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Sixty Years of Lottery


The modern lottery industry arrived in the U.S. in March 1964, with the launch of the New Hampshire Sweepstakes. A handful of years later, amendments to Canada’s Criminal Code were passed as well, allowing for the introduction of legalized gaming across the country; the first Canadian lottery tickets were sold in Québec and Manitoba in 1970.

 

In these early years, it quickly became clear that the growing industry would benefit from an established network of mutual assistance and information sharing. In that spirit, NASPL was born.

Lottery Timeline

1964

The first modern lottery in the United States was launched with the debut of the New Hampshire Sweepstakes, now known as the New Hampshire Lottery. The original game was based on the results of a horse race, and the first tickets were sold March 12, 1964.

1974

The Massachusetts Lottery becomes the first lottery in the world to launch that secure instant scratch game. The Lottery would become an industry leader in the instant ticket business.

1978

Massachusetts and New York launch the first lotto games in the U.S. as offline products.

1982

GTECH introduces the first made-for-lottery retail terminal. The company also launches the Quick Pick option for numbers games, which today accounts for more than 35 percent of the world's lottery purchases.

1985

Tri-State Megabucks is the first multi-state lottery in the U.S., with sales in Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont. The games were promoted at retail with Scientific Games' brand new centrally-controlled retail communications platform.

1986

Developed by Scientific Games, the industry's first touchscreen, self-service lottery retail kiosk sells both instant and terminal-based games to Iowa Lottery players.

1987

The Vermont Lottery is the first to introduce instant tickets with bar codes, developed by Scientific Games.

1990

Pollard Banknote is the first to offer secure and recyclable card stock, the result of a proprietary process that utilized a combination of various solvent and water-resistant coatings to achieve required opacity on conventional card stock.

1991

The Oregon Lottery and GTECH introduce Club Keno, the first such game in the country.

1992

Pollard Banknote pioneers a patented translucent marking system for instant tickets. This concept becomes the lottery industry standard for extended play games.

1993

Loto-Quebec becomes the first North American lottery operator to open a casino. By 2014, 13 lottery organizations in the U.S. and Canada were involved in casino-style gaming in some fashion.

1996

The Big Game is introduced by several large states in order to offer mega-jackpots on the order of Powerball. It became Mega Millions in 2002.

2000

The Iowa Lottery is the first American lottery to offer a computer-based game in conjunction with a scratch ticket; the CD-ROM game was developed by Ingenio. Four years later, the New Jersey Lottery and Scientific Games introduced Cyber Slingo®, the first scratch game in the U.S. to offer an Internet play component.

2004

GTECH introduces lottery digital signage, leveraging existing lottery infrastructure to deliver marketing information and keno game content to retailers. Fully integrated digital signage rapidly became an industry standard.

2006

Scientific Games launches the industry's first retail development program, which helps retailers increase lottery game sales with best practices and merchandising programs.

2007

The Idaho Lottery and INTRALOT begin an industry-first VIP Club to award players points at the point-of-purchase terminal.

2011

Scientific Games develops a Wheel of Fortune® linked instant game with the industry's first tie-in to a Facebook social game.

2012

Illinois becomes the first American lottery to offer regular ticket sales via the Internet with a system developed by GTECH. A few other lotteries had already been offering subscription services through the Web.

2013

The DC Lottery and INTRALOT launch innovative Tap and Play games, the first interactive lottery games played on a player-operated retail lottery terminal.

2013

The California Lottery introduces the first second chance solution to include both instants and terminal-based games.

2014

The Illinois Lottery, using GTECH technology, launches America's first lottery app that allows players to purchase tickets using their mobile phones.

2019

For the first time in more than five years, there's a new U.S. lottery. Following the November 25 launch of the Mississippi Lottery Corporation, there are now only five states without a lottery - Alabama, Alaska, Hawaii, Nevada and Utah. There are currently 48 jurisdictions with lotteries in the U.S., including 45 states, the District of Columbia, and the territories of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. With five Canadian members as well, this brings NASPL's total membership to 53 lottery organizations.

1970

The first lottery tickets are sold in Canada as lotteries in Quebec and Manitoba open for business.

1975

The New Jersey Lottery introduces the first computerized numbers game in the U.S.

1982

The Arizona Lottery launches Scientific Games' automated Tel-Sell marketing system, an innovation that continues to underscore the importance of retail distribution to sales growth.

1982

Pollard Banknote, which traces its roots as a commercial printer back to the early 1900s, enters the secure lottery ticket printing business by producing two instant tickets for Ontario.

1985

The New York Lottery and Scientific Games launch the industry's first Cooperative Services Program, an integrated category management program that went on to drive sales performance for some of the world's leading lotteries.

1987

The Multi-State Lottery Association is formed with six initial members; its first game, Lotto*America, was introduced the next year. That game was replaced with Powerball in 1992, forever changing the concept of jackpot games.

1989

South Dakota is the first lottery to introduce video lottery terminals (VLTs) at bars and clubs.

1990

Sports betting is introduced in Canada by the Western Canada Lottery Corp. and Loto-Quebec.

