Most quit rents are relics of medieval agreements. A few
examples include: Some English landowners must produce a variety
of quit rents: a bucket of snow on demand, three red roses, a
small French flag, a salmon spear. Some rents only kick in if
the king or queen visits: the renter must provide the crown with
a bed of straw, in another the renter must offer a single white
rose.
There is a quite recent
one in Lake Havasu City, Arizona, USA. It started when the city
imported a bridge from London (which had spanned the Thames
river) and was auctioned off in the late 1960s. Robert
McCulloch, Lake Havasu City’s founder, bought the bridge, and by
the early ’70s, the bridge had been reinstalled in Arizona.
As a gift to London, during the dedication ceremony, McCulloch
offered an acre of Arizona land and years later, when the city
wanted to use that land for a visitor’s center, London agreed to
lease it back to Lake Havasu. They settled on a token quit rent:
a Kachina doll (a carved Hopi figure representing an immortal
being).