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Hobo

A hobo is a migrant worker in the United States.[1][2] Hoboes, tramps and bums are generally regarded as related, but distinct: a hobo travels and is willing to work; a tramp travels, but avoids work if possible; and a bum neither travels nor works.[3][4]

Two hoboes, one carrying a bindle, walking along railroad tracks after being put off a train (c. 1880s–1930s)

Etymology

The origin of the term is unknown. According to etymologist Anatoly Liberman, the only certain detail about its origin is the word was first noticed in American English circa 1890.[2] The term has also been dated to 1889 in the Western—probably NorthwesternUnited States,[5] and to 1888.[6] Liberman points out that many folk etymologies fail to answer the question: "Why did the word become widely known in California (just there) by the early Nineties (just then)?"[2] Author Todd DePastino notes that some have said that it derives from the term "hoe-boy", coming from the hoe they are using and meaning "farmhand", or a greeting such as "Ho, boy", but that he does not find these to be convincing explanations.[7] Bill Bryson suggests in Made in America (1998) that it could either come from the railroad greeting, "Ho, beau!" or a syllabic abbreviation of "homeward bound".[8] It could also come from the words "homeless boy" or "homeless Bohemian". H. L. Mencken, in his The American Language (4th ed., 1937), wrote:

Tramps and hobos are commonly lumped together, but in their own sight they are sharply differentiated. A hobo or bo is simply a migratory laborer; he may take some longish holidays, but soon or late he returns to work. A tramp never works if it can be avoided; he simply travels. Lower than either is the bum, who neither works nor travels, save when impelled to motion by the police.[9]

History

 
Two men riding underneath a freight train, 1894

While drifters have always existed in human society, the term became common only after the broad adoption of railroads, a means of free travel for those willing, often out of financial constraints, to hop aboard train cars furtively in violation of the law. With the end of the American Civil War in the 1860s, many discharged veterans returning home began hopping freight trains. Others looking for work on the American frontier followed the railways west aboard freight trains in the late 19th century.

In 1906, Professor Layal Shafee, after an exhaustive study, put the number of tramps in the United States at about 500,000 (about 0.6% of the US population at the time). His article "What Tramps Cost Nation" was published by The New York Telegraph in 1911, when he estimated the number had surged to 700,000.[10]

The number of hoboes increased greatly during the Great Depression era of the 1930s.[11] With no work and no prospects at home, many decided to travel for free by freight train and try their luck elsewhere.

Life as a hobo was dangerous. In addition to the problems of being itinerant, poor, and far from home and support, plus the hostility of many train crews, they faced the railroad police, nicknamed "bulls", who had a reputation of violence against trespassers.[12] Moreover, riding on a freight train is dangerous in itself. British poet W. H. Davies, author of The Autobiography of a Super-Tramp, lost a foot when he fell under the wheels when trying to jump aboard a train. It was easy to be trapped between cars, and one could freeze to death in cold weather. When freezer cars were loaded at an ice factory, any hobo inside was likely to be killed.[13]

Around the end of World War II, railroads began to transition from steam to diesel locomotives, making jumping freight trains more difficult. This, in combination with increased postwar prosperity, led to a decline in the number of hoboes. In the 1970s and 1980s hobo numbers were augmented by returning Vietnam War veterans, many of whom were disillusioned with settled society. Overall, the national economic demand for a mobile surplus labor force has declined over time, leading to fewer hoboes.[14][15]

According to Ted Conover in Rolling Nowhere (1984), at some unknown point in time, as many as 20,000 people were living a hobo life in North America. Modern freight trains are much faster and thus harder to ride than in the 1930s, but they can still be boarded in railyards.[16][page needed]

Culture

Expressions used through the 1940s

Hoboes were noted for, among other things, the distinctive lingo that arose among them. Some examples follow:

