Posted on 05/08/2019 11:41:54 AM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin
Davids familys 80 acres of land was sold to a distant relative and the familys property was gone. What they had spent decades building vanished in a split-second bank interaction.
Throughout his life, David dreamed of somehow getting back the familys land and rebuild their business. Several years after losing the family land, it suddenly appeared on auction. David and his father decided they would do their best to collect whatever modest means they had to try to get it back, reports goodnewsnetwork.com.
They spent many days and sleepless nights trying to come up with every possible way to acquire the extraordinary assets to reclaim their land. When the day of the auction finally came, their hearts sank: nearly 200 farmers were gathered. David and his father felt their chances of repossessing their family land was slim to none.
But they gave it their best shot. When the auctioneer announced their land, they immediately placed their bid and held their breath.
Theirs was the first bid and David and his father anxiously waited to see who would bid next. But suddenly, the room went silent.
David didnt understand what was happening and even the auctioneer was stupefied. He made further attempts to solicit a new bid, but got only silence. Stunned, he called a break.
They reconvened three times and each time, not a single farmer placed a bid.
The auctioneer finally had no choice, and with the strike of the gavel, David and his family had their land back. It felt like a miracle. A miracle of 200 farmers from Nebraska, USA every single one of them knowing what the right thing to do was.
David could finally write a happy chapter in his family history book.
Ive had two profoundly humbling days in my life. The first was the day my son was born. The second was that unforgettable day at the Auction House, he said.
Not a lot (any) details. I think this more fable than fact.
Apparently
"In 2011, David and his family learned that the precious eighty acres was going to be sold at auction within a couple of weeks."
“200 Farmers that did that, makes One wonder what could happen if those 200 Farmers REPLACED 200 USELESS bums in the U.S. House of Representatives...”
I’ll vote for that!
President Washington. President Jefferson. President Adams. President Lincoln. All Farmers before they were President.
President Carter too, but we’re still reaping the awful ‘crops’ he planted in the Middle East! :(
I hear ya!
See the better link at Post #19.
If I could, I would save every family farm. The family farm is part of Americana and essential to the fabric of America. America eats better with “local” farming more than corporate.
Good on the farmers, but who was selling the property, and how much did they lose?
Did they know it was a shady deal when they bought it from the “distant relative”?
There are literally NO SPECIFICS in this story!(2011 isn’t a specific date)
Is it a pleasant story? Yes! Is it true? Not likely!
It’s called “Clickbait” and fraudsters do this to get ‘clicks’
If somebody offers to sell you a bridge in Brooklyn, don’t show them your bank account information.
Nor any offers from a Nigerian prince.
But we could grow a bunch of extra wheat and send it to the Ruskies.
And they can trade it to the Mideast for peanuts...
Bttt.
5.56mm
There is still a sense of fair play in America. When my cousin and I were selling off our grandparents’ homestead—Dawes allotment land—the issue of mineral rights arose. There is oil on the land. When I was a boy, my Dad got a monthly oil royalty check every month for years. The oil company has since stopped pumping, but there is every expectation that the oil companies will return for production there. Anyway, because the homestead was federally-protected Indian land, the mineral rights in Oklahoma were sold separately from the property. A man showed up prepared to bid on the mineral rights, but when he found that the farmer who was buying our property was a little guy, a young man with a small family prepared to work 16 hours a day to make his farm successful, he immediately stopped bidding and allowed the farmer to go ahead and get the mineral rights. The mineral rights made the land valuable enough so that if things went bad and the farmer had to sell, the property would have enough value to keep him from getting skunked on a land sale.
Another excerpt from that link:
After David finished his story, I asked him what he thought had occurred in the Auction House that night, and without missing a beat, he looked at me with even more emotion, and said, Respect.
Also from the link posted in the thread:
“Since 1997, Lauri Gwilt has centered her career on assisting people from across North America to discover the connection between how theyre thinking, and how their lives go. She is co-author and co-host of The Habit of Celebration, an e-course from the Celebrate Whats Right initiative developed with former National Geographic Photographer, Dewitt Jones.”
In the article it says she got this story from “David” during one of her teaching seminars. I suppose she could have made it up - but I don’t think so.
It’s nice. But let’s face it, that land’s been auctioned twice. It ain’t profitable. I wish them luck, they’re gonna need it.
The first thing they would do is toss the fart law out the window...
Above is a link to a Farm Auction site where the guy that does the auctions also calls B.S. on the feel-good story. (I was doing a search for a real news article about the event. I’m guessing it would have been in all the local papers at the time. I didn’t find anything.)
The above article is pretty interesting. And of course, being an auction guy trying to get the most money for the owner, he is saying that even if the story IS correct, it is un-American, and rips off the actual owner/seller.
Although being an auction, I guess that would probably mean the bank took it - or the county did for no taxes paid?
Farmers work harder than any of us.
This will bring a tear to your eye. Small Town Southern Man: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5zwq9RCeISY
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.