Saturday, January 18, 2020

Repost: COLOR CODED CHART FOR HEIGHTENED AWARENESS SHOWING THE CONNECTIONS OF SOME OF THE HATERS OF PEOPLE OF COLOR - Part Two (2)

Updated: COLOR CODED CHART FOR HEIGHTENED AWARENESS SHOWING THE CONNECTIONS OF SOME OF THE HATERS OF PEOPLE OF COLOR - Part Two (2)

 IOLANI - The Royal Hawk Vol VI No. 684 Special: A New Year's Gift - A Gift of Truth  


                                             COLOR CODED CHART FOR HEIGHTENED AWARENESS SHOWING THE CONNECTIONS OF SOME OF THE HATERS OF PEOPLE OF COLOR - Part Two (2) - The Secretary's of State

                                                                         Reviewed by Amelia Gora (2017)

Color Codes used:

Yellow for Slave Holders, etc.
Green for those who defended Slavery
Light Blue for those who lived in the Southern States - the Losers of the American Civil War
Red is for those with the bloodlines of the British Royalty, U.S. President Washington and Robert E. Lee Families



Chronological List of Secretary's of State

No.PortraitNameState of residenceTook officeLeft officePresident(s)
John JayJohn Jay[A]
ActingSlave Holder
New YorkSeptember 26, 1789March 22, 1790George Washington
1Thomas JeffersonThomas Jefferson[M]Slave HolderVirginiaCMarch 22, 1790December 31, 1793
2Edmund RandolphEdmund J. RandolphVirginiaCJanuary 2, 1794August 20, 1795
3Timothy PickeringTimothy PickeringMassachusettsAugust 20, 1795December 10, 1795[B]
December 10, 1795March 4, 1797
March 4, 1797May 12, 1800John Adams
Charles Lee, AG.pngCharles Lee[C]
Acting
VirginiaCMay 13, 1800June 5, 1800
4John MarshallJohn MarshallVirginiaCJune 13, 1800March 4, 1801
LeviLincoln.gifLevi Lincoln Sr.[C]
Acting
MassachusettsMarch 5, 1801May 1, 1801Thomas Jefferson
5James MadisonJames Madison[M]VirginiaCMay 2, 1801March 3, 1809
6Robert SmithRobert SmithMarylandMarch 6, 1809April 1, 1811James Madison
7James MonroeJames Monroe[M]VirginiaCApril 2, 1811March 3, 1817
John Graham
Acting
KentuckyMarch 4, 1817March 9, 1817James Monroe
Portrait of Richard Rush.jpgRichard Rush[C]
Acting
PennsylvaniaMarch 10, 1817September 22, 1817
8John Quincy AdamsJohn Quincy Adams[M]MassachusettsSeptember 22, 1817March 3, 1825
Daniel Brent
Acting
VirginiaMarch 4, 1825March 7, 1825John Quincy Adams
9Henry ClayHenry ClayKentuckyMarch 7, 1825March 3, 1829
James A. Hamilton
Acting
New YorkMarch 4, 1829March 27, 1829Andrew Jackson
10Martin Van BurenMartin Van Buren[M]New YorkMarch 28, 1829May 23, 1831
11Edward LivingstonEdward LivingstonLouisianaMay 24, 1831May 29, 1833
12Louis McLaneLouis McLaneDelawareMay 29, 1833June 30, 1834
13John ForsythJohn ForsythGeorgiaCJuly 1, 1834March 4, 1837
March 4, 1837March 3, 1841Martin Van Buren
Jacob L. Martin
Acting
District of ColumbiaMarch 4, 1841March 5, 1841William Harrison
14Daniel WebsterDaniel WebsterMassachusettsMarch 6, 1841April 4, 1841
April 4, 1841May 8, 1843John Tyler
Hugh S. Legaré.jpgHugh S. Legaré
Acting
South CarolinaMay 9, 1843June 20, 1843
William S. Derrick
Acting
PennsylvaniaJune 21, 1843June 23, 1843
15Abel P. UpshurAbel P. UpshurVirginiaJune 24, 1843July 23, 1843[D]
July 24, 1843February 28, 1844
John NelsonJohn Nelson[C]
Acting
MarylandFebruary 29, 1844March 31, 1844
16John C. CalhounJohn C. CalhounSouth CarolinaApril 1, 1844March 10, 1845[E]
17James BuchananJames Buchanan[M]PennsylvaniaMarch 10, 1845March 7, 1849[E]James K. Polk[E]
18John M. ClaytonJohn M. ClaytonDelawareMarch 8, 1849July 9, 1850Zachary Taylor
