[Ads-l] Possible Antedating of "Bulldyke"

Shapiro, Fred 00001ac016895344-dmarc-request at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU
Sun Oct 26 18:50:56 UTC 2025


Over 40 years ago, I contributed to the OED a citation for the word "bulldyker" from a 1906 medical text.  That is now the earliest OED cite for any of the bulldyke / dyke family of words.  Here is a possible antedating of "bulldyke":8

1892 Daily Inter Ocean (Chicago) 28 July 9/2 (GenealogyBank)  Hattie Washinging [typo for "Washington"], a colored woman, started out at 6:30 o'clock yesterday afternoon with a big revolve in her hand.  She went to Blanche Alexander's place on Custom House place in search of Belle Watkins, who, she said, had won the affections of Harvey Neal, alias "Bulldyke."

There is no clue about how Neal got the nickname, and there is no later evidence bearing on whether that nickname was an etymon of the term "bulldyke" referring to lesbianism.  Curiously, the Daily Inter Ocean article appeared irght next to an article about Alice Mitchell's murder of Freda Ward, the incident that first brought widespread attention to lesbianism.  The mysterious 1892 use of "bulldyke" is discussed in the OED, in Green's Dictionary of Slang, and in an outstanding article by Dave Wilton in his Wordorigins.org website.  The OED has an etymological note asserting that Harvey Neal was "a person who is confirmed to be male in another part of the story," but I don't see where in the newspaper Neal's maleness is confirmed.  Is it possible that Neal was a lesbian woman "passing" as a male?  It is clear that Washington and Neal were Blacks.  The OED's earliest citations for "bulldyke" and related words, in the 1920s and 1930s, are also from African American contexts.

Fred Shapiro

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