Live data · East Texas (Woodbine / Eagle Ford east)

https://Anderson.County.Land

Every RRC-permitted well in Anderson County is plotted on the map below (1,704 pins). The full County Foundation, every recorded instrument joined to wells, parcels, surveys, and ownership, is in production. Use Leon County as the live reference for what your runsheet will look like.

Anderson Access

The wells in Anderson County, on a live map.

Click a well for operator, lease, API, and current status. The full Foundation runsheet for Anderson ships with abstracts, leasing intensity, ownership, and skip-traced contacts.

1,704RRC wells & permits
122K+Est. recorded instruments
24,564O&G leases on file
PalestineCounty seat

The county

Anderson County, at a glance.

Anderson County Courthouse, Palestine, Texas
Anderson County Courthouse · Palestine, Texas · built 1914 · C. H. Page & Brother (1914 Classical Revival)
Region
East Texas (Woodbine / Eagle Ford east)
County seat
Palestine
Cities
Palestine (county seat) · plus Elkhart, Frankston, Cayuga, Montalba, Tennessee Colony

A little history

Created March 24, 1846 from Houston County and named for Kenneth L. Anderson, last vice-president of the Republic of Texas. Palestine, the seat, was named by an early settler from Palestine, Illinois. The Woodbine and Eagle Ford east trends run through the western half of the county.

Public records

Courthouse and records, Anderson County.

Courthouse: 500 N. Church Street, Palestine, TX 75801

Anderson County Clerk

Deeds, oil & gas leases, mineral conveyances, releases, affidavits of heirship, probate filings, marriage and birth records.

Address: 500 N. Church Street, #43, Palestine, TX 75801
Phone: (903) 723-7403

Anderson District Clerk

Civil suits affecting title (quiet title, partition, declaratory judgments), trespass to try title, condemnation, contested probate.

Address: 500 N. Church Street, #43, Palestine, TX 75801
Phone: (903) 723-7403

Online records

For sovereignty-to-current chain of title in Anderson County, our title team pulls deed records in person and reconciles them against the online index. Online date ranges vary by vendor and aren't always complete; for closing-grade title work, we verify at the courthouse.