July 9, 1850July 22, 1850Millard Fillmore
19Daniel WebsterDaniel WebsterMassachusettsJuly 23, 1850October 24, 1852
Charles Magill Conrad.jpgCharles M. Conrad[B]
Acting
LouisianaOctober 25, 1852November 5, 1852
20Edward EverettEdward EverettMassachusettsNovember 6, 1852March 3, 1853
William Hunter (Asst. Sec. of State).jpgWilliam Hunter[F]
Acting
Rhode IslandMarch 4, 1853March 7, 1853Franklin Pierce
21William L. MarcyWilliam L. MarcyNew YorkMarch 7, 1853March 6, 1857[E]
22Lewis CassLewis CassMichiganMarch 6, 1857December 14, 1860James Buchanan
William Hunter (Asst. Sec. of State).jpgWilliam Hunter
Acting
Rhode IslandDecember 15, 1860December 16, 1860
23Jermiah S. BlackJeremiah S. BlackPennsylvaniaDecember 17, 1860March 5, 1861[E]
24William H. SewardWilliam H. SewardNew YorkMarch 5, 1861April 15, 1865Abraham Lincoln
April 15, 1865March 4, 1869Andrew Johnson
25Elihu B. WashburneElihu B. WashburneIllinoisMarch 5, 1869March 16, 1869Ulysses S. Grant
26Hamilton FishHamilton FishNew YorkMarch 17, 1869March 4, 1877
March 4, 1877March 12, 1877[E]Rutherford B. Hayes[E]
27William M. EvartsWilliam M. EvartsNew YorkMarch 12, 1877March 7, 1881
28James G. BlaineJames G. BlaineMaineMarch 7, 1881September 19, 1881James A. Garfield
September 19, 1881December 19, 1881Chester A. Arthur
29Frederick T. FrelinghuysenFrederick Theodore FrelinghuysenNew JerseyDecember 19, 1881March 6, 1885[E]
30Thomas F. BayardThomas F. BayardDelawareMarch 7, 1885March 6, 1889Grover Cleveland[E]
31James G. BlaineJames G. BlaineMaineMarch 7, 1889June 4, 1892Benjamin Harrison
William F. Wharton.jpgWilliam F. Wharton[G]
Acting
MassachusettsJune 4, 1892June 29, 1892
32John W. FosterJohn W. FosterIndianaJune 29, 1892February 23, 1893
-William F. Wharton.jpgWilliam F. Wharton[G]
Acting
MassachusettsFebruary 24, 1893March 6, 1893
Grover Cleveland
33Walter Q. GreshamWalter Q. GreshamIndianaMarch 7, 1893May 28, 1895
Edwin F. UhlEdwin F. Uhl[G]
Acting
MichiganMay 28, 1895June 9, 1895
34Richard OlneyRichard OlneyMassachusettsJune 10, 1895March 5, 1897[E]
35John ShermanJohn ShermanOhioMarch 6, 1897April 27, 1898William McKinley
36William R. DayWilliam R. DayOhioApril 28, 1898September 16, 1898
AAAoftheState.jpgAlvey A. Adee[H]
Acting
New YorkSeptember 17, 1898September 29, 1898
37John HayJohn HayDistrict of ColumbiaSeptember 30, 1898September 14, 1901
September 14, 1901July 1, 1905Theodore Roosevelt
Francis B. Loomis (sketch).gifFrancis B. Loomis[G]
Acting
OhioJuly 1, 1905July 18, 1905
38Elihu RootElihu RootNew YorkJuly 19, 1905January 27, 1909
39Robert BaconRobert BaconNew YorkJanuary 27, 1909March 5, 1909[E]
40Philander C. KnoxPhilander C. KnoxPennsylvaniaMarch 6, 1909March 5, 1913William Howard Taft[E]
41William Jennings BryanWilliam Jennings BryanNebraskaMarch 5, 1913June 9, 1915Woodrow Wilson
42Robert LansingRobert LansingNew YorkJune 9, 1915June 23, 1915
June 24, 1915February 13, 1920
Frank PolkFrank Polk[I]
Acting
New YorkFebruary 14, 1920March 12, 1920
43Bainbridge ColbyBainbridge ColbyNew YorkMarch 23, 1920March 4, 1921
44Charles Evans HughesCharles Evans HughesNew YorkMarch 5, 1921August 2, 1923Warren G. Harding
August 2, 1923March 4, 1925Calvin Coolidge
45Frank B. KelloggFrank B. KelloggMinnesotaMarch 5, 1925March 4, 1929
March 4, 1929March 28, 1929Herbert Hoover
46Henry L. StimsonHenry L. StimsonNew YorkMarch 28, 1929March 4, 1933
47Cordell HullCordell HullTennesseeCMarch 4, 1933November 30, 1944Franklin D. Roosevelt
