New Hampshire - Contact a mobile notary in the cities below:
Cities in New Hampshire:
Amherst | Atkinson | Barrington | Bedford | Belmont | Berlin | Bow | Claremont | Concord | Conway | Derry | Dover | Durham | Exeter | Franklin | Gilford | Goffstown | Hampstead | Hampton | Hanover | Hollis | Hooksett | Hudson | Hudson | Keene | Laconia | Lebanon | Litchfield | Londonderry | Manchester | Merrimack | Milford | Milford | Nashua | Newmarket | Newport | Pelham | Pembroke | Plaistow | Portsmouth | Raymond | Rochester | Salem | Seabrook | Somersworth | Stratham | Swanzey | Weare | Windham | Wolfeboro
About New Hampshire
Settled only three years after the landing of the Pilgrims at Plymouth, Massachusetts, New Hampshire was one of the original 13 colonies. As the ninth state to ratify the Constitution of the United States, New Hampshire cast the decisive vote on June 21, 1788, that put the Constitution into effect.
New Hampshire is one of the six New England states, and one of the smaller states of the United States. It is bordered on the north by the Canadian province of Québec, on the east by Maine and the Atlantic Ocean, on the south by Massachusetts, and on the west by Vermont.
New Hampshire is known as the Granite State because of its extensive granite formations and deposits. Captain John Mason named the state, after receiving one of the first land grants in the early 17th century in what was to become New Hampshire. He named the area after the English county of Hampshire, where he had spent time as a youth.
Within New Hampshire’s boundaries are the highest mountains in New England, countless lakes, hundreds of streams and brooks, and large areas of unspoiled woodlands.
Glaciers, the last of which receded 10,000 years ago, once covered New Hampshire. These glaciers rounded out the mountains and created hundreds of streams and lakes. In addition, much of New Hampshire is covered with rocks, boulders, and clays that were deposited by the glaciers. Although glaciers covered all of the state, there are great differences among its natural regions.
Tourists have flocked to New Hampshire since the late 1800s. Despite its rural appearance, New Hampshire has long been an industrial state. Two of its early industries, the manufacture of shoes and of textiles, started in the homes of the earliest settlers.
Concord is the capital of New Hampshire. Christa McAuliffe, famous teacher and astronaut, who died in the Challenger explosion in 1986, is from Concord. The city built a planetarium in her name.
Manchester is the largest city in New Hampshire. Businessman Samuel Blodgett, built a canal and lock system around the Amoskeag Falls, and envisioned an industrial revolution in New England, much like the one in Manchester in England. His predictions came true, as cotton mills and other businesses moved in, and this is how Manchester got its name.
Since 1952, New Hampshire’s presidential primary, held early in every presidential election year, has received national and international attention. The primary, and the state, has become the most telling testing ground of candidates for the Republican and Democratic nominations. The media give New Hampshire (and Iowa) about half of all the attention paid to all states in the primary process, magnifying the state’s decision power and spurring repeated efforts by out-of-state politicians to change the rules.
Those interested in learning more about New Hampshire, including how to become a notary public in the state, should visit Became A Notary Public