Friday, February 23, 2018

Megalithic Buildings - Federal Hall - New York City

Federal Hall has been the site of government activity for almost 300 years. Three successive buildings have stood at the corner of Wall and Nassau streets, each playing a role in momentous national historic events. The earliest, started in 1699 and completed in 1702, was New York's third City Hall. This is where John Peter Zenger was tried and acquitted of seditious libel in 1735, marking the country's first great 'freedom of the press' trial. In 1765, the Stamp Act Congress met to protest English taxation, and resistance to "taxation without representation" spread across America.

Architect: Ithiel Town and Alexander Jackson Davis (interior by John Frazee and Samuel Thompson)
style
Style:  Greek Revival
 Built to replace the old City Hall on the same site, it was here that George Washington was inaugurated as President.
The question is why was the old building torn down? Then why was rebuilt in 1836?
Another question: Who really built the first building on the site that was demolished. In New York and Toronto there was a large movement in demolishing old buildings of the city and replacing them with other structures.

 That is how the old building lock like. Who really built the old Federal Hall?
Who built it in 1699? Where were native Americans? Why the history is not including them anywhere? This land was populated when Europeans arrived on this land and most likely there were buildings nice buildings here?

Here is what I found on the subject:

New York History Timeline


1000 AD: Woodland Period - homes were established along rivers and trade exchange systems and burial systems were established

1500s - 1600's: New York explored by Europeans from Great Britain, Sweden, Holland and France

1763: 1763-1675 -- Pontiac's Rebellion, Chief Pontiac's tries to force British out of the West, Michigan, New York and Pennsylvania.

1688: 1688 - 1763 The French and Indian Wars between France and Great Britain for lands in North America consisting of King William's War (1688-1699), Queen Anne's War (1702-1713), King George's War (1744 - 1748) and the French and Indian War aka the Seven Years War (1754-1763)
1688: (1688-1699) King William's War (part of the French and Indian Wars) between France and the Wabanaki Confederacy and England and the Iroquois Confederacy. Peace Treaty made at Pemaquid. August 11,1693. and was ratified on Jan. 7. 1699
1690: Schenectady Massacre - French and Algonquins destroy Schenectady, New York, killing 60 settlers
1778: Cherry Valley Massacre - British and Seneca Indian forces attack a fort and village in eastern New York
1754: 1754 - 1763: The French Indian War is won by Great Britain against the French so ending the series of conflicts known as the French and Indian Wars
1763: Treaty of Paris
1775: 1775 - 1783 - The American Revolution.
1776: July 4, 1776 - United States Declaration of Independence
1803: The United States bought the Louisiana Territory from France for 15 million dollars for the land
1812: 1812 - 1815: The War of 1812 between U.S. and Great Britain, ended in a stalemate but confirmed America's Independence
1830: Indian Removal Act
1832: Department of Indian Affairs established
1861: 1861 - 1865: The American Civil War.
1862: U.S. Congress passes Homestead Act opening the Great Plains to settlers
1865: The surrender of Robert E. Lee on April 9 1865 signalled the end of the Confederacy
1887: Dawes General Allotment Act passed by Congress leads to the break up of the large Indian Reservations and the sale of Indian lands to white settlers
1969: All Indians declared citizens of U.S.
1979: American Indian Religious Freedom Act was passed
Names of the New York Indian Tribes
New York is a state of the northeast United States. There are many famous Native American tribes who played a part in the history of the state and whose tribal territories and homelands are located in the present day state of New York. The names of the New York tribes included the Delaware, Erie, Iroquois, Mohawk, Oneida and Seneca.