48Edward Stettinius Jr.Edward Stettinius Jr.VirginiaCDecember 1, 1944April 12, 1945
April 12, 1945June 27, 1945Harry S. Truman
Ambassador Grew.jpgJoseph Grew[I]
Acting
New HampshireJune 28, 1945July 3, 1945
49James F. ByrnesJames F. ByrnesSouth CarolinaJuly 3, 1945January 21, 1947
50George C. MarshallGeorge C. MarshallPennsylvaniaJanuary 21, 1947January 20, 1949
51Dean G. AchesonDean AchesonConnecticutJanuary 21, 1949January 20, 1953
H. Freeman Matthews 1956.jpgHarrison F. Matthews[I]
Acting
MarylandJanuary 20, 1953January 21, 1953Dwight D. Eisenhower
52John Foster DullesJohn Foster DullesNew YorkJanuary 21, 1953April 22, 1959
53Christian A. HerterChristian HerterMassachusettsApril 22, 1959January 20, 1961
Livingston T. Merchant.jpgLivingston T. Merchant
Acting
District of ColumbiaJanuary 20, 1961January 21, 1961John F. Kennedy
54Dean RuskDean RuskNew YorkJanuary 21, 1961November 22, 1963
November 22, 1963January 20, 1969Lyndon B. Johnson
Charles Bohlen.pngCharles E. Bohlen
Acting
District of ColumbiaJanuary 20, 1969January 22, 1969Richard Nixon
55William P. RogersWilliam P. RogersMarylandJanuary 22, 1969September 3, 1973
Kenneth-Rush-1977.jpgKenneth Rush
Acting
FloridaSeptember 3, 1973September 22, 1973
56Henry A. KissingerHenry KissingerDistrict of ColumbiaSeptember 22, 1973August 9, 1974
August 9, 1974January 20, 1977[1]Gerald Ford
Philiphabib cropped.jpgPhilip Habib
Acting
CaliforniaJanuary 20, 1977January 23, 1977Jimmy Carter
57Cyrus R. VanceCyrus VanceWest VirginiaJanuary 23, 1977April 28, 1980[2]
Warren Christopher.jpgWarren Christopher[K][3]
Acting
CaliforniaApril 28, 1980May 2, 1980
David D. Newsom[L][3]
Acting
May 2, 1980May 3, 1980
Richard N. Cooper[N][3]
Acting
May 3, 1980
David D. Newsom[L][3]
Acting
May 3, 1980May 4, 1980
Warren Christopher.jpgWarren Christopher[K][3]
Acting
CaliforniaMay 4, 1980May 8, 1980
58Edmund MuskieEdmund MuskieMaineMay 8, 1980January 20, 1981[4]
59Alexander HaigAlexander HaigConnecticutJanuary 22, 1981July 5, 1982[5]Ronald Reagan
Walter J. Stoessel Jr.Walter J. Stoessel Jr.[K]
Acting
CaliforniaJuly 5, 1982July 16, 1982
60George P. ShultzGeorge P. ShultzCaliforniaJuly 16, 1982January 20, 1989[6]
Michael ArmacostMichael Armacost[L]
Acting
MarylandJanuary 20, 1989January 25, 1989George H. W. Bush
61James BakerJames BakerTexasCJanuary 25, 1989August 23, 1992[7]
62Lawrence EagleburgerLawrence EagleburgerWisconsinAugust 23, 1992December 8, 1992[K][8]
December 8, 1992January 19, 1993[9]
Arnold Kanter[L][10]
Acting
VirginiaCJanuary 20, 1993Bill Clinton
Frank G. Wisner as Ambassador.pngFrank G. Wisner[O][10]
Acting
District of ColumbiaJanuary 20, 1993
63Warren ChristopherWarren ChristopherCaliforniaJanuary 20, 1993January 17, 1997[11]
64Madeleine AlbrightMadeleine AlbrightDistrict of ColumbiaJanuary 23, 1997January 20, 2001[12]
65Colin PowellColin PowellVirginiaJanuary 20, 2001January 26, 2005[13]George W. Bush
66Condoleezza RiceCondoleezza RiceCaliforniaJanuary 26, 2005January 20, 2009[14]
AmbassadorBurns.jpgWilliam Joseph Burns
Acting
District of ColumbiaJanuary 20, 2009January 21, 2009[15]Barack Obama
67Hillary Clinton official Secretary of State portrait crop.jpgHillary ClintonNew YorkJanuary 21, 2009February 1, 2013[16]
68John KerryJohn KerryMassachusettsFebruary 1, 2013January 20, 2017[17]
Thomas ShannonTom Shannon
Acting
MinnesotaJanuary 20, 2017February 1, 2017[18][19][20]Donald Trump
69Rex Tillerson

