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Lotteries are not a modern, or American,
invention. Scholars disagree on the origin of lotteries, but
forms of lotteries date back to the time of Caesar, before
Christ. There are references to lotteries in the bible. From
100 B.C. through the 17th century, China and European countries
used lotteries to finance defense (like the Great Wall in
China); fund armies; build chapels, almshouses, canals and
port facilities; and to replenish royal treasuries.
In America, Lotteries served an important
function in the early development of the country through the
Civil War. The first permanent English colony in America, Jamestown,
was funded by a lottery started in London by James the First.
Many of America's founding fathers played and sponsored lotteries.
Benjamin Franklin used lotteries to finance cannons for the
Revolutionary War. George Washington operated a lottery to fund
construction of the Mountain Road that opened westward expansion
from Virginia. John Hancock operated a lottery to rebuild historic
Faneuil Hall. In the United
States, lotteries were most active during the period following
the adoption of the Constitution and before the establishment
of an effective means of local taxation. Prior to 1790, America
had only three incorporated banks; thus, lotteries served
as established sources of public and private financing.
From 1790 until the lottery prohibition
movement succeeded, Lotteries established and funded numerous
civic improvements and educational institutions. Fifty colleges,
300 schools and 200 churches were erected with Lottery proceeds.
These include some of our most prestigious educational institutions,
such as Harvard, Yale, Princeton and Columbia. Between 1790
and 1860, 24 of the 33 states financed hospitals, orphanages,
libraries, courthouses, and jails through lotteries.
Between 1820 and 1878, corruption in
privately operated lotteries became rampant. Governments found
themselves unable to regulate these lotteries and began lottery
prohibition. By 1878, all states except Louisiana prohibited
lotteries, either by statute or constitutional provision.
In 1905, the United States Supreme Court reaffirmed the states'
authority to control gambling. For the next 60 years, no state
was directly involved in the operation of a gaming enterprise,
and lotteries were prohibited.
In 1930, the Irish Sweepstakes was
launched with great success in America because of the abolition
of lotteries. In 1964, New Hampshire created a state lottery,
the first legal American lottery in this century. Within several
years, New Hampshire was followed by New York and New Jersey.
In 1971, nationwide lottery sales surpassed $100 million for
the first time.
On November 8, 1988 Indiana voters approved a lottery referendum
by a strong majority, 62 percent. On May 3, 1989, the Indiana
General Assembly ratified the Lottery Act and, a week later,
Governor Evan Bayh signed the Lottery Act into law. In June,
Jack Crawford became the first Lottery Director. The Lottery
Commission was appointed a month later.
Three months after the creation of
the first Commission, the Hoosier Lottery was in full operation.
On October 13, 1989, instant, or scratch-off, ticket sales
began at 12:10 p.m. On the first day alone, 8.19 million tickets
were sold. By the following week, first week sales exceeded
$21.8 million.
On October 28, 1989, the Hoosier Millionaire
show debuted on WTTV-4 in Indianapolis and on its 10 station
network. By mid-November, first month sales exceeded $61 million.
The Lottery immediately repaid the state of Indiana more than
$6 million in startup costs, plus interest. Within another
three weeks ticket sales reached $100 million.
On March 15, 1990, Governor Bayh accepted
$73 million from the Hoosier Lottery for tax relief.
April 30, 1990, the Hoosier Lottery
began its first on-line game, Lotto Cash. On May 5, The first
Lotto Cash drawing took place. One month later, Kurt and Teresa
Voskuhl won $6 million for the first Lotto Cash jackpot. In
July of that year, the Lottery introduced Daily 3 and Daily
4 games. August saw the unveiling of the Dream Machine, the
Lottery's "mobile ambassador," a bright red Hoosier
Lottery bus that travels around the state participating in
special Lottery events. In October, Indiana joined the Lotto*America
game (which later became Powerball).
By March 1991, the Hoosier Lottery
ranked sixth in instant ticket sales among the 33 state lotteries.
The Lottery's game show, the Hoosier Millionaire, gave away
more money in prizes than any other game show in the country.
By the end of 1991, the Hoosier Lottery topped $1 billion
in sales.
In April 1992, Lotto America changed
to the Powerball game. Indiana led the United States in Powerball
sales after two weeks. Indiana resident, Bert Morlan, became
the first Powerball winner, beating players in 15 participating
states. The Lottery reached its 99th and 100th millionaires
in the Lotto Cash drawing. The first bar-coded Scratch-Off
Tickets, Cash Crop, Draw Poker and 3 Times Lucky, began. In
December, entry onto the Hoosier Millionaire game show was
changed: winning entries were now generated on every 50th
dollar of sales, instead of every 50th transaction.
