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30. ibid.<br />

31. Boylan, Henry. A Dictionary of Irish Biography. NY: St. Martins Press, 1988, p. 345.<br />

32. Springmeier, Fritz. <strong>The</strong> WT & the Masons, pp. 9, 215.<br />

33. Author’s geneological research in Hopkins Co. TX history.<br />

34. Early Convention Report<br />

35. Evans, Richard L. A Century of Mormonism in Great Britian. Salt Lake City, UT:<br />

Publisher’s Press, 1937, pp. 34-35.<br />

36. Gibbons, Francis M. John Taylor Mormon Philosopher Prophet of God. Salt Lake<br />

City, UT: Deseret Books, 1985, p. 129.<br />

37. Utah Historical Quarterly, 1941, Salt Lake CIty, pp. 190-211.<br />

38. Boylan, op. cit., p. 344<br />

39. ibid., and Black, George F. <strong>The</strong> Surnames of Scotland. NY: <strong>The</strong> NY Public Library,<br />

1962, p. 705.<br />

QUESTIONING OLD ASSUMPTIONS<br />

<strong>The</strong>re was enough circumstantial evidence to lead one to question several assumptions.<br />

I began to question the assumption that the W. T. presidents were unconnected to each<br />

other. Another supposition that was questionable was that the WT Society did not have<br />

a hidden agenda.<br />

C.T. RUSSELL’S STORY<br />

Once there was a Jewish family whose name was Roessel. <strong>The</strong>y lived in early 17th<br />

century Germany. <strong>The</strong>y moved to a country called Scotland. <strong>The</strong>re they re-spelled the<br />

name Russell. <strong>The</strong>y took on the ways of their new homeland. <strong>The</strong> English tried to settle<br />

Protestants from Scotland in Ireland in order to control the Irish. When the opportunity<br />

opened up to go to the Emerald Island (Ireland) with the Scottish settlers who went to<br />

the plantation Ulster they went. It is possible, but not known for sure that they learned<br />

to know the Rutherford's either in Scotland or Ireland. Scotland repeatedly appears as<br />

the source of much of the religious heresy connected with the Power. That C . T.<br />

Russell’s family were in Scotland for a period, and also from the German states which<br />

seem to be a hot bed for Jewish Satanism may be only a coincidence and then again it<br />

might be a clue to understanding the origin of the Watchtower Society. This Author’s<br />

previous book <strong>The</strong> Watchtower and the Masons tells the story how the Arian heresy<br />

began at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland and spread to the the Presbyterians of<br />

the Synod of Ulster. <strong>The</strong> book gives this Author’s reasons for believing that the C . T.<br />

Russell’s family in northern Ireland were Arian in belief before <strong>com</strong>ing to the U. S. and<br />

chances are they were involved with Freemasonry also.<br />

THE ACKLEY CONNECTION<br />

In <strong>The</strong> Watchtower and the Masons the early history of C . T. Russell is given. Charles<br />

and his father married two Ackley sisters a number of years after Charles’ mother died.<br />

What is an intriguing item is that C . T. Russell’s mother’s will indicates she owned land<br />

in Iowa. A description of that land shows it was north of the town of Ackley, Iowa. It<br />

turns out that a man named William Ackley had purchased the land in that area, and<br />

had sold it in large part to Scot-Irish settlers of the Presbyterian faith as they were<br />

169

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