temperance and anti-slavery groups, united to condemn the
apparent murder. The murder caused over half of the Masons in the
northeastern United States to break off their alignment with the
Illuminati. The incident led to the creation of the country’s first third
party movement, the Anti-Masonic Party (1826-33) in New York. They
wanted to stop the aristocratic conspiracy, and prevent all members of
Masonic organizations from public service. Anti-Masonic candidates
were elected to the New York Assembly in 1827.
A State Convention in Massachusetts in 1828 saw the establishment of
a committee “to inquire how far Freemasonry and French Illuminism