First of all my answers were specifically for my land in New York State. The other 49 states work differently. What the real estate law and procedures are here is not necessarily the law elsewhere. And yes.. New York is not the Empire State for no reason. The laws here make it an attractive place to built one.
Do you believe everything you read on the internet? I wouldn't think so.. seeing as the problems you found with my "story". Here is a quote from the "About" page on Wikipedia.
"Because Wikipedia is an ongoing work to which, in principle, anybody can contribute, it differs from a paper-based reference source in important ways. In particular, older articles tend to be more comprehensive and balanced, while newer articles more frequently contain significant misinformation, unencyclopedic content, or vandalism. Users need to be aware of this to obtain valid information and avoid misinformation that has been recently added and not yet removed"
So anon authors and a disclaimer of potential inaccurate content = solid facts ?
I discovered the Reed Library archives when personally visiting the holland land company museum near my house. In New York each town has an official historian. This was my starting point. Sorry if the dates were a little off.. but I was answering this from my head not a book.
http://www.hollandlandoffice.com/home.htm
http://www.fredonia.edu/library/special_collections/
For an accurate history.. visit the source:
https://stadsarchief.amsterdam.nl/ar...ht/333.nl.html
You are correct in the fact Robert Morris was the purchaser from the Seneca.. but once again a full history of the HLC was not the objective of the post but a quick background for those who are not familiar with the HLC.
The mechanics of how the attached debt was obtained was several letters by FCM. I'll have to scan and sanitize these, but keep in mind different states have different procedures. As I mentioned I had no luck myself, I had to enlist the aid of my attorney.
As far as how the state is connected to the Fed.. once again it is clear in the comptroller reports that go to DC and to the GAO.
You cannot update the patent in New York without having the allodial title. A patent in New York cannot be issued without the Allodial title first! Remember the patent already exists... you are not the beneficiary though. That is the point of having it updated to name you as the beneficiary.
On the Gold/Silver issue. I was dealing with Patricia Warrington, Assistant Comptroller, Office of the New York State Comptroller, State of New York and I had to pay based on the daily exchange price. This is why I brought the siver coins because we knew that 1 oz Maple Leaves would either overshoot or undershoot the mark. Mrs. Warrington indicated that for this particular transaction that gold/silver was the only option. I had to make an appointment to pay this.. you can't just walk in and drop your gold on the counter. Jack Hunt, coinbroker, located in Buffalo was able to sell me some very circulated and worn Morgans at very close to their silver content price.