San Mateo County, officially the County of San Mateo, is a county in the U.S. state of California. As of the 2020 census, the population was 764,442. Redwood City is the county seat,the third-most populated city in the county after Daly City and San Mateo.
San Mateo County is included in the San Francisco–Oakland–Berkeley, CA MSA (metropolitan statistical area), Silicon Valley, and is part of the San Francisco Bay Area, the nine counties bordering San Francisco Bay. As of 2020, it has a median household income of $128,091, the fourth-highest household income of any county in the nation behind Loudoun County, Virginia, Falls Church, Virginia, and Santa Clara County, California.
The county covers most of the San Francisco Peninsula. The county is predominantly suburban and is home to many corporate campuses.
San Mateo County was formed in 1856 upon the division of San Francisco County, one of the state’s 18 original counties established at California statehood in 1850. Until 1856, San Francisco’s city limits extended west to Divisadero Street and Castro Street, and south to 20th Street. In 1856, the California state government divided the country. A straight line was then drawn across the tip of the San Francisco Peninsula just north of San Bruno Mountain. Everything south of the line became the new San Mateo County while everything north of the line became the new consolidated City and County of San Francisco. San Mateo County was officially organized on April 18, 1857, under a bill introduced by Senator T.G. Phelps. The 1857 bill defined the southern boundary of San Mateo County as following the south branch of San Francisquito Creek to its source in the Santa Cruz Mountains and thence due west to the Pacific Ocean, and named Redwood City as the county seat. San Mateo County then annexed part of northern Santa Cruz County in March 1868, including Pescadero and Pigeon Point.
Although the formation bill named Redwood City the county seat, a May 1856 election marked by “unblushing frauds perpetrated on an unorganized and wholly unprotected community by thugs and ballot stuffers from San Francisco” named Belmont the county seat.The election results were declared illegal and the county government was moved to Redwood City, with land being donated from the original Pulgas Grant for the county government on February 27, 1858. Redwood City’s status as county seat was upheld in two successive elections in May 1861 and December 9, 1873, defeating San Mateo and Belmont.Another election in May 1874 named San Mateo the county seat, but the state supreme court overturned that election on February 24, 1875, and the county seat has remained at Redwood City ever since.
San Mateo County bears the Spanish name for Saint Matthew. As a place name, San Mateo appears as early as 1776 in the diaries of Anza and Font.Several local geographic features were also designated San Mateo on early maps including variously: a settlement, an arroyo, a headland jutting into the Pacific (Point Montara), and a large land holding (Rancho San Mateo). Until about 1850, the name appeared as San Matheo.
San Mateo County was created by exclusion from the City and County of San Francisco when it was incorporated in 1856; San Mateo County was re-established by an act passed on April 18, 1857, which also made Redwood City the county seat and included provisions for the first County Court, with sessions to be held in March, June, and November of each year.The first County Judge was the honorable Benjamin I. Fox (1804–69), who served from 1856 to 1860; court was held in a storehouse on Redwood Creek, rented from J.V. Diller for $40/month.
Address: 400 County Center, Redwood City, CA 94063
Hours:
Thursday | 8 AM–5 PM |
Friday | 8 AM–5 PM |
Saturday | Closed |
Sunday | Closed |
Monday | 8 AM–5 PM |
Tuesday | 8 AM–5 PM |
Wednesday | 8 AM–5 PM |
Phone: (650) 261-5100
Website: https://sanmateo.courts.ca.gov
Address: 800 N Humboldt St, San Mateo, CA 94401
Phone: (650) 261-5100
Website: https://sanmateo.courts.ca.gov
Address: 1050 Mission Rd, South San Francisco, CA 94080
Hours:
Thursday | 8 AM–4 PM |
Friday | 8 AM–4 PM |
Saturday | Closed |
Sunday | Closed |
Monday | 8 AM–4 PM |
Tuesday | 8 AM–4 PM |
Wednesday | 8 AM–4 PM |
Phone: (650) 261-5100
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