Washington - Contact a mobile notary in the cities below:

Fircrest WA - Lakewood WA - Puyallup WA - Seattle WA - Spanaway WA - Steilacoom WA - Tacoma WA - University Place WA

Cities in Washington:

Aberdeen | Alderwood Manor | Anacortes | Arlington | Artondale | Auburn | Bainbridge Island | Bangor Trident Base | Battle Ground| Bellevue | Bellingham | Bonney Lake | Bothell | Bremerton | Brier | Bryn Mawr-Skyway | Burien | Burlington | Camano | Camas | Cascade-Fairwood | Centralia | Chehalis | Cheney | Clarkston | Clarkston Heights-Vineland | College Place | Cottage Lake | Covington | Des Moines | Dishman | East Hill-Meridian | East Renton Highlands | East Wenatchee Bench | Edgewood| Edmonds | Elk Plain | Ellensburg | Enumclaw | Ephrata | Everett | Fairwood | Federal Way | Ferndale | Fircrest Notary | Five Corners | Fort Lewis | Gig Harbor | Graham | Grandview | Hazel Dell North | Hazel Dell South | Hobart | Hoquiam | Inglewood-Finn Hill | Issaquah | Kelso | Kenmore | Kennewick | Kent | Kingsgate | Kirkland | Lacey | Lake Forest Park | Lake Morton-Berrydale | Lake Shore | Lake Stevens | Lakeland North | Lakeland South | Lakewood Notary | Lea Hill | Longview | Lynden | Lynnwood | Maltby | Maple Valley | Martha Lake | Marysville | Mercer Island | Midland | Mill Creek | Mill Plain | Minnehaha | Monroe | Moses Lake | Mount Vernon | Mountlake Terrace | Mukilteo | Newcastle | Normandy Park | North Creek | North Marysville | Oak Harbor | Olympia | Opportunity | Orchards | Otis Orchards-East Farms | Paine Field-Lake Stickney | Parkland | Parkwood | Pasco | Picnic Point-North Lynnwood | Port Angeles | Port Orchard | Port Townsend | Poulsbo | Prairie Ridge | Pullman | Puyallup Notary | Redmond | Renton | Richland | Riverton-Boulevard Park | Salmon Creek | Sammamish | SeaTac | Seattle (TIER I) | Seattle Hill-Silver Firs | Sedro-Woolley | Selah | Shelton | Shoreline | Silverdale | Snohomish | South Hill | Spanaway Notary | Spokane | Steilacoom Notary | Summit | Sumner | Sunnyside | Tacoma Notary | Terrace Heights | Toppenish | Tukwila | Tumwater | Union Hill-Novelty Hill | University Place Notary | Vancouver | Vashon | Veradale | Walla Walla | Waller | Walnut Grove | Washougal | Wenatchee | West Lake Stevens | West Richland | West Valley | White Center | Woodinville | Yakima

About Washington

Washington is the only state named for a U.S. president. It was admitted to the Union as the 42nd state on November 11, 1889. Washington is in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. It is bordered on the north by the Canadian province of British Columbia, on the south by Oregon, on the east by Idaho, and on the west by the Pacific Ocean.

Washington has beautiful glaciated mountains and thick woodland in the west, and a wide stretch of golden plains in the eastern section of the state. Olympia is the capital of Washington. The state’s largest city, Seattle, is an important port and a gateway to East Asia and the Arctic North. However, it is the Columbia River, which carves its way down through the central part of the state before turning westward toward the Pacific Ocean, that is Washington’s most important resource.

The Columbia River is the greatest source for potential and actual hydroelectric waterpower in the United States. By constructing dams as Grand Coulee, Chief Joseph, and The Dalles to harness the power of this mighty river, the state has revolutionized its economy and brought about staggering transformations in its landscape. The Columbia’s water provides electric power for much of the industry in the state, most of which has been established since World War II, and irrigation for agriculture, especially in the drier region east of the Cascade Range, where semiarid desert land has been transformed into highly productive ranchland and farms. Washington is known as the Evergreen State, for its extensive forests of evergreen trees.

Olympia is Washington’s capital, and sits on the southern end of the Puget Sound. Established as the capital years before Washington achieved statehood, the city possesses a view of the Olympic Mountains, its namesake. The area is victim to periodic earthquakes, and one in 1949 damaged many historical buildings beyond repair. As a result, much of the architecture in the city reflects mid-twentieth century trends.

Seattle is Washington’s largest city, and it’s official nickname is the Emerald City, though it is also known as the Rainy City and Jet City. Visitors to the city can visit its most popular landmark, the Space Needle, which was built for the 1962 World’s Fair. The building is designed to withstand the earthquakes that occasionally strike the city, and is 60 stories tall.

Seattle has a reputation for political activism, and in 1999, when the World Trade Organization met to discuss policy, the city was filled with protesters. Seattle is the birthplace of several famous coffee shops, including Starbucks, and the city known to have given grunge music to the world.

On May 18, 1980, following a period of heavy tremors and eruptions, the northeast face of Mount St. Helens exploded outward, destroying a large part of the top of the volcano. This eruption flattened the forests, killed 57 people, flooded the Columbia River and its tributaries with ash and mud, and blanketed large parts of Washington in ash, making day look like night.

Those interested in learning more about Washington, including how to become a notary public in the state, should visit Become A Notary Public

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