Use of nigger in proper names
The word nigger has historically been used in the names of products, colors, plants, as place names, and as people's nicknames, among others, but has fallen out of favor since the 20th century.
Commercial products
[edit]The word nigger was often featured in branding and packaging consumer products. In 1925, the Matthes Coal and Construction Company was marketing "Niggerhead Coal" as more efficient and a better buy than soft coal.[1] Bouclé fabric was called "niggerhead" in advertisements.[1][2] An Australian company produced various sorts of licorice candy under the "Nigger Boy" label. These included candy cigarettes and one box with an image of an Indian snake charmer.[3][4][5] Compare these with the various national varieties and names for chocolate-coated marshmallow treats, and with Darlie, formerly Darkie, toothpaste.[6] As the term became less acceptable in mainstream culture, product names were changed. "Nigger Hair Tobacco" became "Bigger Hair", and "Niggerhead Oysters" became "Negro Head".[7][1]
Plant and animal names
[edit]Some colloquial or local names for plants and animals used to include the word "nigger" or "niggerhead".
The colloquial names for echinacea (coneflower) are "Kansas niggerhead" and "Wild niggerhead".[citation needed] The cotton-top cactus (Echinocactus polycephalus) is a round, cabbage-sized plant covered with large, crooked thorns, and used to be known in Arizona as the "niggerhead cactus".[citation needed] In the early 20th century, double-crested cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus) were known in some areas of Florida as "nigger geese".[8] In some parts of the U.S., Brazil nuts were known as "nigger toes".[9]Red cabbage (Brassica oleracea var. capitata) was sometimes called "niggerhead cabbage" in the United States, and in Britain at least as recently as the 1980s.[10][1][11]
The "niggerhead termite" (Nasutitermes graveolus) is a native of Australia.[12]
The butterfly Orsotriaena medus had historically been called "the nigger", referring to its dark brown colour,[13] but it has been renamed in Australian faunal works to "smooth-eyed bushbrown",[14] "medus brown"[15] in India, and "dark grass-brown"[16] in Southeast Asia.
The black Labrador dog owned by Guy Gibson, Squadron Leader of RAF 617 Squadron, 'The Dam Busters', was called Nigger (see Nigger (dog)). In 21st-century re-runs on UK (at least) TV, scenes in which the dog's name is mentioned are cut. The dog was run over outside the airfield, and in 2020 a memorial at the spot was replaced with one on which the dog's name is not mentioned.
American cosmic horror author H.P. Lovecraft's black cat was called Nigger-man. Lovecraft owned the cat from childhood until its death in 1904.[17] Lovecraft also used the name for a fictional cat in The Rats in the Walls, first published in 1924.
Colors
[edit]A shade of dark brown used to be known as "nigger brown" or simply "nigger";[18] other colours were also prefixed with the word. Usage for colors continued for some time after it was no longer acceptable for people.[19] Nigger brown commonly identified a colour in the clothing industry and advertising of the early 20th century.[20]
Nicknames of people
[edit]During the Spanish–American War U.S. Army General John J. Pershing's original nickname, Nigger Jack, given to him as an instructor at West Point because of his service with "Buffalo Soldier" units, was euphemized to Black Jack by reporters.[21][22]
In the first half of the twentieth century, before Major League Baseball was racially integrated, many darker-complexioned players were nicknamed Nig;[23][24] examples are: Johnny Beazley (1941–49), Joe Berry (1921–22), Bobby Bragan (1940–48), Nig Clarke (1905–20), George Cuppy (1892–1901), Nig Fuller (1902), Johnny Grabowski (1923–31), Nig Lipscomb (1937), Charlie Niebergall (1921–24), Nig Perrine (1907), and Frank Smith (1904–15).
