Wells Fargo and Music
Wells Fargo has been musically inclined since the Gold Rush. In 1855, we advanced money for an Italian opera troupe. However they defaulted, so we seized their trunk of costumes and musical instruments as security.
Actually, we are really kind hearted. In 1869, Madame Camilla Urso
proposed a music festival to benefit the Mercantile Library, featuring school children and musicians from around California and Nevada. Wells Fargo offered to carry sheet music, letters, and other equipment far and wide throughout its lines on the Pacific Coast for free. The successful San Francisco festival ran for five days in February 1870.
If it could be sent by express, Wells Fargo carried it. In May of 1860, a future jazz musician in Columbia asked Wells Fargo to supply copies of Schatzman's Sax Horn Instructor. Up they came from San Francisco.
On occasion, Wells Fargo contributed to the Big Bang Theory
. Mariposa agent Julia Jones delivered a bass drum to complete a brass band at Whitlock's Gold Mine
. In the spring of 1897, this band, splendid in their white uniforms, serenaded Mariposans with "Old Folks at Home," "The Man in the Moon," and the "Young Bandsman."
In the summer of 1917, Wells Fargo also carried "several valuable violin bows from Colorado Springs to Chicago. Accompanying these bows in a handsome, sturdy, brass-bound packing case were also a few violins – one made by Nicola Amati
in 1662, another by Carlo Bergonzi
in 1723, and a third, modern one produced by Joseph Guarnerius
in 1731.
Wells Fargo starred in the performance of express service. Meredith Willson drew on his boyhood memories in Iowa to write The Music Man
. That story revolves around the arrival of band instruments on the "Wells Fargo Wagon." The whole town turns out to sing: "O-ho the Wells Fargo Wagon is-a comin' down the street, Oh, Please let it be for me!"
Our relations with opera singers improved through the years — we even starred in an opera. In 1910, when Puccini's Gold Rush opera The Girl of the Golden West
appeared, Wells Fargo's agent was heroic.




Comments
That is so cool the way Wells Fargo was everywhere in history. I have a question. Is there any stories in history of a Wells Fargo Stagecoach being robbed?
Posted by: pandiux | September 24, 2007 10:44 AM
Hey Pandiux --
I was wondering where you were. Nice to have you back
Check in tomorrow for your answer.
Posted by: Charles Riggs | September 24, 2007 02:50 PM
I have been out sick but its good to be back. Someday I will go visit the museum I promise!
Posted by: pandiux | September 26, 2007 12:00 PM