Hobo term Explanation
Accommodation car the caboose of a train
Angellina a young inexperienced child
Bad road a train line rendered useless by some hobo's bad action or crime
Banjo (1) a small portable frying pan; (2) a short, "D"-handled shovel, generally used for shoveling coal
Barnacle a person who sticks to one job a year or more
Beachcomber a hobo who hangs around docks or seaports
Big house prison
Bindle stick a collection of belongings wrapped in cloth and tied around a stick
Bindlestiff a hobo who carries a bindle
Blowed-in-the-glass a genuine, trustworthy individual
'Bo the common way one hobo referred to another: "I met that 'bo on the way to Bangor last spring."
Boil up specifically, to boil one's clothes to kill lice and their eggs; generally, to get oneself as clean as possible
Bone polisher a mean dog
Bone orchard a graveyard
Bull a railroad officer
Bullets beans
Buck a Catholic priest, good for a dollar
Burger today's lunch
C, H, and D indicates an individual is "Cold, Hungry, and Dry" (thirsty)
California blankets newspapers, intended to be used for bedding on a park bench
Calling in using another's campfire to warm up or cook
Cannonball a fast train
Carrying the banner keeping in constant motion so as to avoid being picked up for loitering or to keep from freezing
Catch the westbound to die
Chuck a dummy pretend to faint
Cooties body lice
Cover with the moon sleep out in the open
Cow crate a railroad stock car
Crumbs lice
Docandoberry anything edible that grows on a riverbank
Doggin' it traveling by bus, especially on the Greyhound bus line
Easy mark a hobo sign or mark that identifies a person or place where one can get food and a place to stay overnight
Elevated under the influence of drugs or alcohol
Flip to board a moving train
Flop a place to sleep, by extension, "flophouse", a cheap hotel
Glad rags one's best clothes
Graybacks lice
Grease the track to be run over by a train
Gump a chicken[17]
Honey dipping working with a shovel in the sewer
Hot (1) a fugitive hobo; (2) a hot or decent meal: "I could use a hot and a flop"
Hot shot a train with priority freight, stops rarely, goes faster; synonym for "Cannonball"
Jungle an area off a railroad where hoboes camp and congregate
Jungle buzzard a hobo or tramp who preys on his own
Knowledge bus a school bus used for shelter
Maeve a young hobo, usually a girl
Main drag the busiest road in a town
Moniker / Monica a nickname
Mulligan stew a type of community stew, created by several hoboes combining whatever food they have or can collect
Nickel note a five-dollar bill
On the fly jumping a moving train
Padding the hoof to travel by foot
Possum belly to ride on the roof of a passenger car (one must lie flat, on his/her stomach, to avoid being blown off)
Pullman a railroad sleeper car; most were once made by the George Pullman company
Punk any young kid
Reefer a compression or "refrigerator car"
Road kid a young hobo who apprentices himself to an older hobo in order to learn the ways of the road
Road stake the small reserve amount of money a hobo may keep in case of an emergency
Rum dum a drunkard
Sky pilot a preacher or minister
Soup bowl a place to get soup, bread and drinks
Snipes cigarette butts "sniped" (e.g., from ashtrays or sidewalks)
Spare biscuits looking for food in a garbage can
Stemming panhandling or begging along the streets
Tokay blanket drinking alcohol to stay warm
Yegg a traveling professional thief, or burglar

Many hobo terms have become part of common language, such as "big house", "glad rags", "main drag", and others.

Hobo signs and graffiti

 
1920s guide to a supposed traditional beggar's code in France.
1. Poor welcome, disagreeable people. 2. Danger. 3. Beware of prison. 4. Nothing doing. 5. Eats. 6. Can get anything by threatening. 7. Do not threaten the people in the house. 8. Take vengeance. 9. Might give in. 10. Look out for the dog. 11. Brutal owner. 12. Money given here. 13. Men and dogs ready to attack. 14. Woman alone with child or servant. 15. Hard luck stories are profitable. 16. Charity given. 17. Insist and they'll give in. 18. Talk religion

Almost from the beginning of the existence of hoboes, as early as the 1870s,[18] it was reported that they communicated with each other by way of a system of cryptic "hobo signs", which would be chalked in prominent or relevant places to clandestinely alert future hoboes about important local information. Many listings of these symbols have been made. A few symbols include:

  • A triangle with hands, signifying that the homeowner has a gun.[19]
  • A horizontal zigzag signifying a barking dog.[20]
  • A circle with two parallel arrows meaning "Get out fast," as hoboes are not welcome in the area.[20]
  • A cat signifying that a kind lady lives here.[20]

