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Since I get what I take to be a merciful quiet, in response to my notes, it is with little enthusiasm that I say more. Maybe this is really not something to talk about, but it bothers me when I don’t seem able to make myself clear in what I say. You will, I hope, remember that Wapping is now part of the city of Blyth in Northumberland. Seymours were the aristocratic, political and financial power in Northhumberland, where they were associated in all ways with Lanes (Petts/Pates (Lanen van Pelts), Pagets, Lawsons, etc., who were key in settlement of America. The settlement of America was planned and conducted as a military operation, essentially insurgent, against Native Americans, out of Mother Kilwinning Lodge #0, in Lesmahagow, in neighboring Lanarkshire, Scotland. Notice Washington next to Chester and Blyth in Northumberland. Mother Kilwinning was the mother of America. Some will say, “Duh”, in response to this. Others will not understand. Suffice it to say, naval intelligence was the mother of all the world’s intelligence services, including MI5 and the CIA. Petts/Pates built the English Navy, the best in the world in its time, run by Admirals Montagues and Deans, out of old Dutch East India Company families, to which the Pett Dynasty also belonged. My great uncle Byron Leslie Pate, who was the genealogist of my line of Pates, was married to Fodie Seymour, in Belfast-Patetown, North Carolina. Out of that union grew the Seymour Funeral Home, in an industry in which Pates were prominent in North Carrolina. Seymours buried a lot of ex-nobility in Wayne County. But business is business. A picture of the East India Company flag is attached. You see what I mean. Keep in mind that Pates built Patetown for Lancasters. Lancaster is neighbor to Chester in Pennsylvania. Chester is where Penns and Pitts built their clipper ships. Chester is neighbor to Wapping in Northumberland. Wappingers were boatbuilding Indians, in what is now Hyde County, North Carolina. We’re all cousins, Cousin. Notify Administrator about this message?
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