The archives available on Cabot opium trade and combination with Perkins
look like a goldmine.  Fascinating!  I believe the Cabot family investments
may be very significant in the funneling of that dirty money 2-3 centuries
ago into the American Nazi-controlled military-industrial complex that we
are fighting today.

The money laundering arm of the Cabot family is intertwined with the Harvard
endowment.
http://www.newsmakingnews.com/lmharvardpart3.htm
Moors & Cabot, Inc. was  founded in 1890 by John F. Moors and Charles Cabot.
John F. Moors was the maternal grandfather of diplomat John Moors Cabot, and
his partner was named for an uncle, Charles Codman Cabot, a 1922 graduate of
Harvard, and a director of Old Colony Trust.  He was the brother of Henry
Cabot,  born in 1894, who was an investor and Harvard trustee, and who also
had a son named Henry B. Cabot, Jr.  They had another brother named Paul
Codman Cabot, who was born in 1898 and was in the Harvard class of 1921 and
then worked for the First National Bank of Boston and helped to found State
Street Research Investment Trust.  He became treasurer of the Harvard
Corporation in 1948.  Moors & Cabot was intended to handle the family
investments of the two founders and their friends, but the firm has grown to
include 22 branch offices and over 150 registered representatives
nationwide.  Headquartered in the heart of Boston's financial district, the
company is the oldest independent member of the Boston Stock Exchange and
one of the nation's oldest independent members of the New York Stock
Exchange. Since its inception, the firm has participated in the retail sale
of stocks and bonds to individuals and the institutional sale of stocks and
bonds to most of Boston's money management firms.....

After making a fortune in drugs, the family then set up and took control of
a quasi-government association that convinced the federal government to set
up a separate military branch for the air force, and then later branched out
into NASA with scientists imported from Nazi Germany.

http://www.newsmakingnews.com/lmharvardpart3.htm
Elise Cabot Forbes, wife of Ralph Emerson Forbes and daughter of Sam and
Eliza Cabot, was the sister of Samuel Cabot who  was an 1872 graduate of
M.I.T., and who studied chemistry in Zurich, Switzerland while exploring
various factories in Germany.  He returned to Chelsea, Massachusetts where
he set up a laboratory. http://www.nap.edu/books/0309054451/html/135.html
Sam and his brother, Godfrey Cabot, who graduated from Harvard in 1882,
bought a plant in Worthington, Pennsylvania to process coal tar into paints
and other products. Godfrey also spent a year studying in Zurich and two
years traveling in other parts of Europe.  After his return they built a
plant in West Virginia. Their biggest customer would become Standard Oil. In
1896, Godfrey returned to Europe and also visited  Russia.  In 1900, back in
the U.S. he became fascinated with airplanes and became a pilot before World
War I.  After the war he founded the National Aeronautic Association in
Washington, D.C., which would be the base on which the National Aeronautic
and Space Administration (NASA) was founded with the use of the technology
of the Operation Paperclip Nazi scientists rescued from war crimes
prosecution in Germany.

Godfrey Cabot's wife was Maria Moors (daughter of John F. Moors), and one of
their sons, Thomas Dudley Cabot,  born in 1897, received his bachelor's
degree in engineering from Harvard in 1919. Their Cabot Corporation became
the major producer of carbon black with nine plants in Texas and Oklahoma;
establishing an inroad into synthetic rubber production and the
manufacturing of paints and other chemicals. Thomas'  son, Louis W. Cabot,
also a Harvard graduate, was sent to England to build a carbon black plant
in Stanlow, using technology the British had taken from the Germans after
World War II ended. http://books.nap.edu/books/0309054451/html/index.html

Thomas Cabot and his brother, John Moors Cabot, and another relative, Kermit
Roosevelt--all graduates of Harvard--were involved in the coup in Guatemala
in the 1950s. John Moors Cabot, born in 1901, a 1923 Harvard graduate, was a
vice consul in  Peru 1927-28, in the Dominican Republic from 1929-31, Mexico
1931-32, Brazil 1932-35, then to the Netherlands until 1938 and Sweden in
1939.  From 1939-41 he was in Guatemala, becoming the chief of the division
of Caribbean and Central American affairs in 1944.  He was thereafter
stationed in Argentina, Yugoslavia and Shanghai, China, before becoming
minister to Finland, then Ambassador to Pakistan, Ambassador to Colombia
(1957-59); Ambassador to Brazil (1959-61); and Ambassador to Poland
(1962-65).   In 1953 he was the Assistant Secretary of State for
Inter-American Affairs (all according to Who's Who in America 1954-55). Also
see an excellent article by Dan Russell at
http://www.drugwar.com/neocolonialism.htm and list of papers at
http://www.cs.umb.edu/jfklibrary/arcnms.htm