The 1933 movie The Bowery with George Raft and Wallace Beery includes a sports bar in New York City named "Nigger Joe's".[citation needed]
In 1960, a stand at the stadium in Toowoomba, Australia, was named the "E. S. 'Nigger' Brown Stand", honoring 1920s rugby league player Edwin Brown, ironically nicknamed because of his pale white skin; his tombstone is engraved Nigger. Stephen Hagan, a lecturer at the Kumbari/Ngurpai Lag Higher Education Center of the University of Southern Queensland, sued the Toowoomba council over the use of nigger in the stand's name; the district and state courts dismissed his lawsuit. He appealed to the High Court of Australia, who ruled the naming matter beyond federal jurisdiction. At first, some Aboriginal Australians did not share Hagan's opposition to nigger.[25] Hagan appealed to the United Nations, winning a committee recommendation to the Australian federal government, that it force the Queensland state government to remove the word nigger from the "E. S. 'Nigger' Brown Stand" name. The Australian federal government followed the High Court's jurisdiction ruling. In September 2008, the stand was demolished. The Queensland Sports Minister, Judy Spence, said that using nigger would be unacceptable, for the stand or on any commemorative plaque. The 2005 book The N Word: One Man's Stand by Hagan includes this episode.[25][26]
In South Sudan, people who are affiliated with local street gangs or local street gangs themselves are called "niggers".[27]
Place names
[edit]Many places once had names that included the word "nigger", sometimes named after a person, or a historical event, or for a perceived resemblance of a geographic feature to a human being (see Niggerhead). Most of these place names have long since been changed.
The majority of places with the word in their name were located in the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.
Australia
[edit]The term "nigger" has historically been used in several Australian place names, especially in Queensland.
In 2003, two creeks in Wondecla, Queensland, previously known as Nigger Creek and North Nigger Creek, were renamed to Wondecla Creek and North Wondecla Creek respectively. This was met with opposition from a local council, which defended the use as a testimony to the region's history.[28] Similarly (although decades earlier), a local school, opened as Nigger Creek Provisional School in 1883, was renamed Nigger Creek State School in 1909 and then Wondecla State School in 1922. The school closed in 1958.[29]
In 2017, several place names in Queensland such as the island of Nigger Head (which is currently unnamed), were changed due to their use of terms such as "nigger".[30]
There is a creek in Northern Territory formerly named "Nigger Creek". The Northern Territory Place Names Register is in the process of renaming the creek.[31]
More recently,[when?] the Tasmanian Government controversially printed new maps showing a rock named "Niggerhead Rock".[32] "Niggerhead Rock", along with "Suicide Bay", "Victory Hill" and several other places, have been renamed with Tasmanian Aboriginal names. The new names are Karanutung, Luwuka and Timuk, respectively.[33]
Canada
[edit]At Penticton, British Columbia, "Niggertoe Mountain" was renamed Mount Nkwala. The place-name derived from a 1908 Christmas story about three black men who died in a blizzard; the next day, the bodies of two were found at the foot of the mountain.[34] John Ware, an influential cowboy in early Alberta, has several features named after him, including "Nigger John Ridge", which is now John Ware Ridge.[35]
In 2015, the Commission de toponymie du Québec ordered name changes for 11 places in the province that contained variations of the word, including Nigger Rapids, a site on the Gatineau River named for a Black couple who drowned there in the early 1900s.[36]
Finland
[edit]An island in North Karelia named Neekerisaari (lit. 'Nigger Island') had its name removed in 2020.[37] It is now known as Seppänen .
A neighborhood in Vaasa called Neekerikylä - so named because the houses were first painted with black tar paint before white paint was available - had its name changed to Aalto-puisto, because most inhabitants found the name problematic.[38]
New Zealand
[edit]In December 2016, the New Zealand Geographic Board changed three place names in Canterbury in the South Island. Nigger Hill, Niggerhead, and Nigger Stream were renamed Kānuka Hills, Tawhai Hill, and Pūkio Stream, respectively.[39][40][41][42][43] However, other racially charged place names remain, including "Darkies Creek", "Darkies Terrace Track", and "Darkies Terrace" in South Island, named after African-American prospector Arthur "Darkie" Addison in the 1860s,[44] and "Darkie Stream" in North Island.[45]
Turks and Caicos Islands
[edit]There is an island near South Caicos called Nigger Cay.[46][47]
United States
[edit]In West Texas, "Dead Nigger Creek" was renamed "Dead Negro Draw";[48] both names probably commemorate the Buffalo Soldier tragedy of 1877.[49] Curtis Island in Maine used to be known as either Negro[50] or Nigger Island.[51] The island was renamed in 1934 after Cyrus H. K. Curtis, publisher of the Saturday Evening Post, who lived locally.[52] It had a baseball team who wore uniforms emblazoned with "Nigger Island" (or in one case, "Nigger Ilsand").[53] Negro Head Road, or Nigger Head Road, referred to many places in the Old South where black body parts were displayed in warning (see Lynching in the United States).[citation needed] In Los Angeles, Nigger Alley or Negro Alley was used on maps to signify the street originally called Calle de los Negros in the Spanish and Mexican period, referring to Afromestizo or mulatto Mexican residents.[54]
In Saint Paul, Minnesota, a small pond was named "Nigger Lake", but was changed to "Dead Horse Lake" in the 1930s.
