Documentation · Primary Sources
Source Library
Primary sources and references organized by research pillar. Sources are verified against primary documentation where available.
Library status: This library is under active expansion. Sources marked SPECULATIVE require additional primary documentation before the claims they support can be upgraded. Where access to primary documentation is contested, that contestation is noted. Where sources have known reliability problems (e.g., the Taxil Hoax material), those problems are flagged explicitly in the relevant pillar pages.
Legal, Semantic & Financial Architecture
Sources for the Legal-Financial-Linguistic Capture Sequence. This is the strongest empirical pillar — the majority of these sources are in the mainstream historical record.
Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
Section 1: 'All persons born or naturalized in the United States...' The amendment's text does not define corporations as persons, but provides the constitutional foundation that subsequent case law would exploit.
Available via National Archives (archives.gov)
Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad
118 U.S. 394. The Supreme Court case whose headnote — not the judicial opinion — introduced the doctrine of corporate personhood under the 14th Amendment. The headnote was written by court reporter Bancroft Davis, a former railroad executive.
Howard Jay Graham's research documents the Davis-Davis connection explicitly.
Lewis v. United States
680 F.2d 1239 (9th Cir.). Circuit court ruling stating: 'The Federal Reserve Banks are not federal instrumentalities... but are independent, privately owned and locally controlled corporations.' Directly contradicts the public understanding of the Federal Reserve.
Federal Reserve Act
The legislation establishing the Federal Reserve System. Passed December 23, 1913, during a period when many congressmen had returned home for Christmas recess. Structure creates a system of private regional banks with a government-appointed board overlay.
Full text available via U.S. Government Publishing Office
The Creature from Jekyll Island
G. Edward Griffin's account of the secret 1910 Jekyll Island meeting at which the Federal Reserve architecture was designed. Documents attendees including Nelson Aldrich, Paul Warburg, Frank Vanderlip, and Henry Davison. The meeting itself is historically confirmed; Griffin's interpretive framework varies in evidentiary quality.
The "Conspiracy" Origins of Corporate Personhood: Bancroft Davis and the Santa Clara Case
Howard Jay Graham's foundational legal history analysis documenting that the corporate personhood reading of the 14th Amendment was inserted via court reporter headnote, not judicial opinion. Published in the Wisconsin Law Review. Primary scholarly source for the Santa Clara headnote controversy.
Webster's American Dictionary of the English Language (1828 edition)
Noah Webster's first comprehensive American English dictionary. Significant for the you/thou analysis: the 1828 edition documents the near-complete displacement of thou/thee as second-person singular forms, reflecting a semantic collapse that had occurred over approximately two generations. Available in full-text facsimile.
Digitized edition available at webstersdictionary1828.com
Textual & Interpretive Displacement
Sources for the Interpretive Replacement Sequence: the progression from Geneva Bible historicist annotations through the Scofield dispensationalist system.
The Geneva Bible (1560 Edition)
The first English Bible with comprehensive marginal annotations. The notes on Revelation apply historicist methodology — identifying the papacy, Rome, and specific historical institutions as fulfillments of prophetic imagery. Used by the Pilgrims and dominant in early Reformed Protestantism. The presence of specific historical identifications in the notes is documented and not disputed.
Facsimile editions available via Hendrickson Publishers
The Geneva Bible (1599 Edition, with Junius annotations)
The second major edition of the Geneva Bible, with commentary from Franciscus Junius (François du Jon). The Revelation 20 annotations are more developed than the 1560 edition, with specific identification of historical periods. A key open research question involves whether the Revelation 20:7 annotations explicitly identify specific contemporary institutions.
King James Version (Authorized Version)
The Authorized Version commissioned by James I. Published without marginal notes — a deliberate departure from Geneva Bible tradition. James I's hostility to the Geneva notes is documented in his own writings. The absence of notes is historically established; the intentionality of that absence is developed.
Scofield Reference Bible (First Edition)
C.I. Scofield's annotated King James Bible, published by Oxford University Press. Introduced dispensationalist eschatology — including the pre-tribulation rapture and futurist interpretation of Revelation — into a mass-market study Bible. The publication relationship with Oxford, Scofield's biography, and the network of funding is developed-tier evidence.
Original 1909 edition available via archive.org
Scofield Reference Bible (Revised Edition)
The revised and expanded Scofield Reference Bible. Notes on Revelation 20 are explicit in their futurist-dispensationalist reading. The 1917 edition became the dominant version distributed through Moody Bible Institute and subsequent evangelical networks through the mid-20th century.
In Sacram Beati Ioannis Apostoli et Evangelistae Apocalypsim Commentarii
Francisco Ribera's Jesuit commentary on Revelation, representing the earliest developed futurist interpretation. Ribera placed the fulfillment of most of Revelation in a future period at the end of history, departing from the historicist consensus. The connection between Ribera's 16th-century commentary and Scofield's 19th-century system involves disputed transmission chains.
Transmission to Protestantism via Manuel de Lacunza and John Nelson Darby
La venida del Mesías en gloria y majestad (The Coming of the Messiah in Glory and Majesty)
Manuel de Lacunza's pseudonymous work (published as 'Juan Josafat Ben-Ezra') presenting a developed futurist eschatology that would influence Edward Irving and, through Irving, John Nelson Darby. The transmission chain from Ribera to Lacunza to Irving to Darby is documented in scholarly literature on dispensationalism's origins.
