Friday, April 4, 2014
The Renfrew who assassinated Lincoln
Editors Note: All you get today millionaires until you donate.
As another Lame Cherry exclusive in matter anti matter.
I reveal here a reality in inquiring of you the name of the man who shot Abraham Lincoln at Ford's Theater, and you of course would state his name was John Wilkes Booth, and of course you would be wrong.
For the first time I will tell you the name of the conspirator who assassinated President Abraham Lincoln, and his name was Renfrew.
I also inform you that the group which assassinated President Lincoln was connected to Secretary of War, Stanton.
The reality of this story starts in that valley which connects Washington DC with Richmond, Virginia, in the Shenandoah. This was a Confederate hotbed of activity, support and numerous battles in a seesaw occupation of Confederates one day and Unionists the next.
There was operating in this theater or war, like in numerous border areas, guerrillas. Their names were the elder McNeil, young Jesse McNeil, Woodson, Gilmore, White and the legendary Mosby.
Young Jesse McNeil would make a daring dash into Maryland and capture generals Crook and Kelly with his band and accomplish this task with so much agility that they outran the Union Calvary.
This group of irregulars detained a huge force of Army of the Shenandoah in guard duty, as they were such a menace.
Spies were of first resort in this in both the Union and Confederate lines. General Philip Sheridan employed his own Scouts and his own loyalist spy network. Sheridan was very careful in this and astute in suspecting everyone he came across.
It was in this though that a man named Lomas entered his camp who said he was a "Marylander". Lomas came "highly recommended" by Sec. of War Stanton as being a source of information on Confederate activity.
General Sheridan though was not so unsuspecting and kept a close watch on this spy.
The problem as General Sheridan noted, was that his group of Scouts would confirm what Lomas was telling Sheridan, but there would always be enough discrepancies in Lomas' story to have the General conclude that Lomas was a double spy in feeding information to the Union for the benefit of the Confederacy.
The General concluded with a close watch Lomas could do little harm, and might just be a source to feed Confederate General Jubal Early false information when the campaig season would start.
Lomas was a master manipulator as General Sheridan noted, in he was always making pretensions in being over anxious in building to a climax of some "vital" information.
Sheridan put Lomas to the test in giving him the task of destroying the railroad bridges east of Lynchburg, Virginia. In this, Lomas was soliciting the employment of a man named Renfrew, who he said had been part of Mosby's gang, but that a falling out had taken place between Renfrew and Mosby, and now Renfrew would work with the Union.
Previously in this, General Sheridan had sent his Cavalry under General Merritt to sweep up all livestock and burn the grain in the mountainous area of the Shenandoah, the Loudoun Valley, where Mosby always retreated to when he felt trouble was on the way. Mosby's resources had been cut off.
The interview with Renfrew as a most interesting one, in the man appeared at General Sheridan's tent at 12 o'clock at midnight. It was like some Sherlock Holmes scene of disguise as Renfrew proceeded to unmask himself of "various contrivances to conceal his identity" before the General, and the General found before him a slender, handsome and dark complexioned man who was of comfortable conversation and captivating manners.
General Sheridan examining Renfrew discovered he was the real article in having been intimate with Mosby in knowing details of the chief guerrilla and his men.
Upon this, Sheridan sent the duo away on the mission to destroy the railroad bridges by Lynchburg under the watchful eye of his chief Scout, Captain Young and his men.
The duo set off and went to Strasburg and not Lynchburg, where they remained concealed for days, communicating with the Confederates. They then returned to Sheridan's headquarters reporting their failure which was due to extreme hazards they had faced as proof of how loyal they were to the Union cause.
Sheridan knowing for certain now he had Confederate agents on his hands, decided to use them in a ploy to feed information to General Jubal Early that a fox hunt was to take place, which was a ruse to move Sheridan's men out for an early campaign against the Confederates.
Sheridan took great pains in this, in producing a pack of hounds and showing the duo foxes which had been captured previously.
The duo set off again this time to Newton to communicate the intelligence of the fox hunt to the Confederates, and after doing so they were arrested and taken into custody.
On the way to prison at Fort Warren, Lomas and Renfrew escaped their guards at Baltimore and were never heard from again by General Sheridan.......until after the assassination of Abraham Lincoln.
It was at this point that Sec. of War Stanton confided in General Sheridan, that he was certain that Lomas was involved with the conspirators who assassinated Abraham Lincoln. At that point, General Sheridan was almost certain that the good looking, talented spymaster he had interviewed as Renfrew bore a strong resemblance to John Wilkes Booth's pictures.
John Wilkes Booth was not some "actor" as has been portrayed moving in theater circles with a disgruntled mob, but was instead part of a well organized guerrilla movement operating in America, with full support of the Confederate government and associations with European cartel masters guiding the South in the rebellion.
Recall in this the heinous nature which the South went to in this war, in mirroring exactly the European Empires in attempting to instigate the Indian terrorists of the west to go on rampage. In the mid part of the war, the Sioux on the Little Minnesota River had an outbreak in mass, gang raping, butchering, robbing and murdering hosts of Minnesotans as part of this Confederate intrigue.
