Yankee
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The term Yankee refers to someone of New England heritage. By extension its popular meaning has been expanded to include any resident of the Northeast (New England, Mid-Atlantic, and upper Great Lakes states), to any Northerner, or someone in the Union, during and after the American Civil War, or to other citizens of the United States. In certain Commonwealth countries — notably UK, Australia and New Zealand — "Yank" refers to any American. Internationally, "Yank" is today roughly analogous to "Brit, Pom or Pommy" (someone from the UK), "Aussie" (someone from Australia) or "Kiwi" (someone from New Zealand). In Europe, Australian tourists are sometimes called "New Yanks."[1]
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[edit] Yankee cultural history
Historically, Yankees were residents of New England, of English ancestry. The Yankees diffused widely across the northern United States, leaving their imprint in New York, the upper Midwest, and places as far away as Seattle, San Francisco and Honolulu. [2] Yankees typically lived in villages (rather than separate farms), which fostered local democracy in town meetings; stimulated mutual oversight of moral behavior and emphasized civic virtue. From New England seaports like Boston, Salem, Providence and New London, the Yankees built an international trade, stretching to China by 1800. Much of the merchant profits were reinvested in the textile and machine tools industries.
Yankees created the first public high schools and colleges for their children, building human capital that was highly valued in growing cities. Yankee cultural traits included an emphasis on education and an appreciation of complex social structures that emphasized brainpower over manual skills, and favored intricate corporate structures. Education was always a high priority as typified by Harvard College (1636), Boston Latin School (1635) and Yale College (1701), as well as early advanced schools of law, medicine, theology and engineering. The Yankees pioneered the free public school and, under the leadership of Horace Mann designed a system of public schools and teacher training colleges that formed the national model copied eventually by all the states. By the late 19th century Yankees were creating the first universities, including Johns Hopkins (the first research university in the US; it was headed by Daniel Coit Gilman), Harvard, Yale, Michigan, Wisconsin, Columbia, Chicago and California-Berkeley. Prep schools such as St. Paul's, Phillips Andover, Phillips Exeter, Choate and Groton, continue to play a leading role in educating the wealthiest families.
In religion New England Yankees originally followed the Puritan tradition as expressed in Congregational churches, but after 1750 many became Episcopalians, Methodists, Baptists or Unitarians. The 17th century straight-laced moralism portrayed by novelist Nathaniel Hawthorne faded in the 18th century. The First Great Awakening (under Jonathan Edwards) in the mid-18th century and the Second Great Awakening in the early 19th century (under Charles Grandison Finney) emphasized personal piety, revivals, and devotion to civic duty. Theologically Arminianism replaced the original Calvinism. Horace Bushnell introduced the idea of Christian nurture, whereby children would be brought to religion without revivals.
After 1800 the Yankees (along with the Quakers) spearheaded most reform movements, including abolition, temperance, women's rights and women's education. Emma Willard and Mary Lyons pioneered in the higher education of women, while Yankees comprised most of the reformers who went South during Reconstruction in the 1860s to educate the Freedmen.
Politically, the Yankees, who dominated New England, much of upstate New York, and much of the upper Midwest, were the strongest supporters of the new Republican party in the 1860s. This was especially true for the Congregationalists and Presbyterians among them and (after 1860), the Methodists. A study of 65 predominantly Yankee counties showed they voted only 40% for the Whigs in 1848 and 1852, but became 61–65% Republican in presidential elections of 1856 through 1864. [3]
Yankees historically dominated American business, finance, philanthropy, and higher education. Yankees dominated economically and socially the cities of New England as well as New York City, Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago, San Francisco, Seattle and Honolulu. Yankee entrepreneurs were instrumental in creating the Midwest's industrial centers and large commercial cities, often using their connections to international high finance in Boston and New York City.
The Ivy League universities and "Little Ivies" liberal arts colleges, particularly Harvard and Yale, remained bastions of old Yankee culture until well after World War II. Educated Yankees were characteristically introspective, often keeping detailed diaries.
