Friday, August 31, 2007

Long Johns?

Why are long johns called long johns? Were they invented by a man named John? I found the information below here.

The earliest references to the garments strongly suggest the name came to wide public attention because it was applied to the long underwear issued to American soldiers during World War Two. Until this piece appeared, the first known reference to them was in a publication of 1943, but I’ve succeeded in taking that back a couple of years, to a letter home by a new recruit published in the Sheboygan Press, Wisconsin, on 16 October 1941: “We have had but three days of rain in the nine weeks we have been here. Last Friday it turned a little cool so we were issued our winter clothes. We all hope we don’t get our ‘long Johns’ for a while because it is too warm yet.”

Another local newspaper reference, this time from the Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune of 3 June 1944, suggests an origin: “Many a rookie has been ridiculed and laughed at the first time he swallowed his pride and donned his LONG JOHNS. They are the winter underwear issued by the Army, and have the disturbing effect of making a G.I. look like a scarecrow trapeze artist. It might be added that they itch but good! After a soldier finally gets into his LONG JOHNS, he invariably swells his chest, flexes his biceps and struts around the barracks like a John L. Sullivan, after whom these practical if not sightly garments have been named.”

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