Reports of hoboes using these symbols appeared in newspapers and popular books straight through the Depression, and continue to turn up in American popular culture; for example, John Hodgman's book The Areas of My Expertise features a section on hobo signs listing signs found in newspapers of the day as well as several whimsical ones invented by Hodgman,[21] and the Free Art and Technology Lab released a QR Hobo Code, with a QR stenciler, in July 2011.[22] Displays on hobo signs have been exhibited in the Steamtown National Historic Site at Scranton, Pennsylvania, operated by the National Park Service, and in the National Cryptologic Museum in Annapolis Junction, Maryland,[23][24] and Webster's Third New International Dictionary supplies a listing of hobo signs under the entry for "hobo".[25]

 
Mailbox at Jimmy Carter National Historical Park. The symbols on the post were originally drawn by hoboes during the Great Depression.

Despite an apparently strong record of authentication, however, there is doubt as to whether hobo signs were ever actually in practical use by hoboes. They may simply have been invented early on by a writer or writers seeking to add to the folklore surrounding hoboes soon after they acquired the name, an invention perpetuated and embellished by others over the years, aided occasionally by amenable hoboes themselves.[18] Several hoboes during the days that the signs were reportedly most in use asserted that they were in fact a "popular fancy" or "a fabrication".[18] Nels Anderson, who both hoboed himself and studied hoboes extensively for a University of Chicago master's thesis,[18] wrote in 1932,

Another merit of the book [Godfrey Irwin's 1931 American Tramp and Underworld Slang] is that the author has not subscribed to the fiction that American tramps have a sign language, as so many professors are wont to believe.[26]

Though newspapers in the early and peak days of hoboing (1870s through the Depression) printed photos and drawings of hoboes leaving these signs, these may have been staged in order to add color to the story. Nonetheless, it is certain that hoboes have used some graffiti to communicate, in the form of "monikers" (sometimes "monicas"). These generally consisted simply of a road name (moniker), a date, and the direction the hobo was heading then. This would be written in a prominent location where other hoboes would see it. Jack London, in recounting his hobo days, wrote,

Water-tanks are tramp directories. Not all in idle wantonness do tramps carve their monicas, dates, and courses. Often and often have I met hoboes earnestly inquiring if I had seen anywhere such and such a "stiff" or his monica. And more than once I have been able to give the monica of recent date, the water-tank, and the direction in which he was then bound. And promptly the hobo to whom I gave the information lit out after his pal. I have met hoboes who, in trying to catch a pal, had pursued clear across the continent and back again, and were still going.[27]

The use of monikers persists to this day, although since the rise of cell phones a moniker is more often used simply to "tag" a train car or location. Some moniker writers have tagged train cars extensively; one who tagged under the name Bozo Texino during the 1970s and ’80s estimated that in one year ("where I went overboard") he marked over 30,000 train cars.[28] However, not all moniker writers (or "boxcar artists") are hoboes; Bozo Texino in fact worked for the railroad, though others such as "A No. 1" and "Palm Tree Herby" rode trains as tramps or hoboes.[28][29]

Ethical code

Hobo culture—though it has always had many points of contact with the mainstream American culture of its day—has also always been somewhat separate and distinct, with different cultural norms. Hobo culture's ethics have always been subject to disapproval from the mainstream culture; for example, hopping freight trains, an integral part of hobo life, has always been illegal in the U.S. Nonetheless, the ethics of hobo culture can be regarded as fairly coherent and internally consistent, at least to the extent that any culture's various individual people maintain the same ethical standards. That is to say, any attempt at an exhaustive enumeration of hobo ethics is bound to be foiled at least to some extent by the diversity of hoboes and their ideas of the world. This difficulty has not kept hoboes themselves from attempting the exercise. An ethical code was created by Tourist Union #63 (a hobo union created in the mid-1800s to dodge anti-vagrancy laws, which did not apply to union members)[30] during its 1889 National Hobo Convention:[31]

