I am trying to find out what the word "hunkey" means, as it is used in the 1861 popular song "Whack Row De-Dow, a Hunkey boy is Yankee Doodle."
I have heard the word used to describe someone of Czech or central European extraction. I don't know if that was a common period term or not.
Searching Google Books for period references, the closest thing to a definition I can find is an 1870 reference in Putnam's magazine of literature, science, art, and national interests that says "It is now applied to those members of any political organization who are opposed to innovation upon the established principals of the party." I. E., a conservative within the party--so if this was the 1861 concept of the word it might means someone who is anti-abolition or at least cool on the subject. That would make sense-- our soldier boys are not rabid abolitionists.
I may be way off base so I'm looking for some help.
BTW, it appears that the phrase "hunkey-dorey" meaning "a-ok" was just becoming popular in the 1860's. I find it as a song title in George Christy's 1862 Essence of Old Kentucky.
I have heard the word used to describe someone of Czech or central European extraction. I don't know if that was a common period term or not.
Searching Google Books for period references, the closest thing to a definition I can find is an 1870 reference in Putnam's magazine of literature, science, art, and national interests that says "It is now applied to those members of any political organization who are opposed to innovation upon the established principals of the party." I. E., a conservative within the party--so if this was the 1861 concept of the word it might means someone who is anti-abolition or at least cool on the subject. That would make sense-- our soldier boys are not rabid abolitionists.
I may be way off base so I'm looking for some help.
BTW, it appears that the phrase "hunkey-dorey" meaning "a-ok" was just becoming popular in the 1860's. I find it as a song title in George Christy's 1862 Essence of Old Kentucky.
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