Calvin Coolidge was a striking example of the Yankee type. Coolidge moved from rural Vermont to urban Massachusetts, and was educated at Amherst College. Yet his flint-faced unprepossessing ways and terse rural speech proved politically attractive: "That Yankee twang will be worth a hundred thousand votes," explained one Republican leader.[4]
The fictional character Thurston Howell III of Gilligan's Island, a graduate of Harvard University, typifies the old Yankee elite in a comical way.
In the 21st century the systematic Yankee ways had permeated the entire society through education. Although many observers from the 1880s onward predicted that Yankee politicians would be no match for new generations of ethnic politicians, the presence of Yankees at the top tier of politics in the 21st century was typified by Presidents George H. W. Bush and George W. Bush, Democratic National Chairman Howard Dean and Democratic presidential nominee Senator John Forbes Kerry, scion of the old colonial Forbes family.
[edit] Contemporary uses
[edit] In the United States
Within the United States, the term Yankee can have many different contextually and geographically-dependent meanings.
Traditionally Yankee was most often used to refer to a New Englander (in which case it may suggest Puritanism and thrifty values), but today refers to anyone coming from a state north of the Mason-Dixon line, with a specific focus still on New England. However, within New England itself, the term refers more specifically to old-stock New Englanders of English descent. The term WASP, in use since the 1960s, refers by definition to all Protestants of English ancestry, including Yankees and Southerners, though its meaning is often extended to refer to any Protestant white American, including Germans and Scandinavians.
The term "Swamp Yankee" is used in rural Rhode Island, eastern Connecticut, and southeastern Massachusetts to refer to Protestant farmers of moderate means and their descendants (as opposed to upper-class Yankees).[5] Scholars note that the famous Yankee "twang" survives mainly in the hill towns of interior New England.[6] The most characteristic Yankee food was the pie; Yankee author Harriet Beecher Stowe in her novel Oldtown Folks celebrated the social traditions surrounding the Yankee pie.
In the American South, the term is rarely used as a derisive term for Northerners, especially those who have migrated to the South. As some Southerners put it, "A Yankee is a Northerner, and a Damnyankee [written and pronounced as one word] is a Northerner who moves (or comes) South".
A humorous aphorism attributed to E.B. White summarizes these distinctions:
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- To foreigners, a Yankee is an American.
- To Americans, a Yankee is a Northerner.
- To Northerners, a Yankee is an Easterner.
- To Easterners, a Yankee is a New Englander.
- To New Englanders, a Yankee is a Vermonter.
- And in Vermont, a Yankee is somebody who eats pie for breakfast.
Another variant of the aphorism replace the last definition with "an outhouse". There are several other folk and humorous etymologies for the term.
One of Mark Twain's most famous novels, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court popularized the word as a nickname for residents of Connecticut.
It is also the official team nickname of a Major League Baseball franchise, the New York Yankees.
[edit] In other parts of the world
In some parts of the world, particularly in Latin America, Spain and East Asia, yankee or yanqui is used sometimes as an insult politically associated with anti-Americanism and used in expressions such as "Yankee go home" or "we struggle against the yanqui, enemy of humanity" (words from the Sandinista anthem).
In English-speaking countries outside the United States, especially in Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand and the United Kingdom, Yankee, almost universally shortened to 'Yank', is used as a colloquial term for all Americans.
In Cockney rhyming slang, Yank became septic tank begetting the new nickname Seppo or Septic for an American, and is also used in Australia.[4] The term was used extensively in these countries during the world wars to refer to U.S. soldiers, and the U.S. government has often been referred to as the Yanks.
"Working for the Yankee dollar" is sometimes heard as a derogatory phrase for someone who is perceived to have 'sold out' to an American corporation in some way.
Yanquilandia ("Yankeeland") is a Spanish-language derogative nickname for the United States.