  1. Decide your own life; don't let another person run or rule you.
  2. When in town, always respect the local law and officials, and try to be a gentleman at all times.
  3. Don't take advantage of someone who is in a vulnerable situation, locals or other hoboes.
  4. Always try to find work, even if temporary, and always seek out jobs nobody wants. By doing so you not only help a business along, but ensure employment should you return to that town again.
  5. When no employment is available, make your own work by using your added talents at crafts.
  6. Do not allow yourself to become a stupid drunk and set a bad example for locals' treatment of other hoboes.
  7. When jungling in town, respect handouts and do not wear them out; another hobo will be coming along who will need them as badly, if not worse than you.
  8. Always respect nature; do not leave garbage where you are jungling.
  9. If in a community jungle, always pitch in and help.
  10. Try to stay clean, and boil up wherever possible.
  11. When traveling, ride your train respectfully. Take no personal chances. Cause no problems with operating crew or host railroad. Act like an extra crew member.
  12. Do not cause problems in a train yard; another hobo will be coming along who will need passage through that yard.
  13. Do not allow other hoboes to molest children; expose all molesters to authorities – they are the worst garbage to infest any society.
  14. Help all runaway children, and try to induce them to return home.
  15. Help your fellow hoboes whenever and wherever needed; you may need their help someday.
  16. If present at a hobo court and you have testimony, give it. Whether for or against the accused, your voice counts!

Conventions

General

There are numerous hobo conventions throughout the United States each year. The ephemeral ways of hobo conventions are mostly dependent on the resources of their hosts. Some conventions are part of railroad conventions or "railroad days"; others quasi-private affairs hosted by long-time hoboes; still others surreptitious affairs on private land, as in abandoned quarries along major rivers.[citation needed]

Most non-mainstream conventions are held at current or historical railroad stops. The most notable is the National Hobo Convention held in Britt, Iowa.[citation needed] The town first hosted the Convention in 1900, but there followed a hiatus of thirty-three years. Since 1934 the convention has been held annually in Britt, on the second weekend in August.[32]

Notable persons

Notable hoboes

  • Jack Black, author of You Can't Win (1926) OCLC 238829961
  • Maurice W. Graham, a.k.a. "Steam Train Maury"
  • Joe Hill
  • Leon Ray Livingston, a.k.a. "A No.1"
  • Harry McClintock
  • Utah Phillips
  • Robert Joseph Silveria Jr., a.k.a. "Sidetrack", who killed 34 other hoboes before turning himself in to the authorities
  • T-Bone Slim
  • Bertha Thompson, a.k.a. "Boxcar Bertha", was widely believed to be a real person. Sister of the Road was penned by Ben Reitman and presented as an autobiography.
  • Jim Tully, an author who penned several pulp fiction books, 1928 through 1945.
  • Steven Gene Wold, a.k.a. "Seasick Steve"

Notables who have hoboed

In mainstream culture

Books

Comics

Documentaries

  • Hobo (1992), a documentary by John T. Davis, following the life of a hobo on his travels through the United States.
  • American Experience, "Riding the Rails" (1999), a PBS documentary by Lexy Lovell and Michael Uys, narrated by Richard Thomas, detailing the hoboes of the Great Depression, with interviews of those who rode the rails during those years.
  • The American Hobo (2003), a documentary narrated by Ernest Borgnine featuring interviews with Merle Haggard and James Michener.
  • The Human Experience, (2008), a documentary by Charles Kinnane. The first experience follows Jeffrey and his brother Clifford to the streets of New York City where the boys live with the homeless for a week in one of the coldest winters on record. The boys look for hope and camaraderie among their homeless companions, learning how to survive on the streets.

Fictional characters

Examples of characters based on hoboes include:

Films

 
Charlie Chaplin and Jackie Coogan in The Kid, 1921

Music

Artists

Musicians known for hobo songs include: Tim Barry, Baby Gramps, Railroad Earth, Harry McClintock, Ramblin' Jack Elliott, Utah Phillips, Jimmie Rodgers, Seasick Steve, and Boxcar Willie.[citation needed]

Songs

Examples of hobo songs include:

Stage

  • King of the Hobos (2014), a one-man musical that premiered at Emerging Artists Theatre in New York City, is centered around the death of James Eads How, known during his lifetime as the "Millionaire Hobo".[47]

