View allAll Photos Tagged wellsfargo
Let him soothe your soul, just take his hand (Dr. Feelgood)
Some people call him an evil man (Dr. Feelgood)
Let him introduce himself real good (Dr. Feelgood)
He's the only one they call feelgood (Dr. Feelgood)
Having fun with photo stacking and Models of Yesteryear from Matchbox.
The Wells Fargo Stagecoach travelled at approximately 5mph (8Km/h) with four or six horse teams changing at swing stations every 12 miles (19Km). Wells Fargo stagecoaches had, by the turn of the century, played a large part in opening up North America's legendary frontier country.
By 1918, when they were replaced by motorized transport, Wells Fargo Company stagecoaches had been carrying mail and travellers across the length and breadth of the nation for over fifty years. They seated nine passengers and were affectionately called "a cradle on wheels" by author Mark Twain. The coaches were elaborately decorated, nevertheless, travellers often complained of the cramped conditions inside.
And if this photo is ignored by explore (just like all my photos in the past 5 years) that's more likely because those flickr folks are biased towards photos featuring lego and not mathcbox toys.
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Houston, Texas.
Downtown
Wells Fargo Building
Nikon D700 + Nikkor 24-70mm f/2.8
2018 Rose Parade in Pasadena, California
They parked one of the Wells, Fargo Stagecoaches on the street by our condo
Framed by the Lowry Avenue Bridge, downtown Minneapolis reflects in the Mississippi River.
The bridge is a steel tied-arch bridge over the Mississippi River in Minneapolis, Minnesota, completed in October of 2012.
Total length: 889'
Construction started: 2007
Clearance below: 33'
Location: Minneapolis
Body of water: Mississippi River
Bridge type: Tied-arch bridge, Truss bridge.
Downtown Manhattan, NYC
James 4:14
Why, you do not even know what will happen tomorrow. What is your life? You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes.
I know I am posting a lot of these shots of the IDS and Wells Fargo Towers, but I like quite a few of them and am trying to figure out which I like best.
Here is a panoramic view of downtown Minneapolis which I took a few years ago.
Prospect Park gives a great vantage point over the city. Tower Hill (established 1906), which is the site of the Prospect Park Water Tower, is often cited as the city's highest point and a placard denotes the highest elevation at 951 feet (289.86 m), but a spot at 974 feet (296.88 m) in or near Deming Heights Park in Northeast Minneapolis is corroborated by Google Earth as the highest ground.
Highway 35W leads straight into the heart of Minneapolis. From the 24th ave pedestrian bridge, a very popular photography spot.
Decided to step out of office and capture the colors in campus. You don't have to go too far to appreciate nature :-)