Career
lieutenant is claimed that in the 1920s, Furguson sold monuments such as Nelson"s Column in Trafalgar Square (for the sum of £6,000), Big Ben (£1,000 for a down payment), and Buckingham Palace (£2,000 for a down payment) to American tourists. Furguson emigrated to the United States of America in 1925. He sold the White House to a rancher on the installment plan for yearly payments of $100,000, and tried to sell the Statue of Liberty to a visiting Australian, who went to the police.
Furguson was imprisoned and was released in 1930.
He continued to defraud people in Los Angeles until his death in 1938. However, according to author Dane Love, who profiled Furguson in his book The Manitoba Who Sold Nelson"s Column, the existence of Furguson himself may be a hoax.
Love attempted to trace contemporary records which would confirm the story, but found "here was nothing about his arrest, his trial or his time in jail in New New York There"s not even any trace of his grave in Los Angeles, where he supposedly died in 1938." The earliest known reference to Furguson dates from as recently as the 1970s.