Re: Ride out on a rail
Posted by ESC on May 28, 2003 In Reply to: Ride out on a rail posted
by S. on May 28, 2003
: Where does the expression "to ride some one out on a rail" come
from?
: Thanks for any information.
TARRED AND FEATHERED - "At Salem, on September 7, 1768, an informer
named Robert Wood 'was stripped, tarred and feathered and placed
on a hogshead under the Tree of Liberty on the Common.' This is
the first record of the term 'tarred and feathered' in America.
Tarring and feathering was a cruel punishment where hot pine tar
was applied from head to toe on a person and goose feathers were
stuck into the tar. The person was then ignited and ridden out of
town on a rail (tied to a splintery rail), beaten with sticks and
stoned all the while. A man's skin often came off when he removed
the tar. It was a common practice to tar and feather Tories who
refused to join the revolutionary cause, one much associated with
the Liberty Boys, but the practice was known here long before the
Revolution. In fact, it dates back even before the first English
record of tarring and feathering, an 1189 statute made under Richard
the Lionhearted directing that any thief voyaging with the Crusaders
'shal have his head shorne and boyling pitch powred upon his head,
and feathers or downe strewn upon the same, whereby he may be known,
and so at the first landing place they shal come to, there to be
cast up.' Though few have been tarred and feathered or ridden out
of town on a rail in recent years, the expression remains to describe
anyone subjected to indignity and infamy." From "Encyclopedia of
Word and Phrase Origins" by Robert Hendrickson (Facts on File, New
York, 1997).
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