History & Causes of the French Indian War - Political Policies and Beliefs
What were the causes of the French Indian War / Seven Years War? The causes of the Indian wars, battles and conflicts, including the French Indian War, were generally because of the opening of Indian lands to colonization of Europeans and highly lucrative trade prospects. The French Indian War was a North American counterpart to the Seven Years War which was one of the dynastic wars that raged in Europe. Some of the history and causes of the Indian Wars were dictated by political policies and beliefs which shaped the historical background to the causes of the French Indian War
    European Imperialism: The policy of forcefully extending a nation's authority, power and influence by territorial gain and by the establishment of economic and political dominance.
    Colonialism: Establishing colonies in America provided land and new trading opportunities
    Trade: The Europeans all wanted to monopolize the fur trade

Sadly History is reduced to an enumeration of wars instead of achievements cultural educational life style art or anything else.

History Timeline of the French Indian / Seven Years War
French Indian / Seven Years War    
1688    1688 - 1763 The French and Indian Wars begin between France and Great Britain for lands in North America. The Iroquois Indians were allied to the British and the Algonquian speaking tribes were allied to the French. T
The French and Indian Wars was an intermittent series of wars and conflicts consisting of the:

King William's War (1688-1699)
Queen Anne's War (1702-1713)
King George's War (1744 - 1748)
 French and Indian War (1754-1763)         

1748    The Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle was signed on 18 October 1748 ended King George's War restoring conquered territory, but the result was indecisive hence the continuation of the conflicts known as the French and Indian Wars     
1754   1754 - 1763:The French Indian War
(1754-1763) is won by Great Britain. France gives England all French territory east of the Mississippi River, except New Orleans. The Spanish give up Florida to the British.         
1754    May 1754: The Battle of Jumonville Glen. In 1754 the French gained a victory and ousted a British force, including a colonial militia under the young Colonel George Washington, at Fort Necessity, Pennsylvania.         
1755    The Capture of Fort Beausejour on the border separating Nova Scotia from Acadia         
1757    Up to 1757 France continued to dominate. There were failed British campaigns against Louisbourg and the Siege of Fort William Henry         
1758    1758 Great Britain increased support to its troops based in North America and won victories at Louisbourg, Fort Frontenac in the Great Lakes region, and Fort Duquesne in Pittsburgh.         
1760    The final British victory at the Battle of Quebec in 1759 led to the demise of New France in 1760.         1760    September 1760: Montreal falls to the British         
1763    The Treaty of Paris ends French and Indian War
(1754-1763). Canada, east of the Mississippi River, was added to the British empire.     
The Significance and Effects of the French Indian / Seven Years War
The effects and significance of the Seven Years / French Indian Wars in history at a local level were:
    France ceded French Louisiana west of the Mississippi River to its ally Spain in compensation for Spain's loss to Britain of Florida
    France's colonial presence north of the Caribbean was reduced to the islands of Saint Pierre and Miquelon
    Although Britain was victorious the French and Indian Wars British had caused the 'mother country' to incur a massive war debt. The British efforts to reduce the debt included reversing their policy of Salutary Neglect that ultimately led to  insurrection in the colonies, the Boston Tea Party, the American Revolution and the Declaration of Independence.



The most important things that ever happened at Wall and Broad Streets — the convening in 1789 of the first Congress and the inauguration of George Washington as the first president — occurred in a building, Federal Hall, that was demolished in 1812.

Of the estimated 15 million visitors who pass through the crossroads every year, only 200,000 enter Federal Hall National Memorial, even though it is free and open eight hours each weekday.

The original structure on the site was built as New York's second City Hall in 1699 - 1703, on Wall Street, in what is today the Financial District of Lower Manhattan. In 1735, John Peter Zenger, an American newspaper publisher, was arrested for committing libel against the British royal governor and was imprisoned and tried there. His acquittal on the grounds that the material he had printed was true established freedom of the press as it was later defined in the Bill of Rights.

In October 1765, delegates from nine of the 13 colonies met as the Stamp Act Congress in response to the levying of the Stamp Act by the Parliament of Great Britain. Drawn together for the first time in organized opposition to British policy, the attendees drafted a message to King George III, the House of Lords, and the House of Commons, claiming entitlement to the same rights as the residents of Britain and protesting the colonies' "taxation without representation".

