Beautiful certificate from the
American Merchants Union Express Company issued
in 1869. This historic document was printed by John H. Duyckinck, Stationer, and has an
ornate border around it with a vignette of horses pulling three men on a coach with a factory and ships in the background. This item is hand signed by the Company's President ( William Fargo ), Secretary and Treasurer and is
over 137 years old. There is also an imprinted revenue stamp on the face of the certificate. Punch cancelled.
Certificate Vignette
American Express was formed on March 18, 1850 by Henry Wells, William G. Fargo and John Butterfield through combination of Wells and Company. In 1868 the company merged with Merchants Union Express Company to become American Merchants Union Express Company In 1873, the name was changed back to American Express.
William Fargo was the co-founder of Wells, Fargo & Co. The eldest of twelve children, William Fargo was born in Pompey, New York. As a boy he worked on his father's farm and attended school in the winter. At thirteen -- as a mail carrier in his home town --he had already started working toward his goals.
In the 1841 Fargo became the first freight agent of Auburn, New York. His business abilities attracted the attention of Henry Wells -- the owner of the express service -- who hired him. First a messenger for Wells, then a partner, he ran express operations west of Buffalo.
Both men helped organize the American Express Company. And Fargo served as the company's president from 1868 until his death. After the discovery of gold in California Wells and Fargo saw the desperate need of Westerners for expanded banking and express facilities. American Express was happy to stay in the East. So Fargo made his historic decision with Wells to found Wells Fargo & Co.-- a company that was soon busy buying gold dust, selling drafts and doing a general banking and express business.
The two entrepreneurs also built a stagecoaching empire that spanned the West. In fact, in 1863 Fargo came to California overland by stagecoach. He made good use of his stay. While in the Golden State, Fargo worked with the Sacramento Valley Railroad in an attempt to build a railroad across the Sierra Nevada. He also laid the foundation for the Grand Consolidation of 1866 that gave Wells Fargo responsibility for all overland staging west of the Missouri River.
President of Wells, Fargo & Co. from 1870 to 1872. Fargo was the Democratic mayor of Buffalo during the Civil War and a director of the Northern Pacific Railroad, which named one of their railroad towns for him -- Fargo, North Dakota.
The vignette shows two expressmen driving a team of four horses away from a shore side terminal. On the left side of the certificate, there is the traditional American Express dog in a circle. Also, on the bottom left there are hands shaking symbolic of the merger of the rival companies. In the center there is a revenue stamp.
This highly desirable historic certificate is hand signed by William Fargo.