Wells Fargo (1852–1998)
Former American banking company / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Wells Fargo was an American banking company based in San Francisco, California, that was acquired by Norwest Corporation in 1998. During the California Gold Rush in early 1848 at Sutter's Mill near Coloma, California, financiers and entrepreneurs from all over North America and the world flocked to California, drawn by the promise of huge profits. Vermont native Henry Wells and New Yorker William G. Fargo watched the California economy boom with keen interest. Before either Wells or Fargo could pursue opportunities offered in the Western United States, however, they had business to attend to in the Eastern United States.
Company type | Former publicly traded business |
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Industry | |
Predecessors | |
Founded | 18 March 1852; 172 years ago (1852-03-18) in New York City, U.S. |
Founders | |
Defunct | 2 November 1998; 25 years ago (1998-11-02) |
Fate | Acquired by Norwest Corporation and merged to create the current Wells Fargo & Company. |
Successor | Wells Fargo & Company |
Headquarters | San Francisco, California, U.S. (corporate); New York, NY (operational) |
Area served | Worldwide |
Products | |
Subsidiaries |
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Website | wellsfargo.com |
Wells, founder of Wells and Company, and Fargo, a partner in Livingston, Fargo, and Company, and mayor of Buffalo, New York, from 1862 to 1863 and again from 1864 to 1865, were major figures in the young and fiercely competitive express industry. In 1849 a new rival, John Warren Butterfield, founder of Butterfield, Wasson & Company, entered the business. Butterfield, Wells and Fargo soon realized that their competition was destructive and wasteful, and in 1850 they decided to join forces to form the American Express Company, which operates to the present day as the credit card giant American Express.
Soon after the new company was formed, Wells, the first president of American Express, and Fargo, its vice president, proposed expanding their business to California. Fearing that American Express's most powerful rival, Adams and Company (later renamed Adams Express Company), would acquire a monopoly in the West, the majority of the American Express Company's directors balked. Undaunted, Wells and Fargo decided to start their own business while continuing to fulfill their responsibilities as officers and directors of American Express.[1] On March 18, 1852, Wells Fargo was founded in New York City.[2][3]