After the American Revolution, the City Hall served as the meeting place for the Congress of the Confederation of the United States under the Articles of Confederation, from 1785 until 1789. Acts adopted here included the Northwest Ordinance, which set up what would later become the states of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan and Wisconsin, but more fundamentally prohibited slavery in these future states.

In 1788, the building was remodeled and enlarged under the direction of Pierre Charles L'Enfant, who was later selected by President George Washington to design the capital city on the Potomac River. This was the first example of Federal Style architecture in the United States. It was renamed Federal Hall when it became the first Capitol of the United States under the Constitution in 1789. The 1st United States Congress met there on March 4, 1789 to establish the new federal government, and the first thing it did was to count the votes that elected George Washington as the first President of the United States. He was inaugurated on the balcony of the building on April 30, 1789.

Many of the most important legislative actions in the United States occurred with the 1st Congress at Federal Hall. Foremost was the proposal and initial ratification of the Bill of Rights to the U.S. Constitution; twelve amendments to the Constitution were initially drafted (ten were later adopted), and on September 25, 1789, the United States Bill of Rights was proposed in Federal Hall, establishing the freedoms claimed by the Stamp Act Congress on the same site 24 years earlier. Also, the Judiciary Act of 1789 was enacted in the building, which set up the United States federal court system that is still in use today.

In 1790, the United States capital was moved to Philadelphia, and what had been Federal Hall once again housed the government of New York City until 1812, when the building was razed with the opening of the current New York City Hall Part of the original railing and balcony floor where Washington was inaugurated are on display in the memorial. The current structure, one of the best surviving examples of classical architecture in New York, was built as the first purpose-built U.S. Custom House for the Port of New York.Designed by John Frazee, it was constructed of Tuckahoe marble and took more than a decade to complete. It opened in 1842.

In 1862, Customs moved to 55 Wall Street and the building served as one of six United States Sub-Treasury locations. Millions of dollars of gold and silver were kept in the basement vaults until the Federal Reserve Bank replaced the Sub-Treasury system in 1920.

In 1882, John Quincy Adams Ward's bronze George Washington statue was erected on its front steps, marking the approximate site where he was inaugurated as President in the former structure.
In 1920, a bomb was detonated across the street from Federal Hall at 23 Wall Street, in what became known as the Wall Street bombing. Thirty-eight people were killed and 400 injured, and 23 Wall Street was visibly damaged, but Federal Hall received no damage. A famous photograph of the event shows the destruction and effects of the bombing, but also shows the statue of Washington
 In 2006, Federal Hall opened after a brief closure and a $16 million renovation, mostly to its foundation, after cracks threatening the structure were greatly aggravated by the collapse of the World Trade Center Twin Towers.


PRESIDENT GEORGE WASHINGTON (1732-1799)
Location: Federal Hall at Broad, Nassau and Wall Streets Sculptor: John Quincy Adams Ward Year installed: 1883

In 1789, New York City was the capital of the United States, and it was very near the spot where the present statue stands that George Washington took his oath of office as our first president.
In one sense, New York was a rather inappropriate place for Washington to be sworn in, because he didn't fare well as a general in NYC and environs. He was defeated in Harlem, White Plains, and Kips Bay, and perhaps his greatest military achievement here was his strategic retreat in The Battle of Long Island that saved most of his troops to fight on.

Washington was sworn in in front of the original Federal Hall. The present Federal Hall was built in 1833.






















Apparently we lost the ability to built these ceilings.
MET Metropolitan Museum of Art tried and was unsuccessful.
It is possible that we lost also the real history of this building?














Are we missing something ? Why are those columns so large?
Check the dome. Did they harness electricity using Tesla style doms? Why would you install that Dom in the top of the building otherwise.


































Links


Thursday, February 22, 2018

Equifax In the News, New York - November 2017

In November 2017 while in New York the major news on TV was that Equifax website and database were hijacked.