Television

See also

References

  1. ^ "Hoboes" from the Encyclopedia of Chicago
  2. ^ a b c "On Hobos, Hautboys, and Other Beaus". OUPblog. Oxford University Press. November 12, 2008. Retrieved August 5, 2009.
  3. ^ Murray, Thomas E. (1992). "A New Look at the Folk Speech of American Tramps". Western Folklore. Western States Folklore Society. 51 (3/4): 287–302. doi:10.2307/1499777. JSTOR 1499777.
  4. ^ "#TBT - Hobos, Bums, Tramps: How Our Terminology of Homeless Has Changed". National Coalition for the Homeless. June 14, 2018.
  5. ^ . Grammarphobia Blog. July 25, 2009. Archived from the original on May 5, 2012.
  6. ^ Hobo Merriam-Webster. Retrieved November 16, 2021.
  7. ^ Interview with Todd DePastino, author of Citizen Hobo: How a Century of Homelessness Shaped America from the University of Chicago Press website
  8. ^ Bryson, Bill (1998). Made in America. Transworld Publishers Limited. 161. ISBN 978-0380713813.
  9. ^ Mencken, H.L. (2000). The American Language: An Inquiry Into the Development of English in the United States. Knopf (published 2006). ISBN 978-0394400754 – via Google Books.
  10. ^ The New York Telegraph: "What Tramps Cost Nation", page D2. The Washington Post, June 18, 1911.
  11. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 17, 2012. Retrieved May 7, 2013.
  12. ^ Mathers, Michael H. (1973). Riding the Rails. Boston: Gambit. p. 30. ISBN 0876450788. OCLC 757486.
  13. ^ . Allvoices. September 21, 2010. Archived from the original on October 13, 2012. Retrieved November 1, 2015.
  14. ^ "Still Riding the Rails: Life as a Modern Hobo". HowStuffWorks. February 11, 2016.
  15. ^ MacGregor, Jeff; Schukar, Alyssa. "The Last of the Great American Hobos". Smithsonian Magazine.
  16. ^ Conover, Ted (1984). Rolling Nowhere. New York: Viking. ISBN 978-0670603190.
  17. ^ Bruns, Roger (1980). Knights of the Road: A Hobo History. New York: Methuen Inc. p. 201. ISBN 041600721X.
  18. ^ a b c d Wray, Mike; Wray, Charlie (2018). "Hobo Signs: Code of the Road?". Historic Graffiti Society. Retrieved February 25, 2020.
  19. ^ Moon, Gypsy: "Done and Been", p. 198. Indiana University Press, 1996.
  20. ^ a b c Moon, Gypsy: "Done and Been", p. 24. Indiana University Press, 1996.
  21. ^ Hodgman, John. (2006). The areas of my expertise : an almanac of complete world knowledge compiled with instructive annotation and arranged in useful order ... (Riverhead trade pbk. ed.). New York: Riverhead. ISBN 978-1594482229. OCLC 70672414.
  22. ^ "QR Code Stencil Generator and QR Hobo Codes". F.A.T., Free Art and Technology Lab. July 19, 2011. Retrieved July 18, 2012.
  23. ^ Rothstein, Edward (August 1, 2014). "Security Secrets, Dated but Real". The New York Times. Retrieved August 2, 2014.
  24. ^ "National Cryptological Museum – Virtual Tour". Retrieved October 5, 2010.
  25. ^ Webster's third new international dictionary of the English language, unabridged. Gove, Philip Babcock. Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster. 1993. ISBN 0877792011. OCLC 27936328.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  26. ^ Anderson, Nels (March 1932). "American Tramp and Underworld Slang. Godfrey Irwin (book review)". American Journal of Sociology. 37 (5): 842. doi:10.1086/215902.
  27. ^ London, Jack (2005) [1907]. The Road. Project Gutenberg.
  28. ^ a b Daniel, Bill. Who Is Bozo Texino? (documentary). Self-published: billdaniel.net, 2005.
  29. ^ Wray, Mike; Wray, Charlie (2018). "Moniker: Mark of the Tramp". Historic Graffiti Society. Retrieved February 25, 2020.
  30. ^ "Iowa's Hobo Convention". www.mentalfloss.com. January 21, 2014. Retrieved December 20, 2019.
  31. ^ . National Hobo Museum. Archived from the original on July 24, 2011. Retrieved April 20, 2014.
  32. ^ Lammle, Rob (January 21, 2014). "Strange States: Iowa's Hobo Convention". Mental Floss. Retrieved November 1, 2015.
  33. ^ "Tucson Citizen Morgue". Tucsoncitizen.com. April 6, 2009. Retrieved May 7, 2013.
  34. ^ "Louis L'amour: A brief biography". louislamour.com. Retrieved December 7, 2008.
  35. ^ Niven, Frederick (1927). Wild Honey. New York: Dodd, Mead & Company.
  36. ^ "Bob Nolan". AllMusic.
  37. ^ . Archived from the original on October 10, 2012. Retrieved December 7, 2012.
  38. ^ Van Ronk, Dave. The Mayor of MacDougal Street. 2005.
  39. ^ "Dale Wasserman, 94; Playwright Created 'Man of La Mancha'" obituary by Dennis McLellan of the Los Angeles Times, printed in The Washington Post December 29, 2008.
  40. ^ Leeflang, Gerard (1984). American Travels of a Dutch Hobo, 1923–1926. ISBN 978-0813808888.
  41. ^ . Erroluys.com. 1933. Archived from the original on May 5, 2013. Retrieved May 7, 2013.
  42. ^ Thrilling Detective Heroes, John Locke & John Wooley, eds. (Silver Spring, MD: Adventure House, 2007)
  43. ^ "Series List".
  44. ^ "Here Comes Your Man". Frankblack.net. Retrieved May 7, 2013.
  45. ^ Hobo Bill's Last Ride by Jimmie Rodgers (1929) on YouTube
  46. ^ Waiting for a Train by Jimmie Rodgers (1928) on YouTube
  47. ^ "King of the Hobos". www.brownpapertickets.com. Retrieved October 11, 2014.
  48. ^ "HOOP DREAMS". Chicago Tribune.

