A green path to a sustainable future
The following selection of archival artifacts reflects Wells Fargo’s commitment to creating a more sustainable future.
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The following selection of archival artifacts reflects Wells Fargo’s commitment to creating a more sustainable future.
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How millennial era banks prepared for Y2K to ensure that a worldwide crisis never happened.
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In the last half of the 1800s, Wells Fargo’s network of hundreds of agents would take care of a customer’s personal or commercial business by commission.
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In the 1800s, the telegraph allowed Wells Fargo to help customers transfer money securely. To minimize risk, the company used a system of encryption with secret codes.
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Before the 1970s, many bank customers who were blind or low vision had to depend on friends and family to handle their finances — until banks began providing new options.
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In the 1860s, the federal government created a new type of bank to provide standardization for bank customers. The First National Bank of Philadelphia in Pennsylvania was the first of its kind.
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As more customers used computers in their daily lives, Wells Fargo innovated new tools to improve their banking experience. In 1995, they created the first online banking platform.
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In 1976, Wells Fargo made history by becoming the first major bank to offer employees paid leave to volunteer in their communities in programs of their choice.
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What started with a willingness to test new technologies in the 1970s has led to an innovative fleet of more than 11,000 ATMs.
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