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Who Really Invented Monopoly? The Story the Box Never Told

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb
The Truth Network Radio
December 23, 2025 3:04 am

Who Really Invented Monopoly? The Story the Box Never Told

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb

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December 23, 2025 3:04 am

The true story of Monopoly's origins reveals that Lizzie McGee, a woman from Illinois, created the game in 1904 to teach people about the single tax theory. Charles Darrow, a former heater salesman, later claimed to have invented the game, but evidence shows that he did not. The real story of Monopoly's creation is a complex and fascinating tale of innovation and perseverance.

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This is an iHeart podcast. Guaranteed human. This is Sophie Cunningham from Show Me Something. Do you know the symptoms of moderate to severe obstructive sleep apnea, or OSA, in adults with obesity? They may be happening to you without you knowing.

If anyone has ever said you snored loudly or if you spend your days fighting off excessive tiredness, irritability, and concentration issues, it may be due to OSA. OSA is a serious condition where your airway partially or completely collapses during sleep, which may cause breathing interruptions and oxygen deprivation. Learn more at don'tsleep on osa.com. This information is provided by Lilly, a medicine company. Mm-hmm.

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For the second season in a row, I partnered with T-Mobile's Friday Night 5G Lights, powering up hometown football across America. This year, T-Mobile invested over $4 million in prizes to help schools take their Friday nights to the next level.

Now it's time to crown our $1 million grand prize winner. A huge congrats to Derricks High School in Derricks, Arkansas, home of the Outlaws and your 2025 T-Mobile Friday Night 5G Lights Champion. They scored a home field upgrade, Gronk Fitness Weight Room, a 2026 tailgate party, and an all-expense paid trip to the SEC Championship game. to every school that competed, posted and rallied your communities. Thank you.

And a big thanks to T-Mobile for making it all possible and helping communities shine under the Friday night lights. This season may be over, but the story isn't. Stay tuned for season three in 2026. Season two of Unrivaled Basketball is here, and the talent is unreal. Paige Beckers, Nafiza Collier, Kelsey Plum, Brianna Stewart, and more are back to redefine the game.

Unrivaled Basketball, Season 2, sponsored by Samsung Galaxy, tips off January 5th on TNT, True TV, and HBO Max. And we return to our American stories. Up next, a story on one of the most iconic board games ever made. We're talking about Monopoly. The most widely told story on how it came to be is that the game was invented by a former heater salesman named Charles Darrow, who created the board game amid the Great Depression.

And sold it to the Parker brothers in the 1930s. But the truth. is more complicated. Here to tell the real story of Monopoly is Mary Pilon, author of The Monopolist. Take it away, Mary.

How did I make it big? I know how. To play the game, I buy real estate, hotels, fancy cars, even railroads. And I take chances. To make it big, blow-oh, you've got to play the game.

I'm monopoly gay. The story of Monopoly that I learned as a kid that was tucked in my family's board game box and millions of others was that this man, Charles Darrow, invented the game during, you know, kind of the darkest hours of the Great Depression. And then the story went that he was down on his luck. He was struggling to find work, as so many Americans were at that time. And he goes into his basement and he innovates and he creates this game to remind his family of better times, vacationing in Atlantic City.

And, you know, he sells the game and it becomes the surprise hit, saving him and Parker Brothers from the brink of destruction. For decades, that's how the story was told. The problem is it's not true. The true story actually starts with this woman, Lizzie McGee. She was born in the 1860s in Illinois.

Her father, James McGee, was a really influential political thinker. He was one of the co-founders of the Republican Party. He had traveled extensively with Abraham Lincoln during the Lincoln-Douglas debates. He was a very influential newspaper owner. Uh And Lizzie McGee took after her father.

She was very politically minded. She was really savvy. She wrote poetry. She wrote short stories. And she was an impassioned follower of this man named Henry George.

He was a huge deal in his time. He wrote this massive bestseller called Progress and Poverty. He was really interested in land and how we're taxing it, this thing called the single tax. And Lizzie McGee was really swept up in this and also was questioning how much money was being created in this country and how that was going to be divided. She's coming into the world, you know, of a very different generation than her father's.

