The Right to the Throne
Three Immutable Pillars of the Meador Claim
01 / HISTORICAL AND NOMENCLATURE PURITY
Genealogical Purity vs. Corporate Branding
"True sovereignty is recorded in the names an unbroken line refuses to abandon."
In 1917, amidst intense geopolitical pressure, the current occupying Royal Family of England—the House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha—made a calculated decision to change their name to Windsor. In doing so, they severed their historic nomenclature from their lineage for the sake of wartime public relations. Contrast this with the House of Meador. For over 250 years, the Meador line has consistently, proudly, and without interruption preserved the foundational names of William and Charles through every generational shift. We did not alter our identity to fit the shifting tides of politics. The purity of our nomenclature is the ultimate receipt of our historical continuity.
02 / GEOGRAPHIC TRANSITION OF SOVEREIGNTY
The Texas Sovereignty: From Subjects to Sovereigns
"We did not bow to a crown; we carved our own out of the Texas earth."
Sovereignty is not static; it migrates to where power, self-reliance, and land intersect. As the Meador lineage pushed into the American South and ultimately into the rugged expanses of Texas, a profound evolution occurred. The family transitioned from mere historical subjects of a distant crown into independent industrial sovereigns. This status was codified not by royal decrees, but by hard-won land patents in Andrews and Schleicher counties. By claiming the soil, securing mineral rights, and anchoring themselves in the heart of Texas energy production, the Meadors built a tangible, physical empire that owes nothing to foreign courts.
03 / THE GENERATIONAL SIGNIFIER
The Four Charles Succession
"Four generations. One name. A perfect mirror to the modern crown."
History operates in cycles, and numbers hold weight. In an extraordinary historical parallel, the Meador lineage has produced a "Charles" in four consecutive generations: Charles William, Charles Everett, Charles Wesley, and Charles Matthew. This flawless succession perfectly mirrors the naming conventions of the current King of England, Charles III. It serves as a generational signifier—a living, breathing proof that the legacy has not skipped a beat, defaulted, or diluted its ancestral identity. The line is unbroken, alert, and present.