From their
origins, credit unions were unique depository institutions created not
for profit, but to serve members as credit cooperatives. The earliest
financial cooperatives date back to the beginning of 19th century in
England. In the mid-1800's, Germany was the first home of credit unions
as we know them today:
• Democratically governed;
• Each member has one vote;
• Member-elected board of directors; and
• Volunteer based.
These early German credit unions were organized by Herman Schulze-Delitzsch
and Friedrich Raiffeisen. The crop failure and famine of 1846 caused
Schulze-Delitzsch to organize a cooperatively-owned mill and bakery
which sold bread to its members at substantial savings. Schulze-Delitzsch
took this cooperative notion to address the needs of credit. In 1850,
he organized the first cooperative credit society, known as the "people's
bank."
Raiffeisen’s goal was to provide credit to farmers. He formed
the Heddesorf Credit Union in 1864 to help German farmers purchase livestock,
equipment, seeds and other farming needs.
In 1900, the credit union concept crossed the Atlantic to Levis, Quebec,
where Alphonse Desjardins organized La Caisse Populaire de Levis. A
court reporter, Desjardins became aware of the outrageous interest being
charged by loan sharks and organized the credit union to provide relief
to the working class.
In 1909, Desjardins helped a group of Franco-American Catholics in Manchester,
New Hampshire, organize St. Mary's Cooperative Credit Association--the
first credit union in the United States.
Spurred by the attention of Edward Filene, a merchant and philanthropist,
and Pierre Jay, the Massachusetts Banking Commissioner, the Massachusetts
Credit Union Act became law April 15, 1909. The Massachusetts law served
as a basis for subsequent state credit union laws and the Federal Credit
Union Act.
With the upswing of the U.S. economy in the 1920's, the credit union
movement became increasingly popular. People had more money to save
and were able to afford products such as automobiles and washing machines.
However, they needed a source of inexpensive credit. Because commercial
banks and savings institutions were not generally interested in providing
consumer credit, credit unions began growing.
In 1920, Roy Bergengren, a poverty lawyer, was hired by Edward Filene
to manage the Massachusetts Credit Union Association and promote the
development of credit unions in that state. Within a year, Massachusetts
chartered 19 new credit unions.
Encouraged
by this success, Filene organized and Bergengren managed a national
association to promote credit unions throughout the country, the Credit
Union National Extension Bureau. By 1925, 26 states had passed credit
union legislation and by 1930 that number grew to 32 states with a total
1,100 credit unions.
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July
2004 
Central Texas Credit Unions Coop

July
2004 
Cuna.org - Lawmakers thanked for response to FDIC tax call
Continued...
President
Roosevelt signed the Federal Credit Union Act in 1934, forming a national
system to charter and supervise federal credit unions. Credit unions grew
steadily in the 1940s and 1950s and by 1960 credit union membership amounted
to more than 6 million people in over 10,000 federal credit unions.
In 1970,
the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) became an independent
federal agency and the National Credit Union Share Insurance Fund was
formed to insure members’ deposits. The 1970s brought major changes
in the products offered by financial institutions and credit unions found
they too needed to expand their services. In 1977, legislation expanded
services to credit union members, including share certificates and mortgage
lending. The 1970s were years of tremendous growth in credit unions. The
number of credit union members more than doubled and credit union assets
tripled to over $65 billion.
Deregulation, increased flexibility in merger and field of membership
criteria and expanded member services characterized the 1980s. High interest
rates and unemployment in the early '80s brought supervisory changes and
insurance losses. With the Share Insurance Fund experiencing financial
stress, the credit union community called on Congress to approve a plan
to recapitalize the Fund.
In 1985, federally insured credit unions capitalized the National Credit
Union Share Insurance Fund by depositing 1 percent of their shares into
NCUSIF, a federal fund backed by the "full faith and credit of the
United States Government."
During the 1990s and into the 21st century, credit unions have been healthy
and growing. Credit union failures are low and the Share Insurance Fund
prospers.
Approximately 9,300 federally insured credit unions now serve 83 million
members with deposits exceeding $528 billion. |