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The Haunting of Mission Santa Cruz, Mexico, 1708 to 1876, Volume 3: The Haunted Temple

by J.E. Lonergan & A.S. Guerisoli
Lonergan & Guerisoli Books are announcing Volume 3 of their archaeological work on the real history of Mission Santa Cruz, when it was Mexico and how the California land grabs unfolded between 1876-1907 through a series of moves and reorientation. The book has 70 antique photos of early Santa Cruz properties showing a series of moves where the buildings (such as the adobe bricks of Mission Santa Cruz) were removed and separated from its church-side cemeteries, and the headstones (but not the people) were removed into significant (destroyed) places...to create a series of haunting. The audio files are about 2 hours long, with interviews on the book detailing the murder of the Castro heirs and the lynching of the Mexican-Spanish Governor J. Joe Castro on April 22, 1876.
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Santa Cruz is a city on the Northern coast of the Western United States, and formerly Mexican and Spanish-held territory. American-Saxon, Scottish Freemasons, and x-Civil War Veterans would work to demolish and rebuild everything built by the Franciscans of the de Anza Expeditions after 1876. The turn-of-the-century reconstructions included a series of inversions (“city planning”) where there was a deliberate shifting of the material artifacts of antiquity to reshape the way people traverse and relate within the City of Santa Cruz. For example, the Governmental Palace of Nancy ("Nisene") was at the Mesquite (aka, now Rispin Mansion) and has been in ruins since 1960. Main pieces (pillars, windows and bricks) of this mansion were used to construct the new Santa Cruz post-office in 1928. There is 7 feet of rubble under the road, library and ruins in Capitola (which will never be rebuilt for the true history could emerge).

In Books 1 & 2, the murders of the Castro heirs and the dismantling of the famous 100-room luxury hotel the Magnolia Rose had created a series of haunting. In Book 3, we will see that Capitola was also a Capitola of old Rome on the Tarpeian Rock, where there stood a temple (first to Jupiter, then to the Musselmans, then overtaken by King David, the Spanish Red Collars, the Saxons, etc.) where a sacred building (now the RISPIN MANSION) once stood which was accessed by waterway from the Magnolia Rose (a mansion that supposedly burned down, but is in 5 pieces distributed in Santa Cruz, See Book 1). The Temple or Meschita came to be used as a Governmental Palace under the Southern Spanish in Mexico from 1623 to 1876.

The Rispin Mansion of Capitola ruins at Soquel Creek are still known today as a Butterfly Reserve (Latin, “Pamfilio of Naris”). Nisene Marks is also a State Park in the bordering City of Soquel, California. Nisese comes from the Latin “Naris” or “Nancy”, which means: “to stumble upon” or “find” and was a river of the Tiber. Monterey, California (old Mexico) was once a town of Latium (Latin-controlled Rome) under Tiberius or Tiburcio Casear, founder of Tibur (Herbert, 1897). “Marks” refers to “Mars”, the Roman god of War. Capitola, California was the location of the old city of “Panfilio of the Red Collars”, the Southern Spanish Royalists running the Mesquite in the (old Mexican) city of Pan. Pan, or “Pana”, was the god of Wood, and Panfilia means “Butterfly”.

Mission Santa Cruz was a sacred mountain at the Northern-most end of the Camino Real (Spanish, “Royal Road”) and was re-built by the Vispanic Franciscans and Basque, and the Moors of Castro-Moraga who came on the Anzarin Expeditions from 1629 to 1767. The “Moors of Charlemagne” came from as far as Constantinople, and pilgrims came from all over the world to the “Seven Cities and Rivers of Gold”. Each mountain in Santa Cruz had a main river flowing from the Soquel Mountains to the Pacific Sea (San Lorenzo River, Branciforte Creek, Arana Gulch, Valencia Creek, Soquel Creek, Aptos Beach River, etc). Soquel comes from “Xochitl” and means “Flower” in Nahuatl.