And a lot is happening in the country from the time that she's born. You're starting to see the rise of the monopolists.

So she creates a game. In 1904, she receives a patent for the landlord's game. And her goal is to really use this game to teach people that Henry George and single tax theory. And this game spreads among a who's who of left-wing America. And one of the groups that really loves the game are the Quakers in Atlantic City.

The Quakers, they're not big drinkers, they're not big gamblers, but they really love Monopoly and they start having these Monopoly nights. And when people played Monopoly in the early days, they localized the boards.

So if you were playing in Boston, you'd have the Boston Commons. If you were in Chicago, you would have the loop on there.

So the Quakers put Atlantic City properties on. And it's a version of this game that a man named Charles Todd plays. Charles Todd is from Philadelphia. He learns the game in Atlantic City, so not very far away. And then he runs into an old friend.

You know, he and his wife were walking and they run into the Darrows, Charles and Esther on the street.

So they have a Monopoly night and Charles Darrow learns the game from the Todds. And the next day, something kind of weird happens, which is that Darrow reaches out to Charles Todd and he says, I love that Monopoly game so much. When you have a moment, can you have your secretary type up the rules? And Todd thinks this is like a little weird because imagine if he went to someone's house and played like checkers or chess. I mean, at this point, Monopoly had been around for.

30 years or so. But nonetheless, Todd does it and he types up the rules and it's the Atlantic City version of the game.

So it's that game that Charles Darrow sells to Parker Brothers, but he claims that he invented it. But it isn't long before they realize that they have a problem, which is that Charles Darrow did not invent the game. Nobody used to care who invented games. It's not like, oh, I'm going to buy a book because of the author or see a movie because of the actor, actress who's starring in it. But Darrow's story, this Rags to Riches story, becomes like really woven with the marketing around Monopoly and the lore.

But people start writing in and they're like, I played this game 10 years ago. I played this game 20 years ago. And one of the people who gets really angry about this is Lizzie McGee herself. In the mid-1930s, she's living in Washington, D.C., and she calls up these reporters from the Washington Post and the Washington Evening Star. And she says, I got a patent for this in 1904 and 1924.

This is my game. Parker Brothers realizes that they have to do damage control. George Parker himself comes back out of retirement. He gets on a train, he goes to Washington, D.C. And they strike up this deal.

And the deal is: you know what, Lizzie McGee? Parker Brothers tells her, we're gonna publish three of your games, including The Landlord's Game. And at first, Lizzie McGee is elated because she thinks she's gonna get credit for her contribution with one of the most famous board game companies out there. But it's really sad. There's no evidence that Parker Brothers made any effort to acknowledge her as the inventor, pay her any residuals, or publish her other games.

One of the last traces we have of Lizzie McGee's life is the 1940 US Census. And what I find interesting about that is of all the different things that she did with her time, she lists her occupation as maker of games.

So it was something she very much identified with, and her income as zero. And that's kind of the last we hear about Lizzie McGee. And it isn't until decade later through this wild and crazy set of circumstances that her story is exhumed and we start to find out the truth of what happened. Monopoly's been bringing people together for almost 50 years. That's how long we've been wheeling and dealing together, building hotels together, and going to jail together.

In the 1970s, there was a man named Ralph Onspach. He was living in the Bay Area, and he was an economics professor. One of the big headlines then was around the OPEC oil cartels. He's one of the many people waiting in long lines for gas, and he's teaching his students, and he has these two boys at home. The kids were playing Monopoly one night, and he's like, this teaches them bad things.

This teaches them, like, I don't think capitalism is about clobbering everybody else so that you can get ahead.

So he decides to invent a game called Anti-Monopoly, which is a more, you know, in his eyes, philosophically pleasing version of the game. He makes this game and he starts selling it. And it's this kind of countercultural hit. And it isn't long before he receives a cease and desist from Parker Brothers. And they say, you cannot make a game called Anti-Monopoly.

We own Monopoly. And he thinks, this is crazy. You can't have a monopoly on monopoly. And that kicks off this 10 year long legal battle that ultimately goes to the steps of the Supreme Court. And he becomes obsessed with researching the origins of the game.

