Back to top
Join us on LinkedIn Follow us on Twitter Like us on Facebook Follow us on Instagram
 
  OCTOBER RESEARCH STORE SUBSCRIBE LOG IN
AddControlToContainer_DynamicNavigation3
The Legal Description > News > Tuesdays With Mary: George Washington Had Title Problems

Tuesdays With Mary: George Washington Had Title Problems

Email A Friend Printer Friendly Version
0 comments
Tuesdays with Mary
Tuesday, June 30, 2026

George Washington spent a surprising amount of time thinking about land.

Washington’s land activities were far from passive investments. He spent years pursuing military bounty claims, securing patents, commissioning surveys, and defending ownership interests in western lands. At times, those efforts led to disputes with competing claimants and settlers. Long before title insurance existed, Washington learned firsthand how complicated ownership could become.

Years ago, while visiting Mount Vernon, I came across correspondence related to one of Washington’s land claims, clouded by what we would now call a title issue, and I remember being struck by how familiar the problems seemed. Surveys. Boundaries. Patents. Competing ownership interests and claims. The terminology may have changed, but the underlying questions had not.

The more I have worked on this America 250 series, the more apparent it has become that many of the Founders were doing more than creating a government. They were also confronting questions of ownership, investment, and opportunity that they knew well from personal experience. In Washington’s case, those experiences began long before the presidency. Before he commanded an army or presided over a constitutional convention, he was a surveyor learning how land was measured, described, claimed, and transferred. Remarkably, he himself had drawn more than 200 surveys by age 20, after becoming a professional surveyor at only 17 years old.

That experience shaped much of what followed. Throughout his life, Washington acquired extensive landholdings, especially in the western territories. He pursued military bounty claims, commissioned surveys, sought patents, and evaluated opportunities for expansion and investment. In a 1767 letter discussing western lands, he wrote that he was “very well convinced that no Colony upon the Continent has at present so good an opening as this for advantageous purchases.”

Most of us think of Washington as a soldier, statesman, and president. We marvel at his remarkable decision to surrender power voluntarily twice—first by resigning his military commission in 1783 and later by stepping down from the presidency in 1797 after two terms—acts that helped shape American democracy. All of that is true. But Washington was also a businessman who believed the country’s future was tied to the settlement and productive use of land. The nation’s growth was not only a political project; it was also an ownership project.

Washington wasn’t the only Founding Father thinking about land ownership in lasting ways.  Thomas Jefferson reached many of the same conclusions from a different direction. While Washington often saw land as an investment opportunity, Jefferson viewed ownership as foundational and essential for independence. In a 1785 letter to James Madison, he wrote that “the small landholders are the most precious part of a state.” Jefferson believed broad ownership created citizens who were invested in their communities and in the republic’s future.

What makes Jefferson’s observation especially interesting is that his own experience with land was anything but simple. Despite substantial holdings, he struggled financially for much of his life and died deeply in debt. In today’s terms, he was “land-rich and cash-poor”.  The War of 1812, and the subsequent recession headed by the Panic of 1819, along with buyer demand dispersing towards western territory expansion deflated land prices in The Original Colonies. Jefferson hoped a public auction of Monticello would satisfy his debts after his death. Then, as now, the relationship between landownership and financial success was not always as straightforward as theory suggested.

James Madison approached the issue as a political thinker. In his 1792 essay Property, (a great read!) he wrote that “Government is instituted to protect property of every sort.” That sentiment also helps explain why questions of ownership appear so often in the early history of the United States. Property was not a peripheral concern; to Madison the protection of it was one of government’s central purposes.

Even Benjamin Franklin, whose legacy is often associated with science, invention, and diplomacy, understood the economic power of ownership. Like many of his contemporaries, he joined land ventures and recognized the opportunities a growing nation offered to those willing to invest in its future.

I’ve come to appreciate that many of the Founders viewed land holdings not as an abstract theory, but as a practical challenge. They surveyed it, invested in it, inherited it, borrowed against it, disputed it, and worried about it. Their understanding of ownership was shaped as much by experience as by philosophy.

That may help explain why property rights became such a durable feature of the American system. The people building the nation's institutions were not writing theoretical rules for someone else's benefit. They were trying to create a framework for problems and benefits they knew firsthand.

As I was putting the finishing touches on this piece, I happened to watch an interview with filmmaker Ken Burns about his documentary on the American Revolution. One exchange caught my attention. While discussing the forces driving the Revolution, Burns remarked that the struggle was ultimately over "the prize of North America." When asked what he meant by "the prize," his answer was simple: "The land."  The more I study America's founding, the harder it becomes to separate the story of our nation from the story of land ownership itself.

As we celebrate Independence Day this week, I find myself viewing the Founders a little differently. Beyond the speeches, documents, and monuments were individuals trying to make sense of opportunity, ownership, risk, and responsibility in a rapidly changing country. In that respect, they were not quite as distant from our world as they sometimes seem.

I hope you have a wonderful Fourth of July.

Until next time,

Mary Schuster
Chief Knowledge Officer
October Research, LLC

 

 

 
Click here for more Tuesdays with Mary
Today's other top stories
Tuesdays With Mary: When Owning Land Meant Having a Voice
Tuesdays With Mary: The Question Pung Left Behind
Tuesdays With Mary: Trust Is Infrastructure, Too
Tuesdays With Mary: Country's 250th anniversary a good time to reflect and pay it forward
Tuesdays With Mary: A Land Deal So Corrupt They Tried to Undo It


COMMENT BOX DISCLAIMER:
October Research is not responsible for the comments posted on its websites by readers. We will do our best to remove comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments.
Comments:

Be the first to leave a comment.

