Texas General Land Office - 12 Matching Results

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Manuel de Mier y Terán, Commandant General, to Ramón Músquiz, Political Chief of Dept. of Béxar]
Acknowledging Músquiz' communication of 11/16/1830 and enclosing a copy of a Matamoros newspaper informing that Zavala had sold his colonization contract. Newspaper not found here.
Bailey County
Map of Bailey County, Texas, including the Panhandle Plains region. Capitol Lands and the center of Bailey County are marked on map. Scale ca. 1:133,334 (4000 varas per inch).
Taylor County
Cadastral map of Taylor County, Texas in the Panhandle Plains region. Bodies of water are marked in color. Scale [ca. 1:133,334] (4000 varas per inch).
Eastland County
Map of the Prairies and Lakes region covering Eastland County, Texas. The Deaf and Dumb Asylum Lands are marked on map. Scale ca. 1:133,334 (4000 varas per inch).
Jackson County
Map of Jackson County, Texas, including the Gulf Coast region. Portion of Jackson County West of Lavaca River, belongs to Victoria Land District. The Titled Lands marked in blue are in Austin's Colony, the red are in DeLeon's Colony, and the yellow are in DeWitt's Colony, as shown on map. Scale ca. 1:133,334 (4000 varas per inch).
Lamb County
Map of Lamb County, Texas, including the Panhandle Plains region. Scale ca. 1:133,334 (4000 varas per inch).
Lamb County
Map of Lamb County, Texas, including the Panhandle Plains region. The center of Lamb County is marked on map. Scale ca. 1:133,334 (4000 varas per inch).
Burnet County
Map of Burnet County, Texas, including the Hill Country region. Scale ca. 1:133,334 (4000 varas per inch).
Callahan County
Map of Callahan County, Texas, including the Panhandle Plains region. The old and new centers of Callahan County are marked on map. Asylum Lands are also marked on map. Scale ca. 1:133,334 (4000 varas per inch).
Map of Wichita County
Cadastral map of Wichita County, Texas in the Panhandle Plains region. Some notes have been added in red ink. Scale [ca. 1:133,334] (4000 varas per inch).
Patent 87, Volume 40-A
This document was issued to the Houston & Texas Central Railroad Company as the final instrument in the land grant process, assigning ownership to the railroad company for 640 acres in Tom Green County, section 21, block 20, as described in the patent. O. Henry wrote a fictional account of illegal proceedings concerning a land certificate, Bexar Scrip 2692, in the short story "Bexar Scrip 2692.” This is the patent that ultimately gave land ownership to the railroad via that certificate.
In O. Henry's Memory
Photo essay includes images of O.Henry's life in Austin, including the Hill City Quartette, houses O. Henry lived in, sketches by O. Henry and letters by his daughter Margaret Porter.
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