Hoosier Banker is the only magazine published specifically for the Indiana banking community. In continuous publication since 1916, we provide information about the latest industry issues, legislative and regulatory developments, product and service awareness, IBA educational opportunities, personnel news and IBA events.
Other areas of coverage include agricultural banking, financial management, lending & credit, operations & technology, sales & marketing, security & fraud, and more.
Forgers were learning their art well in the mid-1910s, and bank robbers were terrorizing bankers all over the country. These crimes were too big for any lone banker to fight against; it was even too big for the federal government with its limited ready reserves at the time. Forba McDaniel, assistant to the IBA’s chief staff executive since 1910, believed banking legislation to be too important to ignore and government too big to hear a lone man’s voice, so she decided it was time for Indiana bankers to be properly informed of these events. And so, with only six years’ experience in the business world, she promoted the idea of an Association publication, which would become one of the most profound “bulletins” of its kind at the time.
The first issue of Hoosier Banker was published in January 1916, when cars were still called “machines” and bank robbers were “yeggs.” Print was still the primary means of mass communication as the heyday of television was still decades away and even radio would not come into play in Indiana until 1922. Later that year during his report to the Association at the annual convention, the IBA’s then-chief staff executive Andrew Smith told members it had become necessary to send out “warning notices and important information regarding the activities of Congress along banking lines, that it was deemed advisable to send out a bulletin once a month.” Hoosier Banker would continue to publish monthly through its 100th anniversary in 2016, after which it switched to a bimonthly schedule.
After the first issue was published, letters poured in offering congratulations. The magazine has been a fixture of the Indiana banking industry ever since. Seeing Hoosier Banker’s potential and not wanting it to be a drain on Association resources, McDaniel decided the magazine needed its own working capital. One day she put on her wraps, hit the streets and went out into the city to sell advertising. That first year, she sold enough not only to cover the costs of publication and distribution but to turn a $30-per-issue profit (roughly $875 in 2025 money).
McDaniel continued to serve at the helm of Hoosier Banker after she was elected chief staff executive of the association (then called secretary) in 1924 – defeating eight other candidates, all of whom were men. She served the publication well until resigning from the Association in 1933 to work for another IBA alumnus, Herman B. Wells, during his legendary tenure as chancellor of Indiana University. McDaniel was long retired when she was interviewed for an article celebrating the magazine’s 50th anniversary in 1966. She still said Hoosier Banker was “the one thing I am most proud of in my whole career.”
Hoosier Banker continued her legacy, covering all the important milestones of decades to come:
The Great Depression of the 1930s, showing bankers doing what they continue to do now – working methodically and patiently with their customers and communities to make the future brighter.
World War II in the 1940s, including financing bonds to support the war effort.
The “buy now, pay later” credit economy of the 1950s; the adoption of magnetic ink character recognition in 1959, allowing data printed on checks to be read by computer; and the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956.
Sweeping advancements in civil rights, medicine, education, job training and the sciences in the 1960s, including banking milestones such as passage of the Bank Protection Act, the Truth in Lending Act and the Fair Housing Act; the conversion of Fannie Mae into a publicly traded government-sponsored enterprise; and Chemical Bank in Rockville Center, New York, installing the first U.S. automated teller machine.
Stagflation of the 1970s, which also saw landmark banking legislation such as the Bank Secrecy Act, the Fair Credit Reporting Act, the Equal Credit Opportunity Act and the Community Reinvestment Act; the end of the gold standard; and the first in-store bank branches.
The 1980s with its deep devaluation of farmland that devastated the rural economy; the savings and loan crisis; a soaring stock market that then crashed in 1987, losing 22.6% of its value; and Indiana’s Banking Structure Reform Act of 1985 that arguably has had more effect on the Indiana banking landscape than any other state law, allowing banks to branch across county lines and permitting them to acquire banks in contiguous states – and conversely to be acquired by out-of-state banks – leading to a flurry of M&A activity that resulted in a 40% drop in the number of independent banks operating in Indiana.
The 1980s also saw a notable change in personnel for Hoosier Banker – the hiring of Laura Wilson as its associate editor and business manager. Wilson would work her way up to the title of vice president-communications before retiring at the end of 2022. Having served as editor for 35 years – longer than anyone else – she arguably exerted more of an influence on the publication than anyone else in its history, including its initial transition to include a digital offering; video extras, which she shot herself; and social media promotion.
Those decades saw:
The longest bull market in history, the end of the savings and loan crisis and record profits for banks in the 1990s – a decade that also marked the IBA’s 100th anniversary as an Association.
The 2000s, including the aftermath of the 9/11 terror attacks, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program (“TARP”) in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis; the decade was also historic for the IBA, bringing its mergers with the Indiana League of Savings Institutions and the Community Bankers Association of Indiana.
The 2010s, which saw the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform Act, the establishment of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the successful resolution to the IBA’s years-long fight to protect Indiana’s Public Deposit Insurance Fund.
In 2024, Hoosier Banker evolved again to offer a website version in addition to its existing print edition and digital flipbook, making it easier than ever for IBA-member bank employees to access the Association’s publication of record.
Have questions about Hoosier Banker or its history? Reach out to us at [email protected]