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We welcome you to Reno Nevada Mortgage Lender .com
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Reno Nevada Mortgage Lender .com
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| Carson City FHA & VA Program Info |
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FHA (Federal Housing Administration) and VA (Veteran's Administration) home loan programs are not limited to first time home buyers but they are great programs for Carson City area buyers with small or zero down payment. FHA and VA loans can be especially advantageous when combined with a HFA or MCC first time homebuyer program.
Carson City and Nevada area first time home buyers often experience the most difficulty amounting a significant down payment and everyone should have the opportunity to buy a home. For this reason the Federal government has developed two loan programs to assist Carson Citya home buyers who have little or no down payment. These programs are called the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) and the Veteran’s Administration (VA). A Reno Nevada Mortgage Lender .com home loan advisor will be able to determine if you qualify and if so which program is acceptable for your needs.
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| Welcome to Reno Nevada Mortgage Lender .com |
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Reno Nevada Mortgage Lender .com offers all the information you need to help you in obtaining a home loan or mortgage in Carson City. Reno Nevada Mortgage Lender .com is locally owned and operated to ensure you a friendly, and neighbor-like experience, therefore Reno Nevada Mortgage Lender .com is Carson City's premiere mortgage broker of choice. We are also licensed to provide Carson City mortgages and home loans, Carson City jumbo loans, Carson City second mortgages and Carson City refinance loans, Carson City fixed rate mortgages, and home mortgage loans in Carson City.
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| Reno Nevada Mortgage Lender .com helps First Time Home Buyer |
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Reno Nevada Mortgage Lender .com often helps new home buyers acquire the home of their dreams through our different mortgage programs. These programs include exclusive loan products that allow home buyers to have a low down payment.
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Reno Nevada Mortgage Lender .com | Carson City 877.444.0079 | Powered By First Virginia Financial | Copyright 2003, All Rights Reserved. Mortgage Broker Marketing
A Bit of History for Carson City, Nevada
Carson City sits in the center of one of the most scenic and historic areas in the country, making it the perfect starting point for sightseeing. The habitat of the Eastern Sierra must have been a welcome refuge for explorers Kit Carson and John C. Fremont as they rode into Eagle Valley during their 1840s quest to map the West. To the east, long stretches of desert mark the difficult terrain settlers had to endure to get here. To the west, the Sierra Nevada mountains stretch out as a gateway to the Pacific.
During that time, Northern Nevada saw its first wave of white settlers. The Bidwell-Bartleson party is believed to have made their way through the area in 1841. Westbound traffic increased, spurred by the big boom of 1848-1849 when the discovery of California gold ignited the frontier spirit and transformed Eagle Valley. By 1851, Eagle Station, a trading post and small ranch on the Carson Branch of the California Emigrant Trail, served as a stopover for travel-weary gold prospectors.
According to historical accounts, the station and surrounding valley took their names from an eagle shot by Frank Hall with his ball-and-cap Colt and mounted on the trading post wall. Frank, brother W.L. Hall and George Jollenshee ran the ranch, located at the current site of Fifth and Thompson streets. In 1858 Abraham Curry bought Eagle Station when he found lots in Genoa to be too expensive. Carson City's future designation as a capital was largely the fruit of Curry's labor. He left a 10-acre plaza in the city center for his predicted location of the state capitol as he laid plans for the city's future.
In 1859, gold prospectors hit silver in the hills east of Carson City. The Comstock Lode, as it was called, was the largest silver find in world history. Tens of thousands of miners poured into Carson City and Virginia City. In the 1860's, Carson City was a station on the Pony Express and the Overland mail under both Butterfield and Wells, Fargo and Co. In 1861, true to Curry's prediction, and largely because of his shrewd maneuvers, Carson City became the capital of the Nevada Territory.
Despite its small population and expansive territory (Nevada is the seventh largest state), statehood was inevitable. War was brewing in the east, and Nevada's wealth, as well as its congressional votes, would prove vital to the Union war effort. Nevada was granted statehood on Oct. 31, 1864. Each year Nevada's "Battle Born" roots are celebrated in Carson City with the Nevada Day parade. Prosperity continued when the Big Bonanza, another major silver strike, was discovered in 1873. Construction of the V&T Railroad served the mines by transporting ore and timber.
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