TexasCFebruary 1, 2017Incumbent



Reference:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Secretaries_of_State_of_the_United_States
httphttps://study.com/academy/flashcards/slavery-in-the-early-united-states-flashcards.htmls://study.com/academy/lesson/who-was-edmund-randolph-biography-facts-quotes.html

and other researches by Amelia Gora.


The yellow highlights in the above chart shows which of the U.S. Presidents and U.S. Secretary of States owned slaves based on this list:

1. George Washington owned slaves while president.

2. John Adams did not own slaves.

3. Thomas Jefferson owned slaves while president.  As Secretary of State owned slaves.

4. James Madison owned slaves while president.

5. James Monroe owned slaves while president.

6. John Quincy Adams did not own slaves.

7. Andrew Jackson owned slaves while president.

8. Martin Van Buren owned slaves, but not while he was president.

9. William Henry Harrison owned slaves, but not while he was president.

10. John Tyler owned slaves while president.

11. James K. Polk owned slaves while president.



12. Zachary Taylor was the last president who owned slaves during his presidency..


13. Millard Fillmore did not own slaves.

14. Franklin Pierce did not own slaves.


15. James Buchanan did not own slaves, although some may disagree.

16. Abraham Lincoln did not own slaves.


17. Andrew Johnson owned slaves, but not while he was president.

18. Ulysses S Grant owned slaves, but not while he was president.  He was the last president who did.



References:  http://pres-slaves.zohosites.com/


https://www.economist.com/blogs/democracyinamerica/2011/07/founders-and-slavery



U.S. Presidents who defended Slavery are highlighted green asterisk:




1. Slave Trader

Andrew Jackson

Many presidents who owned slaves found it abhorrent to sell one, even if they needed the money.  Lincoln observed that many slaveowners would not shake the hand of a slave-trader.  But for some years Jackson made part of his living doing just that.

2. Permanent commitment ot Slavery
Thomas Jefferson
James Madison
James Monroe
James K. Polk 
Zachary Taylor 
John Tyler
Each of these presidents owned slaves for all of their adult lives, and none of them freed the people in their wills.  Some owned over a hundred, some owned only a few, but all owned "as many as they could get."

3.  Lifetime commitment to slavery.
George Washington
Unlike the men in category 2, Washington arranged that his slaves would be freed after he and his wife died.  They could not free the slaves Martha had inherited from her first husband except by buying them from the estate.  They did not do so.



4.  Interrupted slaveowners

William Henry Harrison
Andrew Johnson





Harrison owned slaves until he moved to the (free) Northwest Territory.  He converted his slaves to indentured servants and urged Congress to permit slavery in the territory.  Later in life he claimed to have belonged to an abolitionist organization as a youth ; still later he claimed it was just a humane society.


