This document summarizes the history of the secret Jefferson Allegiance, brokered by Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton to ensure no despot gains control of the White House. It has been wielded over 200 years by the American Philosophical Society to control presidents seeking ultimate power, such as Polk, Roosevelt, and Nixon. When confronted with the Allegiance, all presidents acquiesced to its demands, including restoring limits on presidential power. The locations of clues to the Allegiance were scattered and hidden in the Jefferson Cipher.
3. The Facts:
In May 1783 the Society of the Cincinnati was founded.
Alexander Hamilton was one of its leading members.
Thomas Jefferson was not allowed membership.
The Society still has its headquarters in Washington D.C.
4. “I am not among those who fear the people.
They, and not the rich, are our dependence
for continued freedom.”
Thomas Jefferson. 1816.
5. The Facts:
In 1743, the American Philosophical Society (APS),
the oldest learned society in North America, was
founded. Thomas Jefferson was a member for 47
years and its president for 17 years. He also
established the Military Philosophical Society at West
Point.
The APS still has its headquarters in Philadelphia.
6. Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton were
opponents and had different views for the future of the
United States.
They did agree on one thing, though.
That the country must survive and never be taken over
by a despot.
They brokered the Jefferson Allegiance and hid it.
The secret to its location is in the Jefferson Cipher.
The parts to the Cipher were scattered and hidden.
7. For over 200 years, the Jefferson Allegiance has been
used to control the President, brought out only when
needed and in secrecy.
It is so powerful, every President confronted with it has
bowed to its dictate as wielded by the American
Philosophical Society.
The following are the times that Presidents have been
confronted.
8. Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo 1848.
President Polk used the immoral Mexican War to
expand the territory of the United States.
9. 22 August 1848.
Polk is confronted by former President John Quincy Adams,
General Zachary Taylor, and a freshman Congressman
named Lincoln.
They have the Jefferson Allegiance and demand that he
stop his designs on confronting the British in the Oregon
Territory to grab more land and run for re-election. He
accedes and does neither.
10. 14 April 1865
Abraham Lincoln, after years of breaking the law
in order to successfully wage the Civil War,
finally sees the peace is in hand with Lee’s
surrender at Appomattox.
11. He is confronted by General Grant, representing
the APS, advising the President that he must
return the office of Presidency to its former
limits. He, and the APS, have too much respect
for Lincoln to bring the actual document to the
White House.
But it doesn’t matter.
Later that evening, Lincoln is dead.
12. 4 March 1905
President Theodore Roosevelt has just started
his second term and is planning to wield his big
stick to expand America’s Empire. He has his
eyes set on the Philippines, Cuba and more.
13. 4 March 1805
Roosevelt is confronted by his daughter, Alice,
the first female member of the APS.
He is warned against trying to make an Imperial
United States.
“My father always wanted to
be the corpse at every funeral,
the bride at every wedding
and the baby at every
christening.”
14. “If you haven’t got
anything nice to
say about
anybody, come sit
next to me.”
Alice Roosevelt
Longworth.
15. 18 February 1945
On board the USS Quincy, returning from the
Yalta Conference, General George Marshall,
representing the APS, confronts an ailing
President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
16. As they had warned Lincoln at the end of the
Civil War, now they give the same warning to
Roosevelt as World War II is winding down. To
restore the peace powers of the President.
Marshall warns Roosevelt, in the same manner
Roman Emperors were humbled centuries
earlier: “Respice post te! Hominem the ease
memento!”
Look behind you! Remember that you are just a man!
Remember that you shall die!
18. March 1962
J. Edgar Hoover, representing the Cincinnatians,
threatens President Kennedy.
19. 22 March 1962
Mary Meyer, JFK’s former mistress, representing
the APS, wants Kennedy to hold off on Vietnam
and makes other demands.
20. Kennedy is caught between the two
sides.
A year later he’s killed
A year later Mary Meyer is killed.
The next day, Khrushchev resigns.
(But that’s a story for The Kennedy Endeavor)
21. August 1974
President Nixon is drunk and isolated in the
White House as he faces impeachment.
Unknown to him, the military has already
removed his authority to launch nuclear
weapons.
22. The APS confronts Nixon, insisting he must
resign the office of Presidency.
When he appeals to the Society of the
Cincinnati, they too turn their back on him.
He resigns.
27. www.bobmayer.com
About the author: Bob Mayer up in the Bronx, New York
City; graduated West Point, served in the Infantry
including leading a recon platoon in the First Cav
Division, and then Special Forces (Green Berets),
commanding an A-Team and other assignments. After
leaving active duty he studied martial arts in the Orient
and was brought back for numerous ADSW (Active Duty
Special Work) tours in Special Operations.
He’s lived on an island off the east coast, an island off
the west coast, in the Rocky Mountains, the hill country of
Texas, the first of New England, the Appalachians and
other places.
They haven’t caught up to him yet.
He is the New York Times bestselling author of over 80
books.