In the late 19th century the Japanese were called "the Yankees of the East" in praise of their industriousness and drive to modernization.[7] In 21st century Japan, the term Yankī is used to refer to a type of delinquent youth[8] who often sports brightly bleached hair. Etymology of the word is disputed, although one of the theories suggest the word comes from the English word "yankee."
In Finland, the word jenkki (yank) is commonly used to refer to any American, and Jenkkilä (Yankeeland) refers to the United States itself.[9]
[edit] Origins of word in English
The origins of the term are uncertain. In 1758 British General James Wolfe referred to the New England soldiers under his command as Yankees: "I can afford you two companies of Yankees."[10] The term as used by the British was thick with contempt, as shown by the cartoon from 1775 ridiculing Yankee soldiers.[11] The "Yankee and Pennamite" war was a series of clashes over land titles in Pennsylvania, 1769ff, in which "Yankee" meant the Connecticut claimants.
Johnathan Hastings of Cambridge, Massachusetts was attributed around 1713 to regularly using the word as a superlative, generally in the sense of excellent.[12]
One of the earliest theories on the word derives from the Northestern Native American approximation of the word English. [13] It has been rejected by linguists.[14]
The Oxford English Dictionary suggests the most plausible origin to be that it is derived from the Dutch nickname Janke, short for Jan (English "John") , and this name was applied derisively to Dutch settlers in New England and New York. [15] One popular (but unlikely) theory describes how Indians used the simplest name that they knew — Jan Keyes — as the name for all white traders. Another speculation suggests the Dutch form was Jan Kaas, "John Cheese", from the prevalence of dairy-farming among the Dutch. Others speculate it was used by Dutch in upstate New York referring to the New Englanders who were migrating to their region. This is certainly an error, as the migration of New Englanders to upstate New York came about after the Revolution and after the term was in widespread use. Michael Quinion and Patrick Hanks argue[16]the term refers to the Dutch nickname and surname Janke, anglicized to Yanke and "used as a nickname for a Dutch-speaking American in colonial times". By extension, according to their theory, the term grew to include non-Dutch American colonists as well.
One influence on the use of the term throughout the years has been the song Yankee Doodle, which was popular at the time of the American Revolutionary War (1775–1783). Though the British intended to insult the colonials with the song, following the Battle of Concord, it was adopted by Americans as a proud retort and today is the state song of Connecticut.
An early use of the term outside the United States was in the creation of Sam Slick, the "Yankee Clockmaker," in a column in a newspaper in Halifax, Nova Scotia Canada, in 1835. The character was a plain-talking American who served to poke fun at American and Nova Scotian customs of that era, while trying to urge the old-fashioned Canadians to be as clever and hard-working as the Yankees.
The "damned Yankee" usage dates from 1812.[17] During and after the American Civil War (1861–1865) Confederates popularized it as a derogatory term for their Northern enemies.
[edit] Further reading
- Beals, Carleton; Our Yankee Heritage: New England's Contribution to American Civilization (1955) online
- Conforti, Joseph A. Imagining New England: Explorations of Regional Identity from the Pilgrims to the Mid-Twentieth Century (2001) online
- Bushman, Richard L. From Puritan to Yankee: Character and the Social Order in Connecticut, 1690–1765 (1967)
- Ellis, David M. "The Yankee Invasion of New York 1783–1850". New York History (1951) 32:1–17.
- Fischer, David Hackett. Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America (1989), Yankees comprise one of the four
- Gjerde; Jon. The Minds of the West: Ethnocultural Evolution in the Rural Middle West, 1830–1917 (1999) online
- Gray; Susan E. The Yankee West: Community Life on the Michigan Frontier (1996) online
- Oscar Handlin, "Yankees," in Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups, ed. by Stephan Thernstrom, (1980) pp 1028–1030.
- Hill, Ralph Nading. Yankee Kingdom: Vermont and New Hampshire. (1960).
- Holbrook, Stewart H. Yankee Exodus: An Account of Migration from New England (1950)
- Holbrook, Stewart H.; Yankee Loggers: A Recollection of Woodsmen, Cooks, and River Drivers (1961)
- Hudson, John C. "Yankeeland in the Middle West," Journal of Geography 85 (Sept 1986)
- Jensen, Richard. "Yankees" in Encyclopedia of Chicago (2005).