Johnson  was a Democratic pro-union Senator from Confederate Tennessee.  Rebel forces confiscated his slaves and at that point things get murky.  Some reports say they were given back.  Johnson says that at least some them came back on their own and he treated them as free employees from then on.  If he had any slaves left  he certainly freed them when, as Military Governor of Tennessee, he freed all of the slaves in the state in 1864.
5.  Minimum slaveownership.
Martin Van Buren
Ulysses S Grant
Martin Van Buren inherited slaves.   Twenty years before he became president his only slave ran away.  When the slave was caught eight years later he offered him for sale.

Grant apparently never bought or sold slaves but his wife received some from her father, and he used the labor of other of his father-in-law's slaves.  There is a certificate signed by Grant freeing a slave.
6.  Technically non-slaveowner
James Buchanan
Buchanan certainly thought he was not a slaveowner.  When running for the Senate he bought his brother-in-law's slaves and freed them so that no one could say there were slaves in the family.  But when he "freed" them he actually converted them to indentured servants who had to work for him for seven years in one case, and 23 years in the case of a child.
7.  Accidental non-slaveowner
Franklin Pierce
Pierce was from a free state and owned no slaves but he defended the rights of southerners to do so.
8. Passive anti-slavery.
John Adams
Millard Fillmore
While he called it "an evil of colossal magnitude," most of Adams' public arguments against slavery seemed practical.  He didn't want slaves in his country for the same reason he didn't want gunpowder in his kitchen: too dangerous.

Fillmore said he despised slavery, but as president he felt he had a constitutional duty to defend it.
9.  Active anti-slavery
John Quincy Adams
Abraham Lincoln
John Quincy Adams did nothing about slavery while president (in fact, he did almost nothing useful about anything while president).   However, he later entered the House of Representatives  (the only ex-president to do so successfully), from which battled  slavery for many years.

Lincoln was consistently anti-slavery, though not always pro-abolitionist.  The South expected him to move against slavery and that is one of the reasons they seceded.  Lincoln felt constitutionally justified in freeing the slaves in the rebel states as a war measure.  He did not attempt to free the slaves in Northern territory.





Reference:  http://pres-slaves.zohosites.com/ranking-the-presidents.html





U.S. PRESIDENTS RELATED:


 U.S. President George Washington married to Martha Washington heirs was Robert E. Lee, a Confederate General


Who was Robert E. Lee?

"In 1861, President Abraham Lincoln offered General Lee the opportunity to command the entire Union Army. Lee, however, chose to follow his heart which was with his home state of Virginia. When Virginia seceded from the Union, Lee went with her.
A year later General Lee was the commander of the Army of Northern Virginia and soon established himself as the greatest tactician and leader of the war. One has to wonder how different the war may have gone had Lee accepted Lincoln's offer.
One of the more interesting and ironic aspects about General Lee's ancestry is his relationship to President George Washington. It is commonly known that Robert E. Lee married Mary Custis, great-granddaughter to Martha Washington and step-great-granddaughter to George Washington.
What isn't so well known is that Robert E. Lee and George Washington were 3rd cousins, 2 times removed through their common ancestor of Augustine Warner. It is ironic how one fought so hard to create the Union while the other fought to split it in two."

Some of his relatives signed the Declaration of Independence:


United States Declaration of Independence


United States Declaration of Independence
The United States Declaration of Independence is the statement adopted by the Second Continental Congress meeting at the Pennsylvania State House in Philadelphia on July 4, 1776, which announced that the thirteen American colonies, then at war with the Kingdom of Great Britain, regarded themselves as thirteen independent sovereign states, no longer …

The United States Declaration of Independence is the statement adopted by the Second Continental Congress meeting at the Pennsylvania State House in Philadelphia on July 4, 1776, which announced that the thirteen American colonies, then at war with the Kingdom of Great Britain, regarded themselves as thirteen independent sovereign states, no longer under British rule. These states would found a new nation – the United States of America. John Adams was a leader in pushing for independence, which was passed on July 2 with no opposing vote cast. A committee of five had already drafted the formal declaration, to be ready when Congress voted on independence.



