MOBILE NOTARY IN BURLINGAME
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Whether you have no time to search for a notary...
...or you need help obtaining a California apostille for your foreign-bound documents, you WILL NOT find a more reliable, reasonably priced mobile notary and apostille service -- from Hollywood Boulevard to San Francisco to Irvine to BURLINGAME— Mobile City Notary will be there.
You get the expertise of a California notary certified as a Notary Signing Agent PLUS the convenience of having a California notary available in BURLINGAME, CA.
...or you need help obtaining a California apostille for your foreign-bound documents, you WILL NOT find a more reliable, reasonably priced mobile notary and apostille service -- from Hollywood Boulevard to San Francisco to Irvine to BURLINGAME— Mobile City Notary will be there.
You get the expertise of a California notary certified as a Notary Signing Agent PLUS the convenience of having a California notary available in BURLINGAME, CA.
What types of documents do you work with?
- Affidavits of Every Variety
- Certification of Document Copies (by the document custodian/owner)
- Compliance Forms for BURLINGAME, CA
- Divorce and Separation Agreements
- Loan Packages and other Bank Documents
- Power-of-Attorney Forms
- Prenuptial/Premarital Agreements
- Trusts and Wills
- Foreign Bound Apostille
Burlingame is a city in San Mateo County, California. It is located on the San Francisco Peninsula and has a significant shoreline on San Francisco Bay. An early suburb of San Francisco, the city is named after diplomat Anson Burlingame. Beginning in the 1960s its proximity to the San Francisco International Airport generated airline support services growth and an increase in population. As of the 2010 U.S. Census, Burlingame had a population of 28,806.
Burlingame is on the Mexican land grant Rancho San Mateo given by Governor Pio Pico to his secretary, Cayetano Arena in 1845. Cayetano soon sold the land to San Francisco based merchant William Davis Merry Howard. Howard retired to live on the rancho for the remaining eight years of his life. Howard planted many eucalyptus trees on his property.
Howard's early death in 1856 led to the sale of most of the land to William C. Ralston, a prominent banker. In 1866, Anson Burlingame, the US Minister to China visited Ralston, and by the time he left he was the owner of 1,043 acres (4 km2) of land. In 1868, Ralston named the settlement after his friend, Anson Burlingame.[5] However, Burlingame would not come back to the area again because on a visit to Russia in 1870, Burlingame died. With his death the land reverted to Ralston.