Tag: Sand Creek Massacre
Colorado Territory Notary History Three hundred years before Colorado Territory was formed, the first notaries passed through present-day Colorado in the 1500s. They were royal notaries on horseback who …
Colorado Territorial Notary, Eugene Weston, 1862 Eugene Weston, a pioneer of southern Colorado, and a territorial notary was born in Bloomfield (now Skowhegan), Maine, Sept. 24, 1835. A remote …
Depredation, Horses Stolen by Indians, 1872 In 1888, Colorado notary John W. Douthit, of Las Animas County, took the sworn statement (affidavit of depredation) of a livestock dealer from …
Notarized Documents of Native Americans, 1800s Following the landing of Columbus in 1492, Spanish explorers in the Southwest, as early as the Coronado Expedition of 1540, met Native Americans. …
Notary History Timeline Our Colorado Notary Blog includes a growing collection and reference library of articles on the history of writing, seals, scribes, and notary history. Many of our …
Deposition by Colorado Notary, 1865 Colorado notary law CRS 12-55-110(1)(d) authorizes a notary to take depositions, affidavits, verifications, and other sworn testimony or statements. While many notaries take affidavits, …
Federal Notary Authority Colorado notary powers and duties are listed in CRS 12-55-110 of the Colorado Notaries Public Act. Notaries may also perform acts authorized under common law or …
Native Americans, Tribal ID Colorado notaries must use reasonable care to identify a document signer. A current government-issued ID card, containing a photograph and a signature, such as a …