Signatory's of the Declaration of Independence who were part of the Families of George Washington his wife Martha and Robert E. Lee - Confederate General - Haters of People of Color:

 The Declaration of Independence 1776 Signatories

There were four (4) signators related to U.S. President George Washington and wife Martha who owned stocks in the Bank of England.



More connections >>

Benjamin Harrison V

Signer of the Declaration of Independence
1st cousin 2 times removed via Col. Robert "King" Carter

More connections >>

Richard Henry Lee

Signer of the Declaration of Independence
1st cousin 2 times removed via Richard Lee II

More connections >>

Francis Lightfoot Lee

Signer of the Declaration of Independence
1st cousin 2 times removed via Richard Lee II

More connections >>

Thomas Nelson

Signer of the Declaration of Independence
2nd cousin 1 time removed via Col. Robert "King" Carter



American Civil War Period 1861 - 1865

Highlighted Information or the Dynamics of Southern Attitudes
"Southerners are a peculiar breed of men, on whom time produces no effect whatever, and who feel about things that happened twenty years ago just as they feel about things which happened a month ago."



"Some of us at the North think their minds are occupied with schemes for the assassination and spoliation of negroes, and for a "new rebellion." Their minds are really occupied with making money, and the farms show it, and their designs on the negro are confined to getting him to work for low wages."



"They were evidently laborer and employer to each other, and nothing more."





Add the Southern States:



"Eleven states left the United States in the following order and formed the Confederate States of America: South Carolina, Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Texas, Virginia, Arkansas, North Carolina, and Tennessee."





Add the U.S. Presidents Since 1861 (Confederate States of America formed) through 2017:



Name of President                                              State Born In

15. James Buchanan                                              Pennsylvania
16. Abraham Lincoln                                            Kentucky
17. Andrew Johnson                                             North Carolina                      Confederate State
18. Ulysses S. Grant                                              Ohio
19. Rutherford B. Hayes                                        Ohio
20. James Garfield                                                 Ohio
21. Chester A. Arthur                                            Vermont
22. Grover Cleveland                                             New Jersey
23. Benjamin Harrison                                           Ohio
24. Grover Cleveland                                             New Jersey
25. William McKinley                                            Ohio                          20th Century
26. Theodore Roosevelt                                          New York - banking influence
27. William Howard Taft                                        Ohio
28. Woodrow Wilson                                              Virginia                              Confederate State
29. Warren G. Harding                                            Ohio
30. Calvin Coolidge                                                 Vermont
31. Herbert Hoover                                                   Iowa
32. Franklin D. Roosevelt                                         New York - banking influence
33. Harry S. Truman                                                 Missouri
34. Dwight D. Eisenhower                                       Texas                      Confederate State
35. John F. Kennedy                                                 Massachusetts
36. Lyndon B. Johnson                                             Texas                     Confederate State
37. Richard M. Nixon                                               California
38. Gerald R. Ford                                                    Nebraska
39. James Carter                                                       Georgia               Confederate State
40. Ronald Reagan                                                    Illinois              
41. George H. W. Bush                                             Massachusetts-lived in Texas Confederate State
42. William J. Clinton                                               Arkansas             Confederate State
21st Century
43. George W. Bush                                                  Connecticut -lived in Texas  Confederate State
44. Barack Obama                                                     Kenya or Kingdom of Hawaii
45. Donald J. Trump                                                 New York


References:  
https://www.whitehouse.gov/about-the-white-house/presidents/
other researches by Amelia Gora

The Confederate State Presidents are marked with "C".



The following are some of those who have affected American Indians, Blacks/African Americans, Hawaiians/kanaka maoli or the three (3) Primary Groups of People of Color in the United States:




President George Washington and wife Martha; Robert E. Lee's Families



George Washington1st U.S. President
3rd cousin 2 times removed via Augustine Warner


Note:  The bloodlines of George Washington and wife Martha; Robert E. Lee are marked with red (blood) and marked "&"








3rd U.S. President and Signer of the Declaration of Independence
2nd cousin 2 times removed via Col. William Randolph of Turkey Island


More connections >>

James Madison
4th U.S. President
4th cousin 1 time removed via Richard Eltonhead

John Quincy Adams
6th U.S. President
11th cousin 1 time removed via Sir Thomas Stanley