Further reading

  • Brady, Jonann (2005). "Hobos Elect New King and Queen". ABC Good Morning America, includes Todd "Ad Man" Waters' last ride as reigning Hobo King plus hobo slide show with Adman's photo's taken on the road.
  • Bannister, Matthew (2006). "Maurice W Graham 'Steam Train', Grand Patriarch of America's Hobos who has died aged 89". Last Word. BBC Radio. Matthew Bannister talks to fellow King of the Hobos "Ad Man" Waters and to obituary editor of The New York Times, Bill McDonald.
  • Davis, Jason (2007). , On The Road 30 minute special. KSTP television. Covers "Ad Man" Waters taking his daughter out on her first freight ride.
  • Harper, Douglas (2006) [1986]. "Waiting for a Train", Excerpt from Good Company: A Tramp Life ISBN 978-1594511844
  • Johnson, L. Anderson. "Riding the Rails for the Homeless." The New York Times. July 12, 1983, p. B3, col 3. Story on "Ad Man" Waters the Penny Route.
  • Oats. "Around the Jungle Fire I, II & III". 1994, 1997, 2000. Interviews with several hoboes: How they got their start, and travels and travails.
  • "Hoboes" from the Encyclopedia of Chicago

External links

  •   The dictionary definition of hobo at Wiktionary
  •   Media related to Hobos at Wikimedia Commons