The land grab was done by Mormon (“Norman”) colonizers and Freemasons after 1876, who followed a pattern in the “conquest” of directionality and orientation of original Spanish-Mexican by shifting everything, with a focus on the altering and closing off the original directions of port entrances, buildings, doorways and roads. The President of the San Francisco Stock Exchange in 1876 was Claus Spreckles himself (with a name change to “Keene”), who was one of the main lynch-men of the Governor Joe Castro on April 22, 1876. He signed in to the Magnolia Rose with the “minister” and Real-Estate Baron, Alfred F. Joseph Hinds (Heinz) and M.L. Bean (Samuel Prescott Bush), and the Heinz sons (from the missing Carmen Pacheco Hubberd of Davenport), known as the Henry Williamsons of Felton.

The Aptos Museum on State Park has the original Hotel Register now know as the “Spreckles Hotel” roster (and Claus Spreckels was the 666th person to sign in). Go ask to see it!! “Spreckels” is another allusion to “SPECK-LESS”, but he was really a land grabber of the Castro’s properties with the Congregational Minister, A. F. Heins and his last wife, the famous Mary Armory Case, aka Ms. Winchester of the so-called Winchester mansion of San Jose. San José was the Capitol of North Mexico until 1832. The Winchester is totally built upside down.

This old mansion was build on the San Antonio land grant to Maria Antonia Castro Alviso and is UPSIDE-DOWN and haunted by Luis Maria Valenzia Urbe Gaditano, son of the assassinated Mexican President Augustine Iturbide (d. 1823) and the Empress of Mexico, Maria Pilar de La Luz Munoz (d. 1832, Mission Dolores, San Francisco). Both of these famous people were hidden by José Joaquin Castro Moraga, the owner of the San Andres Land Grant (Santa Cruz, Villa de Branciforte) from 1808 to his death in 1838.

Mission Santa Cruz is a sacred mountain at the Northern-most end of the Camino Real (Spanish, “Royal Road”) and was re-built by the Vispanic Franciscans and Basque, and the Moors of Castro-Moraga who came on the Anzarin Expeditions from 1629 to 1767. The “Moors of Charlemagne” came from as far as Constantinople, and pilgrims came from all over the world to the “Seven Cities and Rivers of Gold”. Each mountain in Santa Cruz had a main river flowing from the Soquel Mountains to the Pacific Sea (San Lorenzo River, Branciforte Creek, Arana Gulch, Valencia Creek, Soquel Creek, Aptos Beach River, etc). Soquel comes from “Xochitl” and means “Flower” in Nahuatl.

“The Haunted Temple” is our third picture book (on amazon.com) of the history and the archaeology of Santa Cruz del Monte Veros Mountains. “Del Monte Veros” means … “of the Mountain of Truth”, and the truth of “the House of God” was deliberately destroyed. The “Del Monte” Ketchup Empire was taken over by “Heinz” Ketchup Corporation between 1840 and 1876. Enjoy!
§The Palace of Nisene Marks at Capitola, Mexico 1629-1876 (now the Rispin Mansion ruins)
by J.E. Lonergan & A.S. Guerisoli
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The declaration of Mexican Independence from Spain, done on the East gate of the Palace of Nisene, Augustine Urbe Gaditano, date 1823.
§Moorish Teaching Houses, now Evergreen Cemetery
by J.E. Lonergan & A.S. Guerisoli
640_most-beautiful-temple.jpg
The Order of Regular Cannons of San Augustine practiced on the Eastern side of the Santa Cruz mountains. Foundations destroyed and made into a cemetery...
§The foundations of the destoyed Moorish Teaching House
by J.E. Lonergan & A.S. Guerisoli
640_most-beautiful-now.jpg
This is what the destroyed Eastern side of the Santa Cruz mountains looks like now....
§Free Radio Program on the Haunting of Mission Santa Cruz, MX, 1708 to 1876
by J.E. Lonergan & A.S. Guerisoli
The audio files are on http://www.radio4all.net and were done on Free Radio Santa Cruz. There are 10 hours of interviews that barely get a handle on the complexity of the California land grab of Mission Santa Cruz and the haunting....
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