Charley horse
Posted by ESC on October 09, 2001
In Reply to: Phrase posted by Jeff Hassian on October 09, 2001
: Where did the phrase "charlie horse" come from and what does it mean?
Nobody knows. But here are two theories:
CHARLEY HORSE -- "Back in 1946 the 'Journal of the American Medical Association' published an article entitled 'Treatment of the Charley Horse,' rather than 'Treatment of Injury to Quadriceps Femoris.' This would indicate that 'charley horse' has been a part of formal English for at least 50 years. But did this term for a 'leg cramp' arise from a lame horse named Charley that pulled a roller across the infield in the Chicago White Sox ballpark in the 1890s? That's the old story, and there was such a horse, but the expression may have been printed several years before his baseball days, in 1888, to describe a ballplayer's stiffness or lameness. Another derivation that seems likely but hasn't been proved traces 'charley horse' to the constables, or Charleys, of 17th century England. According to this theory, 'Charleys,' for 'local police,' survived in America through the 19th century and because aching legs were an occupational disease among Charleys,' ballplayers suffering such maladies were compare to the coopers and said to be 'weary from riding Charley's horse.'" From the Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins by Robert Hendrickson (Facts on File, New York, 1997).