Enjoy Your Relocation to Marin County
If you are contemplating relocating to Marin County, you are in for truly enjoyable times ahead. One of the most beautiful and unique areas in America, Marin County not only promises gorgeous scenery, but also excellent schools, fine restaurants, endless open spaces and parks, great shopping, and that only grazes the surface.
Some of the most sought-after places to live are in Marin County’s southern reaches – most of them within direct view of the magnificent Golden Gate Bridge. A world-weary advertising executive from New York and first time visitor to the area was so overjoyed with the incredible scenery that he was seeing as he drove up US101 that he actually “had to pull off the highway.”
Sausalito, with its houseboats and extended waterfront, has unbelievable vistas of the City by the Bay – San Francisco. Tiburon, which borders Sausalito to the west, not only has spectacular views of the City; it also has expansive open areas. The star of the area is the exquisite island City of Belvedere, one of the most affluent municipalities in the U.S., that is to be found between Tiburon and Sausalito.
Located in Mill Valley, Tamalpais High School – also open to attendance from Sausalito – was awarded the California Distinguished School Award in 1999, 2005, and 2009 and has ranked in the top 5% of American schools since 2005. Mill Valley is perhaps the most popular municipality for families with children in Marin County.
The process of relocating to Marin County is made much simpler by easily accessed online information that is available about virtually every aspect of each town that one could wish to know. To illustrate, copy and enter the following URL into your browser window: http://www.city-data.com/city/Mill-Valley-California.html. To learn about Tiburon, Belvedere or Sausalito, simply substitute these places for the Mill Valley part of the URL.
Marin’s topographic diversity is another outstanding aspect, started with tidal flats along the coast and rising up the 2,600 foot Mt. Tamalpais. Green and towering Redwood groves and open trails of the Tennessee Valley Trailhead, which is part of the Marin Headlands and the Golden Gate National Recreation Area National Park Service, are perfect locations for horseback riding and hikes. Fishing, boating and swimming are all feasible in the San Francisco and San Pablo Bays and, of course, the Pacific Ocean.
Marin County is also interesting from a historic point of view. Inhabited by the Miwok Indians at the time of the Gold Rush in the early 1850s, the area became most fully populated after the 1906 Earthquake and fires that followed in San Francisco, driving many people of different nationalities across the Bay to Marin County. Owned by Mexico before the US Mexican War, the area was broken into enormous ranchos that were given to Mexicans and Americans who spoke Spanish.
In 1579, famed Sir Francis Drake sailed into a small harbor in western Marin County to repair his ship, The Golden Hind, after a year of marauding along the Mexican coast. While he claimed the surrounding territory for Queen Elizabeth I and England, those claims were never recognized.