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Upholding, championing, advocating, encouraging, and espousing the Unity Amidst Diversity behavioral patterns of individual citizens to be thoughtful, involved, compassionate, considerate, and concerned, they join together, communicate, connect, combine, and promote the general welfare. The America Omniangels dovetail, support, instigate, and advance whichever and whatever representation manifests as an unifying principle.
Archangel Razaiel has been appointed as the Chieftain of the America Omniangels. Archangel Razaiel will continue to serve the planet as an Archangel
of the Tenth Ray of Divine Illumination. The planetary Cosmic Benefactor Archangel for the America Omniangels is
Archangel Geburael who is also a Sepheroth Upholder, a Mighty Chief Heavenly
Hall Steward, and a Seraphic Strength Angel. Archangel Geburael will continue to
serve the planet as an Archangel of the Ninth Ray of Divine Protection.
The Sacred Site focal point of the Hooper Strait America Omniangels is Hooper Strait Light, relocated from Tangier Sound, which is located near the city of Saint Michaels in Talbot County in Maryland, U.S.A. The light station was first established in 1827 with a Lightship which served until 1845. Then a seventy-two ton Light Vessel served from 1845 to 1867. In 1867, a square frame house with an integral lantern was constructed on a screw pile foundation. This tower was destroyed in 1877 by ice. The existing historic tower was constructed of wood on a foundation of screw piling. The octagonal shaped lantern was situate on a white hexagonal dwelling with a red roof.
The integral 41 feet high light was first lit in
1879. A Fifth Order Fresnel Lens was installed the same year, and, the light was
automated in 1954. In 1879, the one and half storied existing Keepers
Quarters were constructed of wood in the Integral to Tower architectural style. Deactivated in 1966, the light is no longer
operational. Hopper Strait Light was moved to a museum setting, and the present
optic, a Fourth Order Fresnel Lens, was installed in 1967. Currently used as a museum, the light is open to the
public and managed by the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum.
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