On July 27, 1962, citing a standard of "offensive to many", and "no one now would suggest a new name including the word", Secretary of the Interior Stewart Udall sent a letter to the United States Geological Survey's board chairman to press for a plan to remove the use of the word "nigger" anywhere it appeared in the organization's topographical maps product, and to request a policy for and change of all occurrences of it on its maps.[55][56][1] This led to a wider codified policy by the USGS against use of any ethnic slur in any map name. Where "nigger" appeared on USGS map objects and another suitable name had not been offered, it was changed to "negro", by 1967.[55] There were, however, communities who did not comply, and disputes extended into the 1970s.[1] In 1971, about 300 students at the University of Vermont protested property owned by the university under the names "Niggerhead Pond" and "Niggerhead Mountain".[1]
During the 2012 United States presidential election campaign in October 2011, the Washington Post reported that Rick Perry, candidate for the Republican nomination, leases a hunting camp once called "Niggerhead". Although it had not been named by him nor his family, according to some local residents interviewed by the Post the Perrys used the camp for years before painting over a large rock with that name on it which stands at an entrance,[57][1] however Perry's campaign stated that the Perrys painted over the rock almost immediately after acquiring a lease on the property in 1983.[58][59]
Some renamings honor a real person. As early as 1936, "Nigger Hollow" in Pennsylvania, named after Daniel Hughes, a free black man who saved others on the Underground Railroad,[60] was renamed Freedom Road.[61] "Nigger Nate Grade Road", near Temecula, California, named for Nate Harrison, an ex-slave and settler, was renamed "Nathan Harrison Grade Road" in 1955, at the request of the NAACP.[62]
Sometimes other substitutes for "nigger" were used. "Nigger Head Mountain", at Burnet, Texas, was named because the forest atop it resembled a black man's hair. In 1966, the First Lady, Lady Bird Johnson, denounced the racist name, asking the U.S. Board on Geographic Names and the U.S. Forest Service to rename it, becoming "Colored Mountain" in 1968.[citation needed] Other renamings were more creative. "Nigger Head Rock", protruding from a cliff above Highway 421, north of Pennington Gap, Virginia, was renamed "Great Stone Face" in the 1970s.[citation needed]
Some names have been metaphorically or literally wiped off the map. In the 1990s, the public authorities stripped the names of "Niggertown Marsh" and the neighbouring Niggertown Knoll in Florida from public record and maps, which was the site of an early settlement of freed black people.[63] A watercourse in the Sacramento Valley was known as Big Nigger Sam's Slough.[64]
Sometimes a name changes more than once: a peak above Santa Monica, California was first renamed "Negrohead Mountain", and in February 2010 was renamed again to Ballard Mountain, in honor of John Ballard, a black pioneer who settled the area in the nineteenth century. A point on the Lower Mississippi River, in West Baton Rouge Parish, that was named "Free Nigger Point" until the late twentieth century, first was renamed "Free Negro Point", but currently is named "Wilkinson Point".[65] "Nigger Bill Canyon" in southeast Utah was named after William Grandstaff, a mixed-race cowboy who lived there in the late 1870s.[66] In the 1960s, it was renamed Negro Bill Canyon. Within the past few years, there has been a campaign to rename it again, as Grandstaff Canyon, but this is opposed by the local NAACP chapter, whose president said "Negro is an acceptable word".[67] However the trailhead for the hiking trail up the canyon was renamed in September 2016 to "Grandstaff Trailhead".[68] The new sign for the trailhead was stolen within five days of installation.[69]
In 2009, research scientists for the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation learned that there were geographical features and roads in the state still bearing the word "nigger" in official sources. Searches of regulatory indices and maps revealed even further examples in Tompkins County and Hamilton County. In 2011, the Department began the process of scrubbing those names from official documents.[70]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h Pilgrim, David. "Nigger Head Oysters – August 2017". Ferris State University Jim Crow Museum. Ferris State University. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
- ^ "The Seattle Star Journal of February 10, 1915". Gaste Arşivi. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
- ^ "More Racist Licorice". Blah blah blah. November 30, 2008.
