Abandoned Albert Pike Campground: Ouachita National Forest, Arkansas

10 months ago
29

In the early morning hours of June 11, 2010, a catastrophic flood swept through the Albert Pike campgrounds in in the Ouachita National Forest. Heavy rains (6-8 inches) caused the Little Missouri River and its tributaries to flood the valley, quickly rising to around 23 ft during a short period of time. Most campers were sleeping. The campground quickly filled with water. The water rushed through so violently, it overturned trucks and RVs, tore bridges down and ripped the roads apart. 20 people lost their lives in this tragedy, many were children.
The campground was named for Albert Pike, the man that organized the KKK in Arkansas, became a member of the secessionist movement and also was chosen by Mazzini to head the Illuminati (a secret society) operations in America. He was a brigadier general and placed in charge of building an Indian army during the time of war.
In 1871, Pike sent a letter to the Italian revolutionary Giuseppe Mazzini. The letter (displayed at the British Museum before mysteriously disappearing in the 1970s), predicted a series of events that would take place decades after Pike's death. With eerie accuracy, he predicted the czars of Russia would fall during a first great conflict, that Nazism would be destroyed while communism would rise during a second great conflict, and that the Zionists would battle Islamic leaders in a third and final great conflict during which they would “mutually destroy each other.”

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