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Bob Lemke's Blog: Collecting colorful Christmas Club checks
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The Christmas club is a savings program that was first offered by various banks and credit unions in the United States beginning in the first half of the 20th century, and including the Great Depression. The concept is that bank customers deposit a set amount of money each week into a special savings account, and receive the money back at the end of the year for Christmas shopping.


Video Christmas club



Origins

The first known Christmas club started in 1909, when Merkel Landis, treasurer of the Carlisle (Pennsylvania) Trust Company, introduced the first Christmas savings fund. The club generated 350 customers who saved about $28 each, and the money was disbursed on December 1 of that year. The January 2, 1920 edition of the Belvidere, Illinois Daily Republican announced that the town's State Farmers Bank was encouraging parents to enroll their children in the Christmas Banking Club "to develop self-reliance and the saving habit".


Maps Christmas club



Promotion

For decades, financial institutions competed for the holiday savings business, offering enticing premiums and advertising items such as tokens. The Dime Saving Bank of Toledo, Ohio, issued a brass token "good for 25 cents in opening a Christmas account" for 1922-1923.> There were also numbered tokens issued by the Atlantic Country Trust Co. in Atlantic City, New Jersey, inscribed on the reverse: "Join our Christmas Club and Have Money When You Need It Most." In the February 2006 issue of Forbes magazine, business writer James Surowiecki summarized the accounts' appeal: "The popularity of Christmas club accounts isn't a mystery; if their money was in a regular account, people assumed they'd spend it."


Save for Christmas with Variety Christmas Savings Club - YouTube
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Drawbacks

Key drawbacks of Christmas club accounts included low interest rates and a high number of restrictions, such as not allowing withdrawals unless fees were paid. Christmas clubs later fell out of favor with consumers.

Banks also incurred high costs in maintaining the accounts. According to Dennis Halpin, the CEO for the Capital Communications Federal Credit Union, the union had 3,500 Christmas club members in 1984. Each member required a check to be produced, signed, collated, and mailed, only for 70 percent to be returned to the bank to be deposited in another account.


Christmas Club Party Background Illustration 61735388 - Megapixl
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Trivia

The television game show Jeopardy! offered the clue, "Bank president Merkel Landis founded this in Pennsylvania The correct respsonse: "What is The Christmas Club?"


Christmas Club Account | fishwolfeboro
src: fishwolfeboro.com


References

Notes

Citations

Bibliography

  • Chaston, Joel (1997). Lois Lowry. New York, New York: Twayne Publishers. ISBN 978-0-8057-4034-9. Lowry recalls that he was once mentioned in a question on the television game show Jeopardy: "The question was, 'Bank president Merkel Landis founded this in Pennsylvania.' The answer was: 'The Christmas Club.' 

George Michael - Last Christmas (Club Stars Remix) - YouTube
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External links

  • Oklahoma State Bank Christmas Club flyer, 2014
  • First Reliance Christmas Club Flyer, February 25, 2016

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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