9th U.S. President
2nd cousin 1 time removed via Col. Robert "King" Carter


John Tyler

10th U.S. President
5th cousin via William Armistead

More connections >>

Zachary Taylor


12th U.S. President
3rd cousin 1 time removed via Col. Richard Lee



 Grover Cleveland22nd and 24th U.S. President

12th cousin via William Mainwaring

Benjamin Harrison23rd U.S. President
3rd cousin 1 time removed via Col. Robert "King" Carter




26th U.S. President
5th cousin 4 times removed via John Carter of Christchurch, London, England








Jimmy Carter


39th U.S. President
5th cousin 6 times removed via John Carter of Christchurch, London, England







Barack Obama


44th U.S. President
5th cousin 8 times removed via Richard Eltonhead







Eleanor Roosevelt

First Lady of President Franklin D. Roosevelt
6th cousin 3 times removed via Thomas Ludlow





George H. W. Bush

41st U.S. President
9th cousin 6 times removed via Sir James Harington


George W. Bush



43rd U.S. President
9th cousin 7 times removed via Sir James Harington




Abigail (Smith) Adams


First Lady of President John Adams
11th cousin via Sir Thomas Stanley


George Clinton


4th U.S. Vice President
10th cousin 3 times removed via Sir Ralph Neville



John Quincy Adams

6th U.S. President
11th cousin 1 time removed via Sir Thomas Stanley


Alice (Lee) Roosevelt



First Wife of President Theodore Roosevelt
11th cousin 2 times removed via Richard Charlton




Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.


U.S. Supreme Court Justice
11th cousin 2 times removed via Sir Thomas Stanley


Franklin D. Roosevelt

32nd U.S. President
11th cousin 3 times removed via Sir Thomas Stanley



Jane (Appleton) Pierce

First Lady of President Franklin Pierce
12th cousin 1 time removed via Sir Ralph Neville






More connections >>

Lou (Henry) Hoover

First Lady of President Herbert Hoover
14th cousin 3 times removed via Sir Richard Sergeaux


Edith (Carow) RooseveltFirst Lady of President Theodore Roosevelt
19th cousin 2 times removed via Sir Geoffrey FitzPiers

More connections >>

Richard Nixon

37th U.S. President
15th cousin 4 times removed via Ralph de Stafford

Warren G. Harding

29th U.S. President
15th cousin 4 times removed via Ralph de Stafford

John D. RockefellerFounder of the Standard Oil Company
12th cousin 3 times removed via Sir John Beaufort

J.P. MorganAmerican Banker and Art Collector
18th cousin 1 time removed via Sir Humphrey de Bohun

More connections >>

J.P. Morgan, Jr.

American Banker and Philanthropist
18th cousin 2 times removed via Sir Humphrey de Bohun



Admiral George DeweyAdmiral of the Navy
20th cousin via Maud of Angus

Allen Dulles5th Director of the C.I.A.
12th cousin 2 times removed via William Mainwaring

John Foster Dulles

52nd U.S. Secretary of State
12th cousin 2 times removed via William Mainwaring

Lt. Gen. James BrudenellLeader of the “Charge of the Light Brigade”
10th cousin via Richard Cave


General George C. MarshallAuthor of “The Marshall Plan”
4th cousin 4 times removed via Katherine

More connections >>

General George S. Patton

U.S. Army - World War II
4th cousin 5 times removed via Katherine




American Revolutionary War Hero
12th cousin 2 times removed via Sir David Lindsay


OBSERVATIONS AND SUMMARY

The Haters of People of Color are shown in the above chart.

The use of the 'Executive Order' is likened to the Monarchy government rule/Constitutional Monarchy rule that "Royal persons are not subject to the laws".

George Washington became the recorded President of a temporary, experimental government called a Democratic government.  It was not meant to last.

George Washington expected his supporters to call him "His Mightiness", eventually he changed his title to President.

There were many Family members who became Presidents over time.

Understanding where they came from, the mindset, their attitudes, etc. makes for a better understanding of those who hate and wrongfully Plunder Upon Innocents such as the American Indians, Blacks/African Americans, Native Hawaiians/Kanaka Maoli, and All People of Color.

