MOBILE NOTARY IN SAN MATEO
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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 SAN MATEO— 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 SAN MATEO, 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 SAN MATEO— 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 SAN MATEO, 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 SAN MATEO, CA
- Divorce and Separation Agreements
- Loan Packages and other Bank Documents
- Power-of-Attorney Forms
- Prenuptial/Premarital Agreements
- Trusts and Wills
- Foreign Bound Apostille
San Mateo (/ˌsæn məˈteɪ.oʊ/ SAN mə-TAY-oh; Spanish for "Saint Matthew") is a city in San Mateo County, California in the high-tech enclave of Silicon Valley in the San Francisco Bay Area. With a population of 97,207 as of the 2010 census, it is one of the larger suburbs on the San Francisco Peninsula, located between Burlingame to the north, Foster City to the east, Belmont to the south, and Highlands-Baywood Park and Hillsborough to the west. Census Department estimates as of 2013, that the city's population exceeded 101,000.[6]
San Mateo was incorporated in 1894. By car, San Mateo is about thirty
minutes from downtown San Jose and twenty-five minutes from downtown San
Francisco.
Documented by Spanish colonists as part of the Rancho de las Pulgas (literally "Ranch of the Fleas") and the Rancho San Mateo, the earliest history is held in the archives of Mission Dolores. In 1789 the Spanish missionaries had named a Native American village along Laurel Creek as Los Laureles or the Laurels (Mission Dolores, 1789). An 1835 sketch map of the Rancho refers to the creek as arroyo de los Laureles. In the 21st century, most of the laurels are gone, removed for development.
Documented by Spanish colonists as part of the Rancho de las Pulgas (literally "Ranch of the Fleas") and the Rancho San Mateo, the earliest history is held in the archives of Mission Dolores. In 1789 the Spanish missionaries had named a Native American village along Laurel Creek as Los Laureles or the Laurels (Mission Dolores, 1789). An 1835 sketch map of the Rancho refers to the creek as arroyo de los Laureles. In the 21st century, most of the laurels are gone, removed for development.