Hoosiers love their cars. In one digital image collection, the Hoosier Motorists Collection, you can find images from all over the state depicting people having fun in campers, auto company executives, road signs, travel photos and more.
The items in the collection were once owned by Robert Hamilton Scrogin, an official in the Hoosier Motor Club and an early editor of The Hoosier Motorist, which the Hoosier Motor Club published from 1912 through 1979. The Hoosier Motor Club got its start in 1902 when Carl G. Fisher and other automobile enthusiasts formed a social group called the Flat Tire Club in Indianapolis. In 1911, the Flat Tire Club was reorganized and its name changed to Hoosier Motor Club. Members began doing more than road trip adventures throughout the state. They began pushing for road funding, danger and directional signage, and more. The Club became an affiliate of the American Automobile Association in 1917. Its membership soared from 500 in 1917 to 1,250 in 1918. By 1982, the Hoosier Motor Club had more than 200,000 members.