GLO survey abstract · Leon County, Texas
A-627 is a GLO survey abstract in Leon County, Texas - granted to MC KINNSEY & WILLIAMS - ~340 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
Aggregated from the Texas clerk-of-records instruments table. Counts are real document counts on this abstract, not estimates.
| Paid Up Oil & Gas Lease | 47 | 28% |
| Memorandum Of Oil & Gas Lease | 45 | 27% |
| Oil & Gas Lease | 23 | 14% |
| Deed Of Trust | 11 | 7% |
| Affidavit | 11 | 7% |
| Mineral Deed | 11 | 7% |
| Conveyance | 10 | 6% |
| Special Warranty Deed | 9 | 5% |
Original grantee
McKinney, Williams and Company was the great mercantile house of early Texas, founded by Thomas F. McKinney and Samuel May Williams. The firm moved cotton, supplies, credit, and steamship traffic through the Brazos and Galveston trade, and it advanced vessels, notes, and supplies to the Texas revolutionary government. Its land story grew from that finance: the Republic of Texas and later state authorities recognized debts and claims with land scrip and real-estate security. A survey under this name points to the commercial machinery behind Texas independence, where public debt, merchant credit, and land certificates were tightly linked.
Other abstracts in this county with the same grantee: A-1191 · A-623 · A-626 · A-622 · A-619 · A-624
Oil & gas activity
In the last three years, 15 new oil & gas leases have been filed against A-627, part of a longer chain of 73 all-time.
Source authority
Texas General Land Office (GLO) holds the patent record for every original survey abstract in Texas, including A-627. The Leon 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
Six spatially-nearest GLO abstracts. Useful when you're scoping a contiguous tract or following a chain across survey lines.