Stephens County is located in north-central Oklahoma. As of the 2010 census, the population was 15,034. The county seat of Kingfisher County is Kingfisher, OK. The county was formed and named after the popular bird by a vote of residents in 1890.
Kingfisher County currently ranks #1 in Oklahoma for oil production with 24.1MM BBL of oil produced in 2021.
All Kingfisher County, OK land records and data are available to the general public.
It isn’t free, but with an online connection, you can access the website OKCountyRecords.com and run a limited search for Kingfisher County Oklahoma records, such as an oil and gas lease or deed, mining leases, mineral deeds, transfer on death deeds, look for buyers of minerals, or a specific owner who recently sold mineral rights. In searching for anything filed in the Oklahoma Kingfisher County Clerks office, the main limitation is that the online data is indexed only back to July 1986 and scanned images back to the same date.
With respect to records filed prior in the county, as owners of properties, mineral rights, or other interests, and to view leases and deeds, you will need to visit the county seat, the fine city of Kingfisher located in the Sooner State to review the records and get any copies which your lands or estate may be subject to.
Residents may contact the Office of the Clerk for questions about:
Free half-hour phone call where you can ask questions about your particular situation regarding your oil and gas mineral rights.
Oil prospecting in the mid-1920s brought additional prosperity and a new economic stimulus to Kingfisher County. The activity was most prevalent around the towns of Hennessey, Cashion, and Dover. Roxana, the county’s only real “oil boomtown,” emerged in 1927 when oil was struck at the McCully Number One well.
Roxana had approximately a thousand residents within a year but rapidly declined and became a ghost town. The Hennessey-Dover Field was ultimately determined to be within the Sooner Trend and in 1973 was one of the nation’s top one hundred producers.
Kingfisher County currently ranks #4 in Oklahoma for total gas production with 197,198,369 cubic feet of natural gas produced in 2021.
Kingfisher County currently ranks #1 in Oklahoma for oil production with 24.1MM BBL of oil produced in 2021.
In the 1920’s oil prospecting began to accelerate in Kingfisher County. The Hennessey-Dover Field was ultimately determined to be within the Sooner Trend and in 1973 was one of the nation’s top one hundred producers.
Present-day operations in Kingfisher County tend to focus on the STACK Play “Sooner Trend (oil field), Anadarko (basin), Canadian and Kingfisher (counties)” as the unique formations underneath the STACK have multiple zones that allow for production from multiple layers of rock formations.
The majority of the play is located across Canadian and Kingfisher Counties with extensions into Blaine, Major, and Garfield counties. Operators in the STACK will typically target the Oswego, Meramec, Osage, and Woodford formations.
As a mineral and oil and gas royalty owner in Kingfisher County, OK and especially if you received your mineral rights through inheritance, you should absolutely sign up for our FREE Weekly Oil & Gas Newsletter BELOW and stay on top of the latest in oil and gas news. Our newsletter is produced and published every Wednesday. We provide actionable information at the county level, as well as breaking news for Oklahoma and Texas mineral owners.
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