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  1. James Congdell Strong Fargo (5 de mayo de 1829 - 8 de febrero de 1915) fue presidente de American Express Company durante 30 años, [1] y hermano del cofundador de American Express Company y Wells Fargo, William Fargo.

  2. James Congdell Strong Fargo (May 5, 1829 – February 8, 1915) was a president of the American Express Company for 30 years, and the brother of American Express Company and Wells Fargo co-founder, William Fargo.

  3. J. C. FARGO. © History Oasis. ‍. Inheriting the role of president from his late father in 1881, J.C. Fargo significantly grew American Express by introducing popular financial products like money orders and traveler's cheques. He directed the company to assist stranded Americans at the onset of World War I, greatly boosting public goodwill.

  4. William George Fargo ( Pompey, Nueva York; 20 de mayo de 1818- Búfalo, Nueva York; 3 de agosto de 1881) fue un pionero estadounidense de los servicios expresos. Biografía. Desde los trece años tuvo que ganarse la vida, por lo cual tuvo poca educación formal, y durante varios años fue empleado de tiendas de comestibles en Syracuse .

    • Estadounidense
    • 3 de agosto de 1881 (63 años), Búfalo (Estados Unidos)
    • Forest Lawn Cemetery
  5. When their director J. C. Fargo travelled to Europe around 1890 he found it very difficult to get cash. He was very annoyed, because he was carrying with him letters of credit, and he felt that, as president of the American Express, it should have been no problem.

    • Livingston, Fargo & Company, Wells, Butterfield & Company, Wells & Company
    • Buffalo, New York, U.S. (1850)
  6. 1 de ene. de 1987 · 1890: J.C. Fargo created the Travels Cheque after struggling to redeem his letter of credit during a trip to Europe sometime between 1888 and 1890. Unlike the express service and the money order, this was the first original product idea created by American Express.

    • Peter Z. Grossman
  7. 26 de jun. de 2017 · Born (we believe) in 1849, Berry went to work at American Express as a messenger boy in 1866. He impressed the head man, J.C. Fargo, with his imagination and stayed on as a traffic manager. Express companies like AmEx and Wells Fargo were in those days the payment arms of the banking industry, providing fast and secure transit of goods and funds.