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Mover State License

Certificate of Liability & Cargo Insurance

Broward County License 

   

Broward County Occupational License

  

City Occupational License

  

Sales License from State of Florida

Lee County License

Moving to Maryland?

Maryland motto: "Fatti maschii parole femine," loosely translated "manly deeds, womanly words," but more accurately translated as "strong deeds, gentle words."

Maryland flower: black-eyed susan

Maryland tree: white oak

Maryland bird: Baltimore oriole

Maryland flag: Adopted in 1904. Design bears the arms of the Calvert and Crossland families.

Maryland is a state located in the Mid Atlantic region of the United States.

Maryland was the seventh state to ratify the United States Constitution.

Maryland bears 2 nicknames, the Old Line State and the Free State. Due to the  great variety of topography Maryland is also called  “America in Miniature”.

Maryland is a life sciences hub with over 350 biotechnology firms, making it the third-largest such cluster in the nation. Institutions and agencies located throughout Maryland include University System of Maryland, Johns Hopkins University, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Celera Genomics, Human Genome Sciences (HGS), The Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR), the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).

Baltimore is Maryland's most populous city. Historically, this city and many others in Maryland developed along the fall line, the point at which rivers are no longer navigable from sea level due to the presence of rapids or waterfalls. Maryland's capital, Annapolis, is one exception to this rule, lying along the Severn River close to where it empties into the Chesapeake Bay. Other major population centers include suburban hubs Columbia in Howard County, MD, Silver Spring, Rockville and Gaithersburg in Montgomery County, MD, Frederick in Frederick County, MD and Hagerstown in Washington County, MD. The eastern, southern, and western portions of Maryland state tend to be more rural, although they are dotted with cities of regional importance such as Salisbury and Ocean City on the Eastern Shore, Lexington Park and Waldorf in Southern Maryland, and Cumberland in Western Maryland.

Maryland's gross state product in 2004 was US$ 228 billion.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau's 2007 Maryland is currently the richest state in the country, with a median household income of $65,144 which puts it ahead of New Jersey and Connecticut, which are second and third respectively. Two of Maryland's counties, Howard and Montgomery, are the third and seventh wealthiest counties in the nation respectively. Also, the state's poverty rate of 7.8% is the lowest in the country. Maryland’s per capita personal income in 2006 was US$ 43,500, 5th in the nation. Maryland’s average household income in 2002 was US$ 53,043, also 5th in the nation.

Maryland's economic activity is strongly concentrated in the tertiary service sector, and this sector, in turn, is strongly influenced by location. One major service activity in Maryland is transportation, centered around the Port of Baltimore, MD and its related rail and trucking access.

The second service activity in Maryland takes advantage of the close location of the center of government, and emphasizes technical and administrative tasks for the defense/aerospace industry and bio-research laboratories, as well as staffing of satellite government headquarters in the suburban or exurban Baltimore/Washington area. In addition many educational and medical research institutions are located in Maryland.

Maryland's population was 5,296,486 in 2000.

The arts in Maryland reflect the State's geographic and cultural diversity from traditional Appalachian fiddle music in Western Maryland and African-American quilting on the lower Eastern Shore to experimental performance and media arts in metropolitan Baltimore, MD.

Through the Maryland State Arts Council, Maryland government supports the performing, visual and creative arts