Leave your comment
Please enter a comment.
CAPTCHA Validation
CAPTCHA
Code:
Please enter the word displayed in the image above. Please enter the word displayed in the image above.
: 
Please enter your name.
: 
Please enter your email address.
This field must contain a valid email address.
Your Email is for reporting purposes only. It will NOT be displayed.
Popularity:
This article has been viewed 442 times.
News by Topic   News by Edition   Reports   Events   Subscribe
Court Report
Cybersecurity
Excess Equity
Industry News
Legislative Developments
Regulatory Updates
Remote Online Notarization
The Blotter
The TRID Journey
 
June 8, 2026
June 22, 2026
July 6, 2026
July 20, 2026
Archives
 
Housing Inventory Solutions
2026 State of the Industry
Adapting to NAR Settlement's New Realities
Real Estate Compliance Outlook
2025 Title Technology
Cybersecurity Today
eClosing Security
Attorney State Perspectives
Archives
 
 
National Settlement Services Summit (NS3)
Women's Leadership Summit (WLS)
Webinars
 
Newsletter Subscriptions
Free Email Updates
Try a Free Edition
  About   Library   Other Publications  
 
The Legal Description
Contact / Editors
Advertise
Request a Media Kit
Social Media
Are You An Expert?
Subscriber Agreement
 
Blog - Tuesdays with Mary
Cybersecurity Central
Court Cases
Legislation
Podcast - Keys to Real Estate
Regulations
RON Resource Center
State AG Enforcement
 
The Title Report
RESPA News
Dodd Frank Update
 
                 
Copyright © 2000-2026 The Legal Description
An October Research, LLC publication
3046 Brecksville Road, Suite D, Richfield, OH 44286
(330) 659-6101, All Rights Reserved
www.thelegaldescription.com | Privacy Policy
VISIT OUR OTHER WEBSITES
> The Title Report
> RESPA News
> Dodd Frank Update
> NS3 The Summit
> Women's Leadership Summit
> October Research, LLC
> The October Store


Loading... Loading...
Featuring:
  • Delivery 3X a week plus breaking news as it happens
  • Comprehensive title insurance industry news
  • Recent acquisitions, mergers, real estate stats
  • Exclusive in-depth coverage of the industry's hottest stories
Featuring:
  • Delivery 2X a week plus breaking news as it happens
  • Comprehensive Dodd-Frank coverage
  • The latest information from the CFPB
  • Full coverage of Congressional hearings
  • Updates on all agency actions
  • Analysis of controversial provisions
  • Release of newest studies and reports
Sign up today and...
  • Be one of the first to know where NS3 is being held
  • Learn about NS3 speakers and sessions
  • Save on registration with Super-Early Bird rates
  • Discover the networking opportunities NS3 offers
  • Find out if CE credits will be offered for your area
  • And much more
Featuring:
  • Delivery 2X a week plus breaking news as it happens
  • Preview the latest RESPAnews.com Top Story
  • RESPA related headline news
  • Quote of the Week
Featuring:
  • Delivery 2X a week plus breaking news as it happens
  • Legal, regulatory and legislative information impacting the settlement services industry
  • News from HUD, Congress, state legislatures and other regulatory agencies
  • Follow the lobbying efforts of all the major national real estate services organizations.
Featuring:
  • Delivery 2X a week plus breaking news as it happens
  • The industry's only full-time newsroom
  • Relevant, up-to-date appraisal industry news
  • Covering the hottest stories and industry trends
TOPICS
EDITIONS
REPORTS
PODCAST
WEBINARS
EVENTS
LIBRARY
FREE EMAIL NEWS
ABOUT
SUBSCRIBE
Court Report
Cybersecurity
Excess Equity
Industry News
Legislative Developments
Regulatory Updates
Remote Online Notarization
State AG Enforcement
The Blotter
Current Edition
June 22, 2026
June 8, 2026
May 25, 2026
May 11, 2026
Archives
Housing Inventory Solutions
2026 Voice of the Title Agent
2026 State of the Industry
NAR Settlement's New Realities
2025 Title Technology
Real Estate Compliance Outlook
Cybersecurity Today
Archives
NEW 2026 Economic Outlook Series
Next-Level Leadership
Life After RESPA
Evolving Realtor Relationships
FinCEN Real Estate Report Demo
2026 Industry and Regulatory Outlook
Blockchain & Title: Next Steps
FinCEN's Residential Rule Explained
RESPA Review: Navigating Multi-level Oversight
AI-Driven Innovation
Evolving Technology
Webinar Archives
National Settlement
Services Summit (NS3)
Women's Leadership
Summit (WLS)
Housing Inventory & Attainability Watch
State AG Enforcement
Podcast - Keys to Real Estate
Blog - Tuesdays with Mary
Excess Equity Watch
Cyber Solutions Showcase
Cybersecurity Central
eClosing Solutions Showcase
Executive Interview Series
RON Resource Center
Case Law
Position Papers
Regulations
2025
Comment Letters
White Papers
Testimony
The Legal Description
Contact Us
Advertise
Request a Media Kit
Are You An Expert?
Subscriber Agreement
Social Media
Try a Free Edition