Naw...If we really wanted to do it right we would hit the great plains. Tons of cheap unclaimed land. If you want to start over you don't build on the south, you start over where you can farm, build your own infrastructure, and start communities without pushback. There is way too much pushback in the south for that to ever happen.
Wyoming, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, North and South Dakota, Arizona, Utah, Nevada...you're talking about millions of Acres of land that is inhabitable, cheap, and untapped.
A lot of that land is bought up breh and being used for tax shelter purposes.
1. John Malone
Malone is the
largest landowner in the US, with 2.2 million acres of land. Though the name may draw some blank faces, the billionaire is
one of the most powerful men in cable. If his $55-billion takeover of Time Warner Cable gets the green light, Malone’s Charter Communications will be the nation’s second-largest cable company.
2. Ted Turner
The 77-year-old is another media mogul who owns around
2 million acres of land across seven states, which is just shy of
three Rhode Islands. Turner, who founded CNN, is also the owner of the world’s largest private herd of bison. (His Standing Butte Ranch featured in the Academy Award-winning film
Dances with Wolves.)
Turner now spends his time with
his four girlfriends across the 28 homes he owns, including 14 ranches.
3. The Emmerson family
The Emmerson family own 1.9 million acres of land. Curly Emmerson and his son, Archie, better known as “Red,” founded the Sierra Pacific Industries in 1949. The company is
one of the country’s largest lumber producers. It employs over 4,500 and for the last 36 years, the company has been giving scholarships to the children of its employees.
Sierra Pacific Industries is working on a range of developments, which includes
a significant conservation project in California.
4. Brad Kelly
The reclusive billionaire has accumulated 1.7 million acres of land in less than a decade. Kelly, who made his money from the discount cigarette business, says he didn’t really plan on acquiring so much land. “I grew up on a farm and that’s about as good an explanation as there is,” he told
the Wall Street Journal (paywall).
5. The Reed family
In 2015, the Reed family, owners of 1.3 million acres of land, celebrated their success by planting their 100-millionth tree. The Reed’s family company— Green Diamond Resource Company—manages and owns a range of forests in California and Washington. The company is now owned by
the fifth generation of Reeds.
6. The Irving family
The Irvings are one of America’s wealthiest families; from their dynasty’s founding in 1881, their fortune is now estimated to be
worth $4 billion through a number of investments that range from tissue manufacturing to oil and gas. The Irvings, who refine 320,000 barrels of oil a day, supply the US with a fifth of its oil imports from their refineries in Canada.
They have amassed an impressive 1.2 million acres of land.
7. The Singleton family
Henry Singleton acquired
1.1 million acres of land (pdf) before his death in 1999. In a span of 14 years, he purchased 28 ranches. In his later years, Singleton went back to raising cattle. The Singleton family now run these ranches in New Mexico and California.
8. The King family
With over
900,000 acres of land, the heirs to Richard King’s historic ranch are set for life. The land stretches over six Texas counties and operates a range of ventures, which includes ecotourism and cattle and feedlots operations.
9. Stan Kroenke
And that brings us to Kroenke, who now owns more than 865,000 acres of land in the US—an area that’s
four-and-a-half times the size of New York. The Waggoner ranch, which
currently employs 120 people, is one of the 20 largest cattle ranches in the US. Kroenke, who is worth more than $7 billion, also owns farms in Arizona, Montana, Wyoming, and British Columbia.
10. The Pingree family
The heirs to David Pingree fortune inherited
830,000 acres of land and round out the top 10. David Pingree, nicknamed the Merchant Prince of Salem, first started buying land 1841.