So I was searching the newspapers of genealogybank.com for
the name “Hammerand” because a woman from St. Louis by the name of Emilie
Hammerand was arrested in Vienna in 1934 after the Nazi assassination of Englebert
Dollfuss, the Austrian prime minister. She, the wife of an Austrian who owned Vienna’s
Hotel Hammerand, was charged with transporting messages between Munich Nazis and
Austrian Nazis. How, I wondered, did this American woman end up assisting the
Nazis?
Unfortunately, when I searched for “Hammerand” many of the
results were for “hammer and,” as in “hammer and nail.” One such result, dated
December 9, 1887, was titled “Vaccinated for lefthandness,” and I couldn’t
resist finding out what that was about. It turned out to be a short humorous article
about a man named David Sills who was “left handed all over.” According to the article, published in the Dallas Morning News (see below), “Not only does [Mr.
Sills’s] left side boss all the balance of his anatomy, but it controls and
directs his walk, his conversation and his tobacco. In fact, when he saunters
down the street the most casual observer can see at a glance that his entire
right side is badly henpecked, and is keeping in the procession with servile
timidity.”
Mr. Sills lefthandedness interested the local doctor who,
for the sake of science, questioned Sills about it. The man told the doctor
that “he was not built that way at the start, or a little earlier, and that he
was vaccinated when quite young with a left-handed scab, and it stuck.” Then he
solemnly told the doctor, “This world has never seen a bald-headed idjit or a left-handed fool.”
Bobby from the t.v. show Supernatural |
As I remember the word, it was slang for “idiot.” I am not
sure why we needed a substitute word for idiot, but it did save a syllable and
sounds fresher. Doing the inevitable Google “research,” I found these two
definitions of idjit:
Idiot, a person with an intellectual barrier blocking them from obtaining average intelligence http://www.urbandictionary.com/
Derived from the Irish Slang word "Eejit", which means a person who is exceedingly Stupid or an Idiot. It was Americanized and made "country" and slowly was changed into "Idjit" by southerners. http://onlineslangdictionary.com/
An academic blog entry explained the origin
and use of the word in Ireland: https://stancarey.wordpress.com/2011/07/22/ijit-idjit-eejit-idiot/ If I looked hard enough, I am sure I could find
a doctoral dissertation written about the word.
Even though I had not heard the word in many
decades, the word has continued in circulation. Among its famous uses, Yosemite
Sam called Bugs Bunny an idgit in a 1960s cartoon. And in recent years, Bobby, a
red-neckish baseball-hat wearing character in Supernatural, a television show, often
called Sam and Dean, younger characters in the show, idjits. As a result, the
word has become a minor meme among the Supernatural crowd, and it is displayed on
tee shirts, baseball caps, bracelets, etc.
It was fun to rediscover this word after so many years and
to learn not only that it survived a journey from Ireland but also that its
longevity extends well over a century. If I were to write an updated definition
of the word, I would illustrate it with a picture of Mrs. Emilie Hammerand of
St. Louis, a friend of Austrian Nazis, who, most assuredly, was not left
handed.
***************************************
Thomson Journal, Vaccinated for Left-Handedness
Dallas Morning News,
December 9, 1887, accessed through Newspapers.com
One of the unaccountable peculiarities of our good friend,
Mr. David Sills, is that he is left-handed all over. Not only does his left
side boss all the balance of his anatomy, but it controls and directs his walk,
his conversation and his tobacco. In fact, when he saunters down the street the
most casual observer can see at a glance that his entire right side is badly
henpecked, and is keeping in the procession with servile timidity. The oldest
inhabitant never saw him shove a jack plane with his right hand, and when he
wears a bile it is invariably located to the right of the equator of his
backbone. In you mention the stock law his left eye responds with surprising
vigor, and his snore is known by neighbors as a strictly one-barrel
performance. Mr. Sills is a quiet, unpretentious citizen. He does not carry
around an intellectual headlight to dazzle people and make horses run away. But
he has a head to defy the power of his eloquent hammer. And he is left-handed from away back. Not long since Dr.
Durham, in a laudable pursuit of science, questioned Mr. Sills in reference to
this peculiarity. Mr. Sills replied that he was not built that way at the
start, or a little earlier, and that he was vaccinated when quiet young with a
left-handed scab, and it stuck. Then he solemnly informed the doctor that this
world has never seen a bald-headed idjit or a left-handed fool. In this Mr.
Sills is eminently correct.
Someone asked me once if there were any digits around Birch Bay. I guess I misunderstood. I held up both hands, waved my fingers and said I had ten.
ReplyDeleteRight, Pat. Fortunately, most of the idgits abandon Birch Bay during the winter months. Wait, maybe those of us staying here are the idjits, given the crazy wind and the cold that keeps freezing my digits.
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