Others from other countries also had a hand in wrongfully Plundering Upon Innocents.

In 1822, during U.S. President James Monroe period, the Secret Treaty of Verona was signed by Austria, France, Prussia, Russia, Great Britain, the Vatican and the United States.  It was to create a One World Order/New World Order.

The Vatican, Roman Catholic Church was complemented in maintaining Obedience among the people.  Other problematic issues includes the fact that they had a detrimental attitude towards People of Color and moved to destroy, decimate, Plunder Upon Innocents on an edict called the Papal Bulls.

Over time, the Genocide against People of Color with the help of the Catholic Church who now recognizes that all Churches who believe in God are part of their Church, etc. have turned away from the "Christian" attitude of love, peace, and understanding.

Instead, rape, Plunder, hate, War, failure to understand is the mentality held by people who claim to be leaders of their Church and are now in the business of Piracy/piracies against all People of Color.

The Partners in Crime against People of Color can be seen by reviewing the Secret Treaty of Verona, the Papal Bulls, the governments which moved to War against "barbaric nations".   United States, an experimental nation which came to infiltrate lands .

The study of genealogies, history, and laws reveals the injustices perpetuated by leaders who have the inbred thinking of their ancestors, and move to War because of the ongoing animosities towards People of Color.  

The minority moves to capture, imprison, decimate, destroy those who are not like them and move to get rid of the "needless" and "useless eaters".

It appears that the injustices will lead to the destruction of some nations naturally.

Queen Liliuokalani did say that if the U.S. did not make corrections, they will fall apart.....and now we know that the U.S. is indeed connected to other Partners in Crime and like dominoes, they too may fall as well.

Research incomplete.

Mele Kalikimaka everyone.

aloha.


References:
George Washington
Gilbert Stuart Williamstown Portrait of George Washington.jpg
George Washington by Gilbert Stuart, 1797
1st President of the United States
In office
April 30, 1789[a] – March 4, 1797
Vice PresidentJohn Adams
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byJohn Adams
Senior Officer of the U.S. Army
In office
July 13, 1798 – December 14, 1799
Appointed byJohn Adams
Preceded byJames Wilkinson
Succeeded byAlexander Hamilton
Commander-in-Chief of the
Continental Army
In office
June 15, 1775 – December 23, 1783
Appointed byContinental Congress
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byHenry Knox (Senior Officer of the Army)
Delegate to the Second Continental Congress from Virginia
In office
May 10, 1775 – June 15, 1775
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byThomas Jefferson
Delegate to the First Continental Congress from Virginia
In office
September 5, 1774 – October 26, 1774
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byPosition abolished
Personal details
Born(1732-02-22)February 22, 1732
Bridges Creek, Colony of Virginia, British America (present-day Virginia, U.S.)
DiedDecember 14, 1799(1799-12-14) (aged 67)
Mount Vernon, Virginia, U.S.
Cause of deathEpiglottitis and hypovolemic shock
Resting placeWashington Family Tomb, Mount Vernon, Virginia, U.S.
Political partyNone
Spouse(s)Martha Dandridge (m. 1759)[1]
ParentsAugustine Washington
Mary Ball
AwardsCongressional Gold Medal
Thanks of Congress
SignatureCursive signature in ink
Military service
AllegianceKingdom of Great Britain United States of America
Service/branchColonial Militia
Continental Army
United States Army
Years of service1752–58 (British Militia)
1775–83 (Continental Army)
1798–99 (U.S. Army)
RankColonel (British Army)
General and Commander-in-Chief (Continental Army)
Lieutenant General (United States Army)
General of the Armies (promoted posthumously: 1976, by an Act of Congress)
CommandsVirginia Colony's regiment
Continental Army
United States Army
Battles/wars


George Washington and his wife Martha were part of the British Royal Family/Kingdom of Great Britain's Royal Families:

"The Kingdom of Great Britain. Created in 1707 as a result of the political union of England and Scotland under the monarch, Queen Anne. There have been three officially recognised Houses since the union:
However for historical interest, I have also included:


Reference:  http://www.britishroyalfamilytree.com/

https://www.gilderlehrman.org/sites/default/files/swf/firstLadies/firstLadies.html - First Ladies info*******************
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