The other day I posted about Nigger Boy Licorice, a brand of sweet that was popular in Australia for many years up until the mid-1960s when it was suddenly realised that people found the name Nigger Boy to be offensive rather than amusing. ... I do have a few various offensive advertisements that the company made.
- ^ Best, Daniel (March 16, 2007). "Racist Comic Book Ads". 20th century Danny Boy. Retrieved May 16, 2016.
... the one thing I did show which left everyone in the room speechless was this ad, taken from an old Australian comic (I think it was a Dagwood comic. I have it downstairs buried in a box somewhere). If the ad wasn't enough then what really stunned people was when I told them that this ad appeared in all it's [sic] glory in the mid to late 1960s. There was more discussion about this ad and it's merits [sic] than anything else in the entire course ...
- ^ Museum Victoria. "Advertisement – Nigger Boy Licorice, 1950s–1960s". Museum Victoria Collections. Retrieved May 16, 2016.
- ^ "Darkie drops offensive name and logo". Straits Times. 1989-01-29. p. 6. Archived from the original (JPEG) on 2015-12-04.
- ^ Ravernell, Wanda J. (June 15, 2005). "What's cute about racist kitsch?". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved March 13, 2006.
- ^ Williams, John (1919). "Notes on Birds of Wakulla County, Florida" (PDF). Wilson Bulletin. Retrieved July 30, 2015.
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(help) - ^ Brazili, Matt (July 14, 2000). "Actually, My Hair Isn't Red". The Wall Street Journal. Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Retrieved November 15, 2014.
Hearing angmo so often took me back to my childhood, when my friends and I used the words Jew and Gyp (the latter short for Gypsy) as verbs, meaning to cheat. At that time, in the 1960s, other racial epithets, these based on physical appearance, were commonly heard: cracker, slant-eye, bongo lips, knit-head. To digress to the ludicrous, Brazil nuts were called "nigger toes."
- ^ "1917 [catalog]. 49th year / John A. Salzer Seed Co". Internet Archive. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
- ^ Thompson, K. F.; Taylor, J. P. (1966). "The breakdown of self-incompatibility in cultivars of Brassica oleracea" (PDF). Heredity. 21 (4). Nature: 637–648. doi:10.1038/hdy.1966.63. S2CID 30413289. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
- ^ "Semiochemicals of Nasutitermes graveolus, the Niggerhead termite". The Pherobase. Retrieved March 12, 2006.
- ^ Evans, W.H. (1932). The Identification of Indian Butterflies (2nd ed.). Mumbai, India: Bombay Natural History Society. pp. 123–124, ser no D16.1.
- ^ Australian Faunal Directory, Government of Australia (Dept of Environment & Water Resources) page on Orsotriaena medus. Accessed 28 April 2018
- ^ "Orsotriaena medus Fabricius, 1775 – Medus Brown". Butterflies of India.
- ^ Kirton, Laurence G. (2014). A Naturalist's Guide to the Butterflies of Peninsular Malayasia, Singapore and Thailand. Oxford:John Beaufoy Publ. p.62.
- ^ Joshi, S.T.; Schultz, David E. (2004). An H.P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia. Hippocampus Press. p. 35. ISBN 978-0974878911.
- ^ "Target Wools advertisement". Vogue Knitting Book (33). c. 1948.
Nigger and Pink Cardigan
- ^ "Hue & Cry". Urban Legends Reference Pages: Racist Sofa Label. 22 April 2007. Retrieved August 11, 2007.