1991

The Atlantic Lottery Corp. and Scientific Games introduce the industry's first Bingo scratch game with a player marking system. Printed on an oversized ticket with a complex play style and offered at a higher price point, this launches the extended play product category for lotteries.

1992

With its debut, Texas also introduced a new lottery model, outsourcing its marketing and sales functions to a private company (GTECH). It would be almost two decades before other lotteries followed a similar path of significant outsourcing (Illinois, Indiana and New Jersey).

1995

The Maine Lottery is the first to use Scientific Games' new one-step, automated keyless game validation process.

1998

The New Mexico Lottery is the first to utilize a 100 percent wireless lottery network, created by GTECH.

2002

European-based INTRALOT enters North American lottery systems market by establishing INTRALOT Inc, in Duluth, Ga. It allows three strong companies to serve the American market, fostering competition and innovation.

2004

The Atlantic Lottery Corp. and the British Columbia Lottery Corp. are the first lotteries in North America to offer Internet sales.

2006

Pollard Banknote patents its Scratch FX® technology. To this day, all ticket vendors continue to develop new printing technologies and enhancements that attract players to the games.

2010

For the first time, American lotteries could sell both Powerball and Mega Millions tickets, a landmark achievement in the industry.

2011

In another mobile-based development, Pollard Banknote develops a system for using QR codes on instant tickets that can be scanned by smartphones.

2012

The Minnesota Lottery launched a combined Linq3 and Scientific Games solution to become the first lottery to sell tickets at gas pumps and ATMs.

2013

The Georgia Lottery is the first American lottery to offer keno games via the Internet.

2013

The Delaware Lottery is the first American operator of any kind to introduce casino-style Internet gaming, using a system developed by Scientific Games and 888 Holdings.

2016

The world record for a lottery jackpot fell dramatically when the Powerball jackpot reached an epic $1.58 billion on January 13, 2016. It was the first time any lotto game offered a prize of more than one billion dollars. The pot of gold was split between winners in California, Florida and Tennessee.

2022

A single ticket sold in California won a Powerball jackpot worth $2.04 billion, a new world record

1973

Scientific Games is founded with an algorithmic solution that leads the way for the production and sale of the world's first secure instant lottery game.

1976

Gaming Dimensions Inc. was founded in Providence, R.I., and renamed GTECH Corp. when the company went public in 1983.

1982

Canada's Interprovincial Lottery Corporation and GTECH launch LOTTO 6/49, the world's first multi-jurisdiction lotto game.

1985

The first lottery-specific communication systems, using radio technology, are developed by GTECH.

1986

Pollard Banknote is the first ticket printer to implement the secure placement of the validation number within the game area, replacing the use of a separate Void if Removed number box. This innovative approach allowed for more space on the ticket for graphic detail and game areas.

1987

The Iowa Lottery is the first American lottery to sell pulltab tickets.

1990

Canada's first video lottery terminals are placed in service by the Atlantic Lottery Corp. in New Brunswick and Newfoundland & Labrador.

1990

West Virginia begins a limited test of VLTs at Mountaineer Park, the first VLTs located in quantity at a racetrack.

1991

The Virginia Lottery begins the first large-scale installation of instant ticket vending machines.

1992

The Texas Lottery launches with the industry's first satellite communications network for retail lottery terminals, provided by GTECH.

1996

Scientific Games develops technology that offers an additional level of game security by concealing validation bar codes under the scratch-off coating.

2000

GTECH develops ES-VIDEO, the first VLT central system capable of downloading.

2003

Pollard Banknote introduces the PlayBook®, which provides enhanced extended play opportunities with multiple different game formats within a single book.

2006

The Multi-State Lottery Association and SPIELO (a division of GTECH) launch the first multi-state video lottery progressive in Delaware, Rhode Island and West Virginia.

2007

Scientific Games develops the lottery industry's first linked multi-state instant game, Deal or No Deal™, which involves 21 states and offers lotteries exclusive, one-of-a-kind prizes and marketing packages. The winners appeared on national television two years later.

2010

North America's first regulated online poker network, The Canadian Poker Network, is launched by Loto-Quebec and GTECH. The British Columbia Lottery Corporation joined the CPN the next year.

2011

Lotteries begin to embrace the mobile world, as the Iowa Lottery and Scientific Games launch the industry's first iPhone® mobile app that checks tickets and creates electronic bet slips for use at retail.

2012

The New Mexico Lottery's version of terminal-based instant- win games, Quicksters, are the first such games to be sold through self-service vending machines, utilizing INTRALOT's WinStation.

2013

Scientific Games creates the industry's first multi-state linked instant game, MONOPOLY™ Jackpot, with second-chance opportunities to win progressive jackpots of up to $1 million or more.

2014

The Minnesota Lottery in conjunction with technology partner Scientific Games becomes the first American lottery to sell eInstant games.

2018

The U.S. Supreme Court issues a ruling striking down the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act (PASPA), opening the door for states to allow sports wagering. Delaware is the first U.S. state to add full-scale sports betting after the ruling, with the Delaware Lottery as the provider.

2023

The first multi-jurisdictional eInstant progressive jackpot game, Jackpot Spectacular, is launched in Pennsylvania and Virginia.

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