Photographs and narrative about repurposed USPS stamp machines used to sell gambling tickets in Indiana bars. Buy the photozine here >> ($18).
Club 23, Walkerton, IN
He Ain’t Here, Lake Station, IN
That Place Bar & Grill, Mishawaka, IN
Muncie’s, Lake Station, IN
Ruthie’s, Lake Station, IN
O’s Tap, Knox, IN
Dutch Mill, Logansport, IN
Pinola Saloon, Pinola, IN
Catch 22 Pub and Grub, Mishawaka, IN
Union Bar and Grill, Union Mills, IN
Down N Under, Hamlet, IN
American Legion Zook Farrington Post #434, Kingsford Heights, IN
Dutch Mill, Logansport, IN
Journey’s End, Bourbon, IN
Down N Under, Hamlet, IN
These photos portray an assortment of old postage stamp vending machines I have found in Indiana’s neighborhood bars. The machines have been adapted to dispense small paper gambling tickets called pull-tabs, which can be redeemed at the bar. Like lottery tickets, pull-tabs can be purchased for as little as a quarter and promise pay offs of up to thousands of dollars.
I first became interested in them while photographing small towns in the early 2000s. At that time, pull-tab sales were not legal in the state of Indiana, except in licensed fraternal clubs. If I asked to photograph a bar that included a repurposed stamp machine, bartenders would move them out of sight for the picture. As a former letter carrier, their history fascinated me and I always wondered how they ended up in bars, selling unauthorized gambling tickets.
Pull-tab sales were legalized in 2008, in a move to help small taverns stay afloat during the recession. Licenses were purchased and stamp machines resurfaced from the backroom or basement. Many of them were manufactured a half-century ago and showed significant signs of wear. Sometimes they jammed easily or had only one ticket slot working. Modern, electronic pull-tab machines are also available, but people seem to prefer to take a chance on the malfunctioning, timeworn stamp machines.
I began this project in 2014 and ended up photographing over 50 machines. A selection of my images is included here.
© Kay Westhues, all rights reserved | Back to top ↑
Photographs and narrative about repurposed USPS stamp machines used to sell gambling tickets in Indiana bars. Buy the photozine here >> ($18).
Club 23, Walkerton, IN
He Ain’t Here, Lake Station, IN
That Place Bar & Grill, Mishawaka, IN
Muncie’s, Lake Station, IN
Ruthie’s, Lake Station, IN
O’s Tap, Knox, IN
Dutch Mill, Logansport, IN
Pinola Saloon, Pinola, IN
Catch 22 Pub and Grub, Mishawaka, IN
Union Bar and Grill, Union Mills, IN
Down N Under, Hamlet, IN
American Legion Zook Farrington Post #434, Kingsford Heights, IN
Dutch Mill, Logansport, IN
Journey’s End, Bourbon, IN
Down N Under, Hamlet, IN
These photos portray an assortment of old postage stamp vending machines I have found in Indiana’s neighborhood bars. The machines have been adapted to dispense small paper gambling tickets called pull-tabs, which can be redeemed at the bar. Like lottery tickets, pull-tabs can be purchased for as little as a quarter and promise pay offs of up to thousands of dollars.
I first became interested in them while photographing small towns in the early 2000s. At that time, pull-tab sales were not legal in the state of Indiana, except in licensed fraternal clubs. If I asked to photograph a bar that included a repurposed stamp machine, bartenders would move them out of sight for the picture. As a former letter carrier, their history fascinated me and I always wondered how they ended up in bars, selling unauthorized gambling tickets.
Pull-tab sales were legalized in 2008, in a move to help small taverns stay afloat during the recession. Licenses were purchased and stamp machines resurfaced from the backroom or basement. Many of them were manufactured a half-century ago and showed significant signs of wear. Sometimes they jammed easily or had only one ticket slot working. Modern, electronic pull-tab machines are also available, but people seem to prefer to take a chance on the malfunctioning, timeworn stamp machines.
I began this project in 2014 and ended up photographing over 50 machines. A selection of my images is included here.
© Kay Westhues, all rights reserved | Back to top ↑