- ^ Allan, Keith (July 20, 2016). "Contextual determinants on the meaning of the N word". SpringerPlus. 5 (1): 1141. doi:10.1186/s40064-016-2813-1. ISSN 2193-1801. PMC 4954799. PMID 27504239.
- ^ "Buffalo Soldier Cavalry Commander: General John J. Pershing". U.S. National Park Service. Archived from the original on September 15, 2007. Retrieved August 17, 2007.
- ^ Vandiver, Frank E. Black Jack: The Life and Times of John J. Pershing – Volume I (Texas A&M University Press, Third printing, 1977) ISBN 0-89096-024-0, p. 67.
- ^ "1920: Corsicana's Finest Hour". Archived from the original on December 28, 2007.
- ^ "Jay Justin "Nig" Clark of Navarro County, Texas".
- ^ a b Monaghan, Peter: Taking a Stand, July 29, 2005, in The Chronicle of Higher Education, available at "Australia's E. S. 'Nigger' Brown Stand and "Judicial Restraint"". Prof. Andrew V. Uroskie. July 29, 2005. Retrieved September 27, 2008.
- ^ Bita, Natasha (September 27, 2008). "League legend would have wanted sign to stay: grandson". The Australian. Archived from the original on January 6, 2009. Retrieved September 27, 2008.
- ^ Hou, Hou Akot (24 September 2024). "NBG strategizes combating gang crimes". No.1 Citizen.
- ^ "AUSTRALIA: Council wants to keep 'Nigger' Creek". 25 July 2003.
- ^ "ArchivesSearch | Queensland State Archives | Queensland Government".
- ^ "Racist place names to be struck from the record in Queensland". 28 August 2017.
- ^ "Place Names Register".
- ^ "Land Council Decries Maps with Offensive Place Name". Tasmanian Times. 2022-05-18. Retrieved 2024-08-30.
- ^ "Aboriginal alternatives offered for 'offensive' Tasmanian place names". ABC News. 6 May 2017.
- ^ "Niggertoe Mountain". BC Geographical Names.
- ^ "John Ware Ridge". Geographical names in Canada. Natural Resources Canada. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
- ^ "11 Quebec sites that contain the N-word to be renamed". CBC. 2015-09-26. Retrieved 2024-09-23.
- ^ "Neekerisaari will disappear from the maps of Finland".
- ^ "Neekerikylän ja Bölen nimimuutokset käsittelyssä". 3 September 2013.
- ^ "Proposals to alter place names from 'Nigger Hill' to 'Kānuka Hills' (with an altered extent) and 'Niggerhead' to 'Tawhai Hill'" (PDF). LINZ. Retrieved 4 October 2017.
- ^ "New Zealand could replace 'racist' place names". BBC News. Retrieved 2017-10-04.
- ^ "Objection to changing offensive names". The New Zealand Herald. 21 April 2016. Retrieved 4 October 2017.
- ^ "'Nigger' place names will be no more". Māori Television. 8 December 2016. Retrieved 4 October 2017.
- ^ "Notice of Final Determinations of the Minister for Land Information on Official Geographic Names" (PDF). New Zealand Gazette. 15 December 2016. Retrieved 4 October 2017.
- ^ "New Zealand Drops Racially Offensive 'Nigger' Place Names". New Delhi: NDTV. 8 December 2016. Retrieved 4 October 2017.
- ^ "Names in Poor Taste". The Timaru Herald. Retrieved 22 March 2021 – via PressReader.
- ^ Green, E. P.; Clark, C. D.; Mumby, P. J.; Edwards, A. J.; Ellis, A. C. (1998). "Remote sensing techniques for mangrove mapping". International Journal of Remote Sensing. 19 (5): 935–956. Bibcode:1998IJRS...19..935G. doi:10.1080/014311698215801. ISSN 0143-1161.
A 180 km2 subset in the vicinity of South Caicos and Nigger Cay was selected from all images and the water masked out using the infrared bands (TM band 7 and SPOT band 3) as masks (®gure 1, step A).
- ^ "The Most Uncommon Island Names in The Caribbean". Uncommon Caribbean. 2013-12-31. Retrieved 2024-09-23.