They have been hijacked in August 2017 and all personal informations of 150 million a of Americans and Canadians made public. Before informing the public Richard Smith the CEO sold his shares of the company.
Then he quit or retire for personal reasons.

And instead of being jailed for inside trading he had public hearing that were televised; There he was asked how to fix the problem.
In the same time Equifax got a contract without bidding from the USA government to keep track of the taxes of all citizens of USA.

In Canada a friend of mine receive a letter with the SIN Number uniquely identifying each citizen in Canada with the stolen information from Equifax. She was asked to redo her taxes that otherwise she will loose her benefits. She is retired. And she did her taxes. A fake internet link was provided to post more personal information online.

History

1898: Equifax’s roots begin in this year as a Tennessee-based grocery story. Founded by brothers Cator and Guy Woolford, each got their start in the credit business as grocers, where they compiled lists of customers based on their creditworthiness.
1899: The Woolfords moved to Atlanta with the goal of making credit reporting their new career. In Atlanta, Georgia, in 1899, the Retail Credit Company was born. Compiling credit information into a book, the Woolfords sold copies to merchants. The company posted a loss of more than $2,000 in its first year, but sold many more books the following year.
1901: Retail Credit Company expands into the moral hazard market, selling credit information to life insurance companies.

They started their credit investigations by going door-to-door among merchants, asking about their customers and noting the findings in ledgers. Cator, a former bank employee, and Guy, a lawyer, employed simple notations to reflect merchants' comments about their shoppers' payment habits: "Prompt," "Slow," or "Requires Cash." They published these findings as "The Merchant's Guide," sold it for $25, and offered individual credit reports.

The Retail Credit Company continued to grow into one of the largest credit bureaus. By the 1960s it had nearly 300 branches in operationand was beginning to compile its data onto computers, giving many more companies access to this data—if they chose to purchase it.

They collected all kinds of consumer data;details about people including their marital troubles, jobs, school history, childhood, sex life, political activity and more. There was no limit to the kind or amount of data they were collecting, and they were scrutinized for selling this data to just about anyone who would buy it.

Some of the information was factual, while much of it was completely false—some was no more substantial than rumors! Equifax was even said to reward their employees for finding the most negative information about consumers.

In response, when the US Congress met in 1971 it enacted the Fair Credit Reporting Act. This new law was the first to govern the information credit bureaus and regulate what they were allowed to collect and sell.

Equifax that act like a spy of everyone in north America controlling when you buy anything how much how much debt you have is using this information stolen from everyday person in USA and Canada to sell stocks in open market. So it collects money from other people investors because has stolen info of every citizen. 

Net income‎: ‎US$ 488.8 million (2016)
Number of employees‎: ‎9,500 (2016)
Revenue‎: ‎US$ 3.144 billion (2016)
Key people‎: ‎Rego Barros Jr. (interim chief executive)

The system is too big to fail for such companies is not true. In India were the Canadian databases were exported for the telemarketing purposes was formed a system where Indians were hired to call Canadian from these databases to asked them for money  to pay old unpaid taxes and the money were transferred trough phone cards. That system generated jobs too unethical jobs. It was disabled. So there is hope that such companies should cease to exists.


Links
http://www.creditrepair-pro.com/equifax-exposed/
https://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/business-economy/equifax
https://keycreditrepair.com/brief-history-equifax/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equifax
https://theoutline.com/post/2366/it-s-worse-than-you-think?zd=1&zi=xadzssye
http://www.fundinguniverse.com/company-histories/equifax-inc-history/



Sunday, February 11, 2018

New York Apparitions of the Virgin Mary

Veronica Lueken (1923-1995), the seer of Bayside, was a married woman, a mother of five children. Up until June of 1968, She lived the life of an ordinary New York City housewife, with her husband Arthur, a retired purchasing agent, and their daughter and four sons. On the day that Robert F. Kennedy was shot to death in California by an assassin, Veronica experienced a perfume of roses when she responded to a radio appeal for prayers for the dying Senator.