In January 1993, Nelson Oles pulled
his own entry ticket in the drawing, and made a repeat appearance
on the Hoosier Millionaire show. He was the third repeat contestant.
The Hoosier Lottery introduced its fifth on-line game, Lucky
5.
In February 1994, the Hoosier Bingo
instant game began. In September, Hoosier Lotto replaced Lotto
Cash. Hoosier Lotto was designed to have more winners and
bigger jackpots, and it offered the only "match two of
six" prize in a pick-six game in North America. The game's
first drawing, on September 24th produced 112 times more winners
than the final Lotto Cash drawing. On September 19-24, the
Hoosier Lottery hosted the North American Association of State
and Provincial Lotteries (NASPL) convention in Indianapolis.
The economic impact of the conference was estimated at more
than $600,000.
In October 1994, the Hoosier Lottery
sold its first $5 instant ticket to commemorate the Lottery's
fifth birthday. Other birthday celebrations included transfers
to the state of $708 million, ticket sales totaling over $2.4
billion and player prize payouts of over $1.3 billion since
the Hoosier Lottery's inception. In fiscal year 1994, the
Hoosier Lottery averaged 1,000 major winners ($500 or more)
every month.
In March 1995, Indiana led all Powerball
states with a $9.1 million winner and seven $100,000 winners
in the March 4th drawing. By April, transfers to the state
topped $800 million. In May, the Lottery launched its informational
campaign designed to let Hoosiers know that more than $100
million in Lottery profits would be used in 1996 to reduce
license plate excise taxes. In June, the Lottery recognized
a Hoosier entertainment tradition by inaugurating Instant
Euchre, the world's first lottery game to use suit and trump.
In August 1995, the Lucky 5 game was
expanded from two to five nights per week. The Hoosier Lotto
now offered a 25-year annuity as a prize payment option. In
November, the Hoosier Lottery awarded a new media contract
to WNDY-TV in Indianapolis to broadcast the Hoosier Millionaire
show. In December, Indiana had the first quintuple $100,000
Powerball ticket sold in the 21 participating states.
In February 1996, the Hoosier Lottery
unveiled a fresh look for the Hoosier Millionaire game show.
Later in February, the Lottery held the first Lucky 5 second-chance
drawing, allowing players to win $70,000 in one drawing and
$500 in prize drawings held later in March. In April, the
Hoosier Lottery presented Lucky For Life 1, the first instant
ticket that offered a prize for life ($1000 per month for
the winner's lifetime). In August, Frederick Leo O'Connor
of Indianapolis hit the Lucky 5 jackpot four times and received
$200,000. Lucky 5 was expanded again, to seven nights a week.
In March 1997, the Hoosier Lottery
introduced the Tax Free Million instant game offering a top
prized of $1 million with the federal taxes paid for by the
Hoosier Lottery (The state of Indiana does not impose taxes
on Hoosier Lottery winnings.) The Hoosier Lottery launched
its first Web page on the Internet at www.hoosierlottery.com.
In June, the Lottery introduced a new multi-state game, Daily
Millions. In November, the multi-state Powerball game made
changes to allow a choice between cash or annuity options,
and larger prizes in lower levels.
In February 1998, the Hoosier Lotto
game was expanded from one drawing on Saturday to two drawings
conducted on both Wednesday and Saturday. The first $10 instant
ticket, 2 Million In Cash, went on sale in late February.
In March, the Multi-State Lottery dropped the Daily Millions
game and began the Cash4Life game, the first multi-state game
to offer a lifetime prize. In August, a Powerball ticket sold
in Richmond, Indiana to a group of co-workers pooling their
money was validated for $295.7 million, the largest North
American jackpot.
In June 1999, David and Elaine Pearson
claimed the largest Hoosier Lotto jackpot ever, $42 million.
They decided to accept the cash option of $26.2 million, and
took home $16.3 million after Federal taxes were deducted.
In August, the Hoosier Lotto jackpot was split by three winning
tickets for the first time. William Hutchison of LaPorte,
Robert Hagberg of Ligonier and Dale Gaddy and Olav Haug of
Indianapolis split the $10.5 million prize. In October, WB4
is selected as the new television station for the Hoosier
Millionaire show and the nightly Lottery drawings. WB4 began
Lottery productions in early 2000. On October 13, 1999, the
Hoosier Lottery celebrated its 10th anniversary with gala
events held across Indiana. |