- ^ "Dead Negro Draw". Handbook of Texas Online. Retrieved February 19, 2010.
- ^ "From Negro Creek to Wop Draw, place names offend". NBC News. February 26, 2012. Retrieved February 6, 2015.
- ^ Island chronicler Charles McLane says "Curtis Island was known as Negro Island from Revolutionary Times to the 1930s ..." McLane, Charles B.; McLane, Carol Evarts (1997). Islands of the Mid-Maine Coast. Vol. I. Gardiner, ME; Rockland, ME: Tilbury House; Island Institute. p. 124. ISBN 978-0-88448-184-3.
- ^ An early postcard shows it as "Nigger Island." cf.CardCow.com. "CardCow.com Postcard Sale site". Nigger Island Lighthouse, Camden Maine. Retrieved April 17, 2012.
- ^ McLane, Islands of the Mid-Maine Coast Vol. I at p. 124
- ^ Lukas, Paul (September 13, 2012). "Question Time, Vol. 2". Uni Watch: The Obsessive study of athletic aesthetics. Retrieved May 3, 2016.
- ^ Lopez, Cesar (2012). "Lost in Translation: From Calle de los Negros to Nigger Alley to North Los Angeles Street to Place Erasure, Los Angeles 1855–1951" (PDF). Southern California Quarterly. 94 (1 (Spring 2012)): 39–40. doi:10.1525/scq.2012.94.1.25. JSTOR 10.1525/scq.2012.94.1.25.
- ^ a b Monmonier, Mark (2008-09-15). From Squaw Tit to Whorehouse Meadow: How Maps Name, Claim, and Inflame. University of Chicago Press. pp. 44–45. ISBN 978-0-226-53464-0.
- ^ "US Geological Survey (USGS) briefing materials on Derogatory Names Policy, 2017" (PDF). Retrieved 2020-06-14.
- ^ McCrummen, Stephanie (October 1, 2011). "At Rick Perry's Texas hunting spot, camp's old racially charged name lingered". The Washington Post. Retrieved October 3, 2011.
- ^ Burns, Alexander (October 2, 2011). "Perry team pushes back on Herman Cain criticism". Politico. Retrieved October 3, 2011.
- ^ "Republican Rick Perry in hunting lodge race row". BBC News. October 3, 2011. Retrieved October 3, 2011.
- ^ Lou Hunsinger Jr. "Daniel Hughes: Giant of Freedom Road". Williamsport Sun-Gazette. Archived from the original on April 20, 2012. Retrieved February 15, 2012.
- ^ Bob Hill. "Forests & Freedom: Forgotten Links In Pennsylvania's Underground Railroad". The Resource a publication of the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. Archived from the original on October 18, 1999. Retrieved June 27, 2007.
- ^ "Nathan Harrison (1823–1920)". San Diego Biographies. San Diego Historical Society. Archived from the original on December 10, 2007. Retrieved July 1, 2011.
- ^ Racial slurs deleted from Fla, maps JET, (magazine), July 1992, Johnson Publishing
- ^ Fleming, Thomas C. (1999). BLACK LIFE IN THE SACRAMENTO VALLEY 1919–1934. Boson Books. Retrieved May 3, 2016.
- ^ "Free Negro Point". USGS Geographic Names Information System. Retrieved March 12, 2006.
- ^ Van Cott, John W. (1990). Utah Place Names. Salt Lake City, Utah: University of Utah Press. pp. 271–272. ISBN 978-0-87480-345-7.
- ^ McCombs, Brady (November 26, 2012). "Push on to rename 'Negro Bill Canyon' in Utah". Salt Lake Tribune. Salt Lake City. Associated Press. Retrieved March 29, 2015.
- ^ Maffley, Brian (September 23, 2017). "Negro Bill Trailhead renamed to a more sensitive moniker in honor of southern Utah pioneer".
- ^ Maffley, Brian (September 29, 2017). "Vandals steal BLM's new Grandstaff Trailhead sign at Moab's Negro Bill Canyon".
- ^ Gershman, Jacob (July 22, 2011). "After Discovery, State Quietly Moves to Scrub N-word From Official Documents". Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on May 3, 2015. Retrieved 22 May 2024.