In my last America 250 post, I wrote about Fletcher v. Peck, the 1810 Supreme Court case that emerged from the Yazoo Land Scandal. The Court's decision established an important principle; governments could not simply revoke property rights that had already been granted.
One of the takeaways from Fletcher v. Peck is that America had to build legal infrastructure before it could fully benefit from physical infrastructure. The Supreme Court's decision helped establish confidence in property rights and contracts. It reinforced the idea that ownership could survive changing political winds and that rights conveyed by government grants could not simply be revoked after the fact.
For a young country trying to attract settlers, investment, and commerce, that kind of certainty mattered.
But certainty alone doesn't create value. Access does too.
Just fifteen years after Fletcher v. Peck, New York completed the Erie Canal; which is widely regarded as America’s first major infrastructure project. It connected the Hudson River to Lake Erie, dramatically lowering transportation costs and opening new markets across the growing nation.
The canal didn't create ownership rights along its path; it made those rights more valuable. Land that had once been distant from major markets suddenly became connected to them. Farmers gained access to customers. Communities gained access to trade. Investors gained access to opportunity.
The pattern would repeat itself throughout the evolution of American history.
Railroads changed the value of land. In some cases, railroads were financed with land itself. The federal government granted millions of acres along proposed routes, betting that the railroad would increase the value of surrounding property. The strategy worked. As access improved, land values rose, more settlers arrived, and the railroads sold portions of their holdings to help fund construction.
Railroads also left behind some of the most enduring title questions in American history. More than a century after many rights-of-way were established, courts are still sorting out whether certain rail corridors were owned outright or held as easements. Infrastructure may create value, but it can also create title issues that last for generations.
Ports connected regions to global trade. Farm-to-market roads, highways, and eventually the Interstate System connected people, goods, and opportunity on an entirely different scale.
Today, data centers, logistics hubs, broadband networks, and energy infrastructure continue to influence where investment flows and where property values rise (or fall).
The Erie Canal reminds us that physical infrastructure does more than move people and goods. It changes the economic relationship between places. It alters what land is worth.
As America approaches its 250th anniversary, it's worth remembering that the country's growth depended on both forms of infrastructure. The legal infrastructure that allowed people to trust the system. And the physical infrastructure that connected people to opportunity. Together, they helped shape the American property market we know today.
Until Next Time,
Mary Schuster
Chief Knowledge Officer
October Research, LLC
PS: I hope you enjoyed last week’s America 250 installment from our publisher Erica Meyer. She agreed to pinch hit so Dan and I could elope. It was time to make honest dogs out of Grace and Shelby.
Click here for more Tuesdays with Mary