- Kleppner; Paul. The Third Electoral System 1853–1892: Parties, Voters, and Political Cultures University of North Carolina Press. 1979, on Yankee voting behavior
- Knights, Peter R.; Yankee Destinies: The Lives of Ordinary Nineteenth-Century Bostonians (1991) online
- Mathews, Lois K. The Expansion of New England (1909).
- Piersen, William Dillon. Black Yankees: The Development of an Afro-American Subculture in Eighteenth-Century New England (1988)
- Power, Richard Lyle. Planting Corn Belt Culture (1953), on Indiana
- Rose, Gregory. "Yankees/Yorkers," in Richard Sisson ed, The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia (2006) 193–95, 714–5, 1094, 1194,
- Sedgwick, Ellery; The Atlantic Monthly, 1857–1909: Yankee Humanism at High Tide and Ebb (1994) online
- Smith, Bradford. Yankees in Paradise: The New England Impact on Hawaii (1956)
- Taylor, William R. Cavalier and Yankee: The Old South and American National Character (1979)
- WPA. Massachusetts: A Guide to Its Places and People. Federal Writers' Project of the Works Progress Administration of Massachusetts (1937).
[edit] Linguistic
- Butsee H. Logemay, "The Etymology of 'Yankee'," Studies in English Philology in Honor of Frederick Klaeber, (1929) pp 403–13.
- Fleser, Arthur F. "Coolidge's Delivery: Everybody Liked It." Southern Speech Journal 1966 32(2): 98–104. Issn: 0038-4585
- Harold Davis. "On the Origin of Yankee Doodle," American Speech, Vol. 13, No. 2 (Apr., 1938), pp. 93–96 in JSTOR
- Kretzschmar, William A. Handbook of the Linguistic Atlas of the Middle and South Atlantic States (1994)
- Lemay, J. A. Leo "The American Origins of Yankee Doodle," William and Mary Quarterly 33 (Jan 1976) 435–64
- Mathews, Mitford M. A Dictionary of Americanisms on Historical Principles (1951) pp 1896 ff for elaborate detail
- Ruth Schell, "Swamp Yankee," American Speech, 1963, Volume 38, No.2 (The American Dialect Society, Published by Duke University Press ), pg. 121–123. accessed through JSTOR
- Oscar G. Sonneck. Report on "the Star-Spangled Banner" "Hail Columbia" "America" "Yankee Doodle" (1909) pp 83ff online
[edit] References
- ^ "It's a real worry that Aussies in Europe are now being tagged 'New Yanks'." Cited in Sydney Morning Herald at [1]
- ^ Mathews (1909), Holbrook (1950)
- ^ Kleppner p 55
- ^ William Allen White, A Puritan in Babylon: The Story of Calvin Coolidge (1938) p. 122.
- ^ Ruth Schell, "Swamp Yankee," American Speech, 1963, Volume 38, No.2 , pg. 121–123. accessed through JSTOR
- ^ Fisher, Albion's Seed p 62; Edward Eggleston, The Transit of Civilization from England to America in the Seventeenth Century. (1901) p. 110; Fleser (1962)
- ^ William Eleroy Curtis, The Yankees of the East, Sketches of Modern Japan. (New York: 1896).
- ^ Daijirin dictionary, Yahoo! Dictionary
- ^ . See comments on H-South by Seppo K J Tamminen at [2]
- ^ Mathews (1951) p 1896
- ^ Mathews (1951) p 1896
- ^ "yankee, n and a" OED <http://dictionary.oed.com/cgi/entry/50288716>
- ^ "yankee, n and a" OED <http://dictionary.oed.com/cgi/entry/50288716>
- ^ Mathews (1951) p 1896
- ^ "yankee, n and a" OED
- ^ see [3])
- ^ Mathews (1951) p 1896