Outdoor Rosary Vigils A short time later, St. Theresa the Little Flower (who has always been identified with roses, since her most famous promise, often quoted was —(“After my death, I will let fall a shower of roses from heaven” ) appeared to her, in her home, and the vision was shared by Veronica's son Raymond, who was 10 years old at the time.

Her early visions seemed to be a sort of preparation for the coming of Our Lady, who announced to her in 1970 that She wanted Rosary Vigils held outdoors. on the eves of all the great feast days of the Catholic Church.

These Vigils were to be held on the grounds of the old St. Robert Bellarmine's Church in the district of Bayside Hills, a division of Queens. one of  the five boroughs of New York City. Our Lady announced that She wanted a shrine established there, and that She was to be invoked under the title of OUR LADY OF THE ROSES. MARY HELP OF MOTHERS. She promised if these Vigils would be faithfully kept, despite weather conditions and disturbances.

She would appear to Veronica at each of the Vigils, and give heavenly messages of worldwide importance. She asked that the Holy Rosary be said Vigil location changed in June 1975 In June of 1975, because of the objections of the residents around St. Robert Bellarmine's Church to the prayer Vigils, the location of the Vigils was changed. Veronica was instructed by Our Lady to accept an offer she had received from the Police Chief to use the Vatican Pavilion at the old World's Fair Grounds in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park.

This is the site where Michelangelo's work of art—the “Pieta”, was exhibited during the 1965 World's Fair, and where Pope Paul VI, during his visit to New York on Oct. 4, 1965, stopped for a visit and gave a blessing. Veronica was told that this site would only be temporary, and that they would eventually be allowed to return to the original site.

Chastisement of a Ball of fire The Messages reveal the general state of evil in the world, the state of corruption within the Catholic Church, the evil within the Vatican itself, and the necessity of worldwide atonement to the Eternal Father to avoid chastisements, which, if not mitigated by universal penance and return to God and His Divine Laws, will be terrible beyond comprehension.

 They warn that a worldwide Warning, Miracle, and fiery Chastisement in the form of a "Ball of Redemption"—a comet which will strike the earth, and along with World War III and other disasters. will remove three-quarters of mankind—are very near at hand.             

Veronica in ecstasy being recorded as she repeats the Message from Heaven                                
continuously, aloud by all the pilgrims, during the Vigil. Jesus also appears and gives His own Message later in the evening.

And so, since June 18, 1970, thousands of people from all over the world have come to attend these Vigils, which are held in the open air despite all weather conditions. During this time, several hundred messages have been transmitted, with Veronica acting as a “voice box”—repeating the words from Heaven.

Saturday, February 10, 2018

Battery Park New York Manhattan





(1) Wagner Park The 3.5-acre park is named for Robert F. Wagner Jr. who served in a number of civic positions including former NYC deputy mayor. This park is a mixture of neatly cut lawns and densely planted gardens. Paths and walkways weave through it, and several public works of art are located here. It is one of the airiest and open parks in NYC as it sits right next to the Hudson River. You might even forget for a minute that you are in the huge metropolis that New York City is. But then you look out into the distance and see the Statue of Liberty and you remember exactly where you are. (2) Eyes

This stark, modernist sculpture is aptly named. The EYES were placed in Wagner Park in 1995 and are the work of the artist, Louise Bourgeois. You aren’t the only one staring at the beautiful waterfront vista. So are these giant granite eyeballs. (3) The Esplanade and Park

The Esplanade runs along the Hudson River all the way from Battery Park to the southern boundary of TriBeCa at Chambers Street. Benches are placed along the path which is wide and has plenty of room for runners, cyclists, and casual walkers. There are many groomed lawns so bring a blanket and plop down for a picnic or just some sunbathing.