Mm-hmm. And in his work, he starts to find that There's a lot of holes in the story, and that Darrow didn't invent the game, that Lizzie McGee actually did. And he starts traveling across the country to interview people who hadn't played the games. And he becomes like this detective, you know, who pieces together the history of it all. And I wouldn't be here talking about this if not for Ralph.

Like, he absolutely took it on full time. You know, this lawsuit strained his marriage, strained his family, strained him financially, but he really stuck to it. We now have evidence that Parker Brothers had received letters from original players, people who'd been playing before Darrow.

So the idea that they didn't know does not square with the facts. The other thing we see in Ralph's lawsuit is this exchange between Barton, who was the CEO of Parker, or the head of Parker Brothers at the time, and Darrow. Where he asks Darrow, he's like, hey, you know, we're hearing that you didn't invent this game. And Darrow waffles. Like, he just avoids the question.

He refuses to give a full accounting. And then, you know, later when Ralph's lawsuit comes up, Barton is deposed and he testifies under oath and he really dismisses Lizzie McGee. He kind of writes her off as a political quack, but the record shows that they knew that Darrow had not invented the game, but continued with the story. And even today, you know, Hasbro will not admit that Lizzie McGee invented the game. It's interesting, you know, his case settled in the 1980s.

And it was covered pretty widely at that time. Yet the Darrow myth really persisted. I think part of why is it's an amazing story. Who doesn't want to believe in a Cinderella story that you can go into your basement? And have a light bulb moment and suddenly become rich.

That's as American as it gets, but it's just not true. And I think actually that. The little engine that could have it is Lizzie McGee. You know, she, to me, is the innovator and the one who, against all odds, really persevered. But Lizzie McGee and Ralph Onspock never met.

She died way before the lawsuit. And yet their fates become intertwined because Lizzie McGee needs Ralph as this advocate to tell her story. And Ralph Angsbach needs to find the Lizzie McGee story to piece together the origins of the case. And in the Supreme Courts, They uphold a lot of historical research. In the end, he won his right to sell his anti-Monopoly games and won the right to talk about the game's origins, including Lizzie McGee's history, openly.

And a terrific job on the production, editing, and storytelling by our own Gavin Listro. And by the way, thanks to intellectual property rights, it's harder and harder to steal ideas. It can still happen, no doubt, but my goodness, only in America did we really dig down and drill deep on the idea of patent and IP rights so that lone inventor could get the reward. could go to court and win. The story of how Monopoly came to be, the real story, here on Our American Stories.

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This is Unrivaled, where the pace is faster, the energy is higher, and every athlete shines. Unrivaled Basketball, Season 2, sponsored by Samsung Galaxy, tips off January 5th on TNT, True TV, and HBO Max. Support for the show comes from Public, the investing platform for those who take it seriously. On Public, you can build a multi-asset portfolio of stocks, bonds, options, crypto, and now generated assets, which allow you to turn any idea into an investable index with AI. It all starts with your prompt.

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That's public.com/slash podcast. Paid for by Public Investing, Brokerage Services by Open to the Public Investing Inc., member FANRA SIPC. Advisory Services by Public Advisors LLC, SEC Registered Advisor. Generated assets is an interactive analysis tool. Output is for informational purposes only and is not investment recommendation or advice.

Complete disclosures available at public.com/slash disclosures. This is Sophie Cunningham from Show Me Something. Do you know the symptoms of moderate to severe obstructive sleep apnea or OSA in adults with obesity? They may be happening to you without you knowing. If anyone has ever said you snored loudly or if you spend your days fighting off excessive tiredness, irritability, and concentration issues, it may be due to OSA.

OSA is a serious condition where your airway partially or completely collapses during sleep, which may cause breathing interruptions and oxygen deprivation. Learn more at don't sleep on osa.com. This information is provided by Lilly, a medicine company. Okay. Only 10 more presents to wrap.

You're almost at the finish line. But first. In the night, I'm in it shining bright. There. The last one.

Enjoy a Coca-Cola for a pause that. refreshes. This is an iHeart podcast. Guaranteed human. Mm-hmm.

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