In 2002, an entire California town went up for auction on eBay - complete with buildings, businesses, and even its own zip code. The winning bidder paid $1.77 million for the whole town of Bridgeville.
The seller wasn't a government agency or real estate company - it was just one man who happened to own most of the town. Bruce Krall had purchased the majority of Bridgeville's buildings over the years and decided to sell everything as a single lot.
The eBay listing was surprisingly casual for such a massive purchase. The description read like a normal house sale, mentioning the post office, general store, and "charming rustic buildings" as if they were backyard sheds. Bidders could buy an entire municipality with the same process used for buying used electronics.
The auction attracted worldwide attention from curious bidders who had never considered owning their own town. Serious investors competed with pranksters and dreamers who just wanted to say they bid on a whole town.
The winning bidder was a businessmanwhoplanned to turn Bridgeville into a tourist resort, but the deal eventually fell through due to financing complications. The town was re-listed on eBay multiple times over the following years with different owners.
What made the sale particularly unusual was that buyers got everything - not just the land and buildings, but the legal rightstooperate a post office, maintain the zip code 95526, and essentially govern a recognized municipality.
The 25 residents who didn't own property had no say in the sale. They woke up one day to discover their entire townhadbeen sold to a stranger on the internet without their knowledge.
Real estate agents called it the most unusual property transaction in American history. An entire town's destiny was decided by anonymous online bidding.
That tiny California town proved that literally anything can be sold on eBay - even your entire community.