"People
Helping People," is a well-used credit union slogan, and also,
it turns out, a common title for books about state movements. Edward
M. Walters used the phrase for his 2009 history of credit unionism in Texas, but it's first appearance seems to be on John W. Zerillo
and Ted Desveaux's 2004 book People Helping People: A History of the Maine Credit Union Movement.
Though
commissioned and published by the Maine Credit Union League, Zerillo
and Desveaux's work is especially interesting because, unlike many
other trade-association supported histories (including the
aforementioned work by Walters and Moody and Fite's CUNA-sponsored national history), it doesn't treat the development of its
sponsoring organization as a proxy for the history of the movement as
a whole. While the Maine Credit Union League is the focus of one
quite readable and interesting chapter, the most fascinating parts of
the book come when the authors tell stories of early credit unionism
that highlight the culture of the early credit union movement.
To accomplish
this, Zerillo and Desveaux supplement their archival research with
extensive oral history interviews. In fact, one chapter, entitled
"Maine Credit Union Pioneers and Volunteers," is entirely
devoted to profiling key figures, many of them quite elderly but
still living at the time of writing. Whether recounting the often
strange logistics of running a credit union out of one's home (such
as being woken up at 4:00 AM on Christmas morning to make a loan to a
member who needed to visit a sick relative in Canada) or recalling
the purpose of the very first loan made by Ste. Famille FCU (to buy a
milk cow, of which the book contains a photo), such personal accounts
powerfully convey the sense of purpose felt by early credit union
volunteers. While modern credit unions still use the term "movement"
(with some temporary lapses of "industry" from time to
time), People Helping People's oral history component helps
communicate what that term meant to previous generations of credit
unionists.
Another
interesting aspect of the book is the amount of space the authors
devote to the histories of individual institutions. Since the Maine
Legislature was very late in passing a state-wide credit union law,
only three credit unions were founded (thanks to special acts of the
Legislature) prior to the passage of the Federal Credit Union Act in
1934. As a result of their unorthodox way in which they were
established, these credit unions had a variety of idiosyncrasies,
such as a huge, twenty-four person board of directors and
extra-restrictive membership requirements, that set them apart from
the rest of the movement for decades.
In addition to
their extensive discussion of the pioneering organizations, Zerillo
and Desveaux also devote an entire chapter to a compilation of brief
historical sketches of all of the state's credit unions. While some
of the pieces were written by the book's authors and others were
submitted by the credit unions themselves, reading them all
back-to-back is a fascinating way to take in both the similarities
and the diversities of the movement's constituent parts, whether one
considers the ways in which they were established, how they
developed, and their strategies for navigating a variety of
challenges.
A final valuable
element of People Helping People is the long memory it
provides of banker attacks on the credit union movement. In many
credit union histories, bank opposition to credit unions is brushed
off with a vague mention of the issue of credit union taxation. By
contrast, Zerillo and Desveaux come back to the topic repeatedly in a
way that underscores the variety of tactics that bankers have used
over the years in their campaigns to suppress competition from the
cooperative model. Whether in the form of opposition to credit union
enabling legislation in the 1920s and 1930s, attempts to put banks
branches in factories with credit unions in the 1960s, or regulatory
wrangling in the 1990s, the book's authors don't shy away from
discussions of the movement's often tense relationship with the
banks.
Overall, People
Helping People is a quick, accessible read that delivers a solid
overview of both the institutional and social history of the credit
union movement in Maine. While the authors do neglect a few
potentially interesting topics (such as the unique character of the
French Canadian credit unions that Mark Richard touches on in Loyal But French), their book is nonetheless a vitally important
contribution to the credit union history literature. Indeed, it's the
best executed example of the "state movement history" genre
I've encountered thus-far, and I heartily recommend that anyone
considering undertaking such a project in their own state first read People Helping People for inspiration in regards to both method and
structure.
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