See also:
www.newsmakingnews.com/lindaminorarchive.htm
http://www.newsmakingnews.com/lmharvardpart1.htm


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Tuesday, March 06, 2001 9:47 PM
Subject: Samuel Cabot, Jr. Ledger, 1814-1821


>from:
>http://www.library.hbs.edu/hc/sfa/samuelcabotjr.htm
>-----
>
>
>                                                        Samuel Cabot, Jr.
>                                                        Ledger, 1814-1821
>
>Mss: 766
>1814-1821
>C116
>
>Historical Note:
>
>Samuel Cabot, Jr., born in Boston on December 21, 1784, trained for the
>family ancestral career of foreign commerce. At age nineteen he went to sea
>and settled at Isle of France to learn the East India trade. In 1806,
Samuel
>Cabot, Jr. returned to the United States and formed a partnership with
>Samuel Hazard of Philadelphia. Moving to Philadelphia, Cabot and Hazard
>worked as wholesale commission agents. Leaving Hazard in Philadelphia,
>Cabot returned to Boston in 1808 and serviced the Boston market for the
>partnership. After his marriage in 1812, Samuel Cabot formed a
>partnership with his brother, Joseph, and John W. Perit of Philadelphia.
>Based in Philadelphia, Perit and Cabot maintained a Boston office with
Samuel
>Cabot as their representative. In 1817, Samuel Cabot formed another
>partnership with his brother-in-law, Thomas H. Perkins, and the latter's
>cousin,
>James Perkins. This additional family partnership, Samuel Cabot and James &
>T. H. Perkins' Sons & Company, brought substantial income to all
>concerned through the China trade. By the mid-1820s, Samuel Cabot removed
>himself from Perit and Cabot. He retired from active business in 1838
>and spent the rest of his life investing the abundant proceeds from his
>merchant days. Samuel Cabot, Jr. died in 1863.
>
>Scope and Content:
>
>This collection consists of one ledger containing two hundred sixty pages
of
>accounts from 1814 to 1824. At a later date, the first forty pages were
>used as a scrapbook with 1860s newspaper clippings pertaining to the Civil
>War pasted over the accounts. Beginning on page 41, the accounts remain
>as originally written and include both debits and credits. Representative
>names for the accounts include: Sales; Our One Quarter Sch. Happy Couple;
>George G. Lee; Joseph Cabot's Expense Account; Third Voyage Bark Pedler;
>Samuel Cabot; Commissions; James and Thomas H. Perkins;
>Shipment of Pacific to St. Domingo; Shipment of Schooner Juno; John W.
Perit;
>Perit and Cabot; Oliver, Borland & Abbott; Ebenezer Stocker;
>William Stephens; Coffee Purchase; Francis Oliver; Sales of Sugar; Thomas
>Lee; Frederick Cabot; Ship Amistad; Shipment to Alexandria; Shipment
>of Schooner Sukey; James Perkins, Jr.; Merchandize; Notes Payable; Thomas
>Hollingsworth; Hall & Russell; Shipment for schooner Victory;
>Plimpton & Marett; William Dodd; Cash; Farm at Temple; William Appleton;
>Andrew Cunningham; schooner William; Thomas Thaxter; Lemons for
>schooner Miller; George Pearle; John Hancock; Bridge & Beale; William Tuck;
>Peter Windsor; Leon Blain; John Bromfield, John Anderson and
>others.
>
>Provenance : Gift of Philip Cabot, 1937
>
>Amount: 1 volume
>-----
>Aloha, He'Ping,
>Om, Shalom, Salaam.
>Em Hotep, Peace Be,
>All My Relations.
>Omnia Bona Bonis,
>Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
>Amen.
>Roads End
>



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