A Visual History Of Credit Cards From 1951-Today
Credit cards weren't always the adorable little pocket debt machines that they are today. They weren't even plastic until AmEx decided to class things up in 1959. Travel back to the good old days when credit cards were a "ticket for anyone to spend freely and decide when was best to pay it back" with this revealing photo set from Slate.
A visual history of the credit card. [The Big Money]
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A lot has changed for that cute little Diner's Club card. Now they are a grown up corporation big and strong! They can now support human trafficking!
@Skankingmike: When I was growing up in the 80s, I, too, thought that credit cards were some holy grail of spending. But the more I look back on it, it's because my parents abhorred the thought of getting a credit card. They had their mortgage, their car payment, and that was it credit-wise. If we didn't save up for something, we didn't have it.
Why am I starting to sound like my grandparents?
A friend of mine dug up a "Lit Borthers" brass credit medallion along w some other goodies circa early 1900's
[en.wikipedia.org]
I remember as a very young kid my mom having a JcPenney charge card, a Sears card and a few years later a Master Card. They also had an account at the local drug store. But this was also in the days before ATMs. The purpose back then seems to be to consolidate everything into bills that could be paid by check at the end of the month. My mom never went to the bank, my dad was the one that did. It seems more like an accounting efficiency than a buy it on credit thing.
I also remember the first ATMs in the late 70's. They were like magic but they ate your cards all the time.
Everthing seemed to change at some point in the 80's with cards. That was about the time South Dakota purged all of their usury laws, consumer laws and all the banks moved in. That was also about the time they started giving cards to college kids.
@MedicallyNeedy: I would love to see a picture of the medallion. That wiki article makes me miss the old flagship stores of some of the old department stores. I wish companies would embrace these buildings for what they really are rather than trying to cover them up. Why yes Macy's I am looking at you. They have not been kind to the Dayton's flagship building in downtown Mpls.
@Munchie: The binding arbitration was some thugs showing up at your door to hit you in the knees with a bat.
@Skankingmike: Credit cards were pretty hard to get in the late '80's.
I still recall my dad's story on how he got his first credit card in the late '80's. For his troubles, he ended up with a Citibank Visa Classic with a $300 credit limit. He still has the original card too.
@AluminumFalcon_GitEmSteveDave: I saw a picture of an MBNA card on the slideshow. Wouldn't that count as a quick cap?
@Skankingmike: I had no problem in the 80s getting one. I've been a "member" of Amex since 1982 -- when I was 22. I was in college at the time and only had a part-time job at a grocery store. Amex marketed pretty heavily in colleges. I got a citibank card shortly thereafter.
"As the story goes, 60 years ago, Frank McNamara, the founder of what's considered the first credit card, was eating out at a restaurant, and when the check arrived, he realized that he had not brought along his wallet. The embarrassing situation led him to eventually create the Diners Club card"
...which also would have done no good if he forgot his wallet.
@Eyebrows McGee (now with more baby!):
The hell you say. I've been documenting their atrocities for years.
Whoa - charge plates!! That brought back some great memories. Got my first one in 1964 from Marshall Field's in Chicago; that was in the days when very few women had credit in their own names; I still remember the number. Carson Pirie Scott also had charge plates, as did the Crawford Dept. Store. I'm sure I still have them in the "miscellaneous" drawer! @xmarc:
my ex boyfriend's grandmother has the best credit card number EVER for her diner's club card: it was whatever number of 0's ending in 42. she used to send him out with it to fill her car up with gas. she's ancient and was one of their first customers. i have no idea why they never made her change it, maybe because they grandfathered in all the early accounts when they made changes.
@Coles_Law: If only McNamara was a true innovator. Then we'd be the beneficiaries of Credit Tattoos.
@CaptainSemantics: My parents had cards but refused to use them for things like gas and food -- only durable goods. So that if they couldn't pay it off one month, they wouldn't be paying interest on a consumable. My attitude towards credit cards was similar for years.
@henwy: Because it doesn't matter what the rate is when you get the card, they'll find a way to raise it on you.
@vildechaia:
I wish I had my mom's old metal charge plate that was good at Mandel Bros., Marshall Field's, Carson's, The Hub & The Fair.
It was an Addressograph plate & came in a leather sleeve.
It's supposed to be the second most valuable credit card to collectors.
Worth several hundred $$$!
Only the paper Amex card from the 50s is worth more.
And does anyone remember the original Sears cards which were a weird rectangular size, much longer & narrower than today's cards?
@henwy: Wow, I just finished reading the last slide of the article.
Does Slate know the Consumerist demographic or WHAT?!
@bohemian: I had an ATM card in 79. In Oklahoma they have "CheckOKard" and "SCS" as the two main networks. I deposited checks and made withdrawls via a local bank's machine to my bank across the state. Different banks. No fees. Those were the days.
@bohemian: But if '80s college kids didn't have credit cards, how did they buy music off the iTunes Music Store?!
@henwy: MBA doesn't do much good when people fail to pay. Where MBA helps is preventing people from suing the credit card company when the credit card company acts irresponsibly. By adding MBA terms, the companies can open the way to doing things that would before get them stiff judgments in court.
@EdnaLegume: Isn't that why a lot of people go into debt? "I'd be able to make my Hummer payment if I hadn't put these 24s on it. But now I look cool!"
@AluminumFalcon_GitEmSteveDave: If you abbreviate because as "b/c" again, we Consumerists will have no choice but to tar and feather you! :D
@Eyebrows McGee (now with more baby!): Side note: CONGRATS, EYEBROWS! Just remember to check the oil in that thing regularly - they leak A LOT!
All those photos of credit cards with CC numbers exposed -- I wonder if the more current ones are accounts that never existed, or we're just relying on the fact that the expiration date has passed? Can't help but think of the Consumerist article Chase Reactivates Dead Card Without Your Permission. Robert Roth or Sue Guerrera could be in for a nasty surprise.
Also, love the third slide of the AmEx card for John J. Smith of the Acme Company at "I23 Main Street" (the letter "I" being typed for the number "1"). I remember back in the late '80s working in an office where the where a secretary had been entering data into the computer for months, consistently typing "I" instead of "1." I think some older typewriters didn't have a key for the number "1" so using the letter "I" instead was pretty common. For computer data entry, doesn't work so well.
@Don't take anything aaron8301 says seriously: good theory unless you only use your credit cards to pay for hookers.
@AluminumFalcon_GitEmSteveDave: Could you please repost it without the black bars and the blurry areas?
It would help me appreciate the design of the card.
:P
@Trai_Dep: You jest, but I have a young cousin who honestly believes that we must have had things like mp3s, facebook and internet-enabled mobiles when I was her age, since that's all she's ever known. I talk about records, parties and rotary wall phones and she looks at me like I'm insane.
@ngoandy: To heck with that, when is Dave going to remove the blurry bits and the sign for his avatar?
Ladies, amirite, amirite? Ladies... Ladies?!
















awww wouldn't it be cool if they brought back 'retro' style cards. i'd go further into debt if it made me look cool.