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GLO survey abstract · Rains County, Texas

A-43CUNNINGHAM, T survey

A-43 is a GLO survey abstract in Rains County, Texas - granted to CUNNINGHAM, T - ~330 acres. The polygon below is the real survey boundary. Estimated instruments, leases, wells, and ownership stats are scoped to this abstract; the Foundation workbook stitches every record back to patent.

Activity profile

What's on file for A-43.

Aggregated from the Texas clerk-of-records instruments table. Counts are real document counts on this abstract, not estimates.

Top instrument types on record

Assign Ogl6732%
Oil Gas & Mineral Lease4019%
Warranty Deed3517%
Deed Of Trust2713%
Warranty Deed W/Vendors Lien136%
Rel Ln136%
Mineral Deed94%
Royalty Deed84%

Recording activity by decade

1920s
73
1930s
12
1940s
27
1950s
18
1960s
7
1970s
29
1980s
29
1990s
34
2000s
48
2010s
20
2020s
16

Original grantee

T Cunningham

Republic of Texas or State of TexasPatent class history

Filed in the GLO under the standard headright/bounty/donation framework, the T Cunningham survey is one of thousands of Rains County patents that capture the moment Texas land policy turned settlement and service into title. The GLO indexes it as Nacogdoches 3rd file 002267. The GLO patent file remains the controlling root document for any chain of title that runs through T Cunningham.

headright bounty or state patent

Oil & gas activity

New leases, permits, and wells on A-43.

No oil & gas leases or drilling permits intersect A-43 in our dated records.

All Rains County abstracts   See the full Foundation workbook

Source authority

Where these abstract designations come from.

Texas General Land Office (GLO) holds the patent record for every original survey abstract in Texas, including A-43. The Rains County clerk's abstract index, every CAD parcel reference, and every lease ever recorded on this tract trace back to the GLO patent.

Search the GLO Land Grant Database →  ·  GLO Map Browser (GIS) →

Surrounding abstracts

Nearby in Rains County.

Six spatially-nearest GLO abstracts. Useful when you're scoping a contiguous tract or following a chain across survey lines.