The spymaster Lomas was in intimate contact with the Secretary of War of Lincoln's United States and was highly recommended. This was a premier espionage operation of double intelligence and not some individual acting out alone, as the Confederates were feeding Lomas directly specific intelligence.
When the Shenandoah campaign was unleashed, which was the decisive blow in crippling General Lee's Army of Northern Virginia of resupply of men and food, the two best Confederate agents were employed to turn the tide against General Sheridan, for in the Cedar Creek counterattack by General Early, one of the main objects was to capture General Sheridan at his headquarters, but he was away at the time meeting with Sec. of War Stanton in Washington, and only arrived later to save the day.
His riding through Winchester puzzled him as women there were shaking their dresses at him in contempt. They knew Early's attack was coming and were already celebrating Sheridan's demise.
Renfrew known as the actor John Wilkes Booth had moved from stage, to the stage of a terror campaign with the chief guerrilla in Virginia in Mosby. This is where John Wilkes Booth was a great deal in moving from the Union with ease out to the Maryland conduit and down into the Shenandoah in Virginia to report his intelligence as much as Lomas was engaged.
This is Booth's hidden past as spymaster of the Confederates and contact with the European cartel. He was sent in to murder Abraham Lincoln to break up the "reunification of absence of malice toward all" after the war which would be a threat toward the European operation in keeping a divided America, and as a last desperate gamble of ending Lincoln might somehow so shock the North that the South would survive independent.
President Jefferson Davis' intelligence chief knew Lomas, met him, and was aware of the activity which Lomas engaged in with Sec. of War Stanton. Lomas was the link to Renfrew or John Wilkes Booth as a control.
The European cartel was operating under diplomatic immunity spy rings both in Washington and Richmond Virginia. This was the nefarious link to all parties.
The first operation against Abraham Lincoln was based on the Jesse McNeil kidnapping of generals Crook and Kelly. This having failed by the Renfrew guerrillas, it was adjusted to the murder of Abraham Lincoln.
Washington diplomatic society was feeding John Wilkes Booth the comings and goings of Lincoln, and this is how Booth and his group knew to be at Ford's Theater.
It was known in the Confederate government of Jefferson Davis, that Abraham Lincoln was to be kidnapped, moved to Maryland, and then down the Shenandoah Valley, where President Lincoln would be turned over to General Jubal Early, for transportation to Richmond, where as hostage, the Confederacy would sue for peace in a cessation of hostilities and their independence.
This plot did not originate in Richmond, but from the London Home Office with the Rothschilds instigating it.
With Renfrew's guerrillas failing at this, Renfrew was moved to shoot President Lincoln as the last desperate chance. With the realities that Lomas was intimate with the Lincoln Administration, and directly connected to Sec. of War Stanton, and was directly connected to John Wilkes Booth as Renfrew, with a few diplomatic whispers from London, and an America intent on revenge, it behooved those associated with Renfrew and Lomas to hang the assassins and then keep their mouths shut.
The Confederates were not about to reveal their spy ring and part in this, as they would have been all hung likewise.
General Lee benefited greatly from this spy network and it was this information which greatly enhanced his abilities to victory.
It is the hidden story of John Wilkes Booth, that he was a guerrilla with Mosby for some time and part of an extended spy network in his identity as Renfrew.
The first time this information has ever been made public in another Lame Cherry exclusive in matter anti matter. I do not sell you Jerome Corsi cut and paste here, nor produce 200 pages of filler, but I do expect the people with money to donate as no one else has the ability of bringing this wide array of information to the public understanding.
"I learned that, after the assassination of, Mr. Lincoln, Secretary Stanton strongly suspected his friend Lomas of being associated with the conspirators, and it then occurred to me that the good-looking Renfrew may have been Wilkes Booth, for he certainly bore a strong resemblance to Booth's pictures."
Personal Memoirs of P. H. Sheridan, General, United States Army
The intrigue of the Europeans in this was well understood and immediately after the defeat and surrender of General Lee, the assassination of Abraham Lincoln gripped the nation. In that, General Grant ordered General Sheridan immediately to the west to either fight General Kirby Smith of the Confederates or make him surrender.
Sheridan would command a huge force, and Grant ordered a large part deployed on the Rio Grande, due to the reality that Maximilian of the French and Austrian Empires had invaded Mexico. Observe the link which General Grant expresses:
"As a matter of fact, he looked upon the invasion of Mexico by Maximilian as a part of the rebellion itself, because of the encouragement that invasion had received from the Confederacy, and that our success in putting down secession would never be complete till the French and Austrian invaders were compelled to quit the territory of our sister republic."
Personal Memoirs of P. H. Sheridan, General, United States Army
Those were the realities of this in how coordinated the Confederate States of American and certain European powers were working in league for the overthrow of the Americas.
The one dimensional mind has been conditioned to believe that it was one Lincoln and one Booth and that was the end of the story. The real history is one of international intrigue and spymasters as assassins and bringing the invasion of the Americans by the European powers.
A Lame Cherry exclusive in matter anti matter.
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