Pattern Analysis & Information Warfare
Sources for the Great Erasure pillar and cultural memory severance analysis. Evidence ranges from fully established (orphan train program) to speculative (civilizational discontinuity hypotheses).
U.S. Census 1890 — Fire Records and Documentation
The 1890 U.S. Census records were substantially destroyed in a 1921 fire at the Commerce Building, Washington D.C. The Census Bureau had already ordered the destruction of damaged portions in 1896. The loss is historically documented. Whether the fire was accidental is an open research question — no definitive evidence of arson has been established.
NARA documentation of the loss available via nara.gov
Children's Aid Society Records — Orphan Train Program
Records from Charles Loring Brace's Children's Aid Society documenting the relocation of approximately 150,000–200,000 children from Eastern cities to Midwestern and Western rural families between 1854 and 1929. The program is thoroughly documented. Demographic analysis of sending and receiving populations is an open research question.
Records held at the New York Public Library and CAS archives
1893 World's Columbian Exposition Documentation
Official records, photographs, and plans for the Chicago World's Fair. The architectural scale of the White City — including buildings constructed from plaster of Paris (staff) — and its near-complete demolition following the exposition is historically documented. The specific architectural questions raised by alternative-history researchers require engagement with primary architectural records.
Documentation available via Chicago History Museum
National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) — 19th Century Federal Records
NARA was established in 1934, after the period under analysis. Pre-NARA federal record management was inconsistent, with significant losses across multiple agencies. The scope of 19th-century record loss is documented by NARA itself — though the causes are typically attributed to poor archival practice rather than deliberate destruction.
archives.gov
Methodology & Counter-Arguments
Sources for methodological analysis, including Church Committee and COINTELPRO documentation that establishes the baseline for institutional deception analysis.
Church Committee Final Reports (94th Congress)
Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities. 14-volume report documenting illegal domestic surveillance, assassination plots, and COINTELPRO operations. Establishes that organized institutional deception at federal scale is not hypothetical — it is documented. Essential baseline for any institutional analysis.
Available in full via intelligence.senate.gov
Warren Commission Report
Report of the President's Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy. Significant not primarily for its conclusions but for its methodology — the Commission's treatment of contrary evidence, witness accounts, and chain-of-custody issues represents a documented case study in institutional narrative management.
Available via archives.gov
COINTELPRO Files (FBI)
FBI Counter Intelligence Program documents released following the 1971 Citizens' Commission to Investigate the FBI break-in and subsequent FOIA litigation. Documents systematic infiltration, disinformation, and disruption of political organizations from 1956–1971. Establishes documented precedent for institutional information warfare against domestic targets.
Documents available via vault.fbi.gov
Operation Mockingbird — Church Committee Documentation
CIA media infiltration program documented in Church Committee testimony. William Colby's testimony and subsequent reporting by Carl Bernstein (Rolling Stone, 1977) documents CIA relationships with major media organizations. Primary documentation is partial; the full scope remains developed-tier rather than established.
Bernstein article: 'The CIA and the Media,' Rolling Stone, October 20, 1977
Scriptural & Theological Foundation
Sources for the Revelation 20 exegesis and the historicist eschatological tradition. Theological sources are treated as evidentiary for the tradition's existence, not as independently authoritative.
Against Heresies (Adversus Haereses) — Irenaeus of Lyons
Book V contains Irenaeus's eschatological framework, including his interpretation of Revelation. Irenaeus represents the earliest major patristic treatment of millennial themes. His framework is broadly premillennial but provides the baseline from which subsequent historicist readings develop.
Ante-Nicene Fathers Vol. 1; available via ccel.org
City of God (De Civitate Dei) — Augustine of Hippo
Books XX–XXII contain Augustine's amillennial interpretation of Revelation 20, which became the dominant reading in Western Christianity for over a millennium. The binding of Satan (Rev 20:2) is interpreted as Christ's incarnation, the thousand years as the church age. This is the framework that Geneva Bible historicism modified, not replaced.
Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers; available via ccel.org
Commentary on Revelation — Joachim of Fiore
Joachim's historicist reading of Revelation, mapping specific prophetic passages onto historical periods, influenced the entire tradition of historicist eschatology from the medieval period through the Reformation. His method — rather than his specific identifications — is the antecedent to Geneva Bible annotation methodology.
Exposition of the Revelation of St John — John Calvin
Calvin did not write a commentary on Revelation, which is itself significant — his near-silence on the text contrasts with his comprehensive treatment of other New Testament books. The Geneva Bible annotations on Revelation were produced by other Reformers working within the broader Calvinist tradition.
Absence of source is itself a data point for the research question.
Sources Under Verification
The following source categories are referenced in the research but have not yet been verified against primary documentation. They are not cited in evidence-tier claims until verification is complete.
Full Scofield correspondence and financial records — Oxford University Press Archives
Jekyll Island meeting minutes — existence disputed; no primary documentation confirmed
Pre-1828 pronoun shift quantitative analysis — corpus linguistics research needed
1890 Census fire investigation report — NARA request filed
Lacunza-to-Irving transmission documentation — requires access to Irving's annotated copy