hobo, other, uses, disambiguation, hobo, migrant, worker, united, states, tramps, bums, generally, regarded, related, distinct, hobo, travels, willing, work, tramp, travels, avoids, work, possible, neither, travels, works, hoboes, carrying, bindle, walking, al. For other uses see Hobo disambiguation A hobo is a migrant worker in the United States 1 2 Hoboes tramps and bums are generally regarded as related but distinct a hobo travels and is willing to work a tramp travels but avoids work if possible and a bum neither travels nor works 3 4 Two hoboes one carrying a bindle walking along railroad tracks after being put off a train c 1880s 1930s Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Culture 3 1 Expressions used through the 1940s 3 2 Hobo signs and graffiti 3 3 Ethical code 4 Conventions 4 1 General 5 Notable persons 5 1 Notable hoboes 5 2 Notables who have hoboed 6 In mainstream culture 6 1 Books 6 2 Comics 6 3 Documentaries 6 4 Fictional characters 6 5 Films 6 6 Music 6 6 1 Artists 6 6 2 Songs 6 7 Stage 6 8 Television 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEtymology EditThe origin of the term is unknown According to etymologist Anatoly Liberman the only certain detail about its origin is the word was first noticed in American English circa 1890 2 The term has also been dated to 1889 in the Western probably Northwestern United States 5 and to 1888 6 Liberman points out that many folk etymologies fail to answer the question Why did the word become widely known in California just there by the early Nineties just then 2 Author Todd DePastino notes that some have said that it derives from the term hoe boy coming from the hoe they are using and meaning farmhand or a greeting such as Ho boy but that he does not find these to be convincing explanations 7 Bill Bryson suggests in Made in America 1998 that it could either come from the railroad greeting Ho beau or a syllabic abbreviation of homeward bound 8 It could also come from the words homeless boy or homeless Bohemian H L Mencken in his The American Language 4th ed 1937 wrote Tramps and hobos are commonly lumped together but in their own sight they are sharply differentiated A hobo or bo is simply a migratory laborer he may take some longish holidays but soon or late he returns to work A tramp never works if it can be avoided he simply travels Lower than either is the bum who neither works nor travels save when impelled to motion by the police 9 History Edit Two men riding underneath a freight train 1894 While drifters have always existed in human society the term became common only after the broad adoption of railroads a means of free travel for those willing often out of financial constraints to hop aboard train cars furtively in violation of the law With the end of the American Civil War in the 1860s many discharged veterans returning home began hopping freight trains Others looking for work on the American frontier followed the railways west aboard freight trains in the late 19th century In 1906 Professor Layal Shafee after an exhaustive study put the number of tramps in the United States at about 500 000 about 0 6 of the US population at the time His article What Tramps Cost Nation was published by The New York Telegraph in 1911 when he estimated the number had surged to 700 000 10 The number of hoboes increased greatly during the Great Depression era of the 1930s 11 With no work and no prospects at home many decided to travel for free by freight train and try their luck elsewhere Life as a hobo was dangerous In addition to the problems of being itinerant poor and far from home and support plus the hostility of many train crews they faced the railroad police nicknamed bulls who had a reputation of violence against trespassers 12 Moreover riding on a freight train is dangerous in itself British poet W H Davies author of The Autobiography of a Super Tramp lost a foot when he fell under the wheels when trying to jump aboard a train It was easy to be trapped between cars and one could freeze to death in cold weather When freezer cars were loaded at an ice factory any hobo inside was likely to be killed 13 Around the end of World War II railroads began to transition from steam to diesel locomotives making jumping freight trains more difficult This in combination with increased postwar prosperity led to a decline in the number of hoboes In the 1970s and 1980s hobo numbers were augmented by returning Vietnam War veterans many of whom were disillusioned with settled society Overall the national economic demand for a mobile surplus labor force has declined over time leading to fewer hoboes 14 15 According to Ted Conover in Rolling Nowhere 1984 at some unknown point in time as many as 20 000 people were living a hobo life in North America Modern freight trains are much faster and thus harder to ride than in the 1930s but they can still be boarded in railyards 16 page needed Culture EditExpressions used through the 1940s Edit Hoboes were noted for among other things the distinctive lingo that arose among them Some examples follow Hobo term ExplanationAccommodation car the caboose of a trainAngellina a young inexperienced childBad road a train line rendered useless by some hobo s bad action or crimeBanjo 1 a small portable frying pan 2 a short D handled shovel generally used for shoveling coalBarnacle a person who sticks to one job a year or moreBeachcomber a hobo who hangs around docks or seaportsBig house prisonBindle stick a collection of belongings wrapped in cloth and tied around a stickBindlestiff a hobo who carries a bindleBlowed in the glass a genuine trustworthy individual Bo the common way one hobo referred to another I met that bo on the way to Bangor last spring Boil up specifically to boil one s clothes to kill lice and their eggs generally to get oneself as clean as possibleBone polisher a mean dogBone orchard a graveyardBull a railroad officerBullets beansBuck a Catholic priest good for a dollarBurger today s lunchC H and D indicates an individual is Cold Hungry and Dry thirsty California blankets newspapers intended to be used for bedding on a park benchCalling in using another s campfire to warm up or cookCannonball a fast trainCarrying the banner keeping in constant motion so as to avoid being picked up for loitering or to keep from freezingCatch the westbound to dieChuck a dummy pretend to faintCooties body liceCover with the moon sleep out in the openCow crate a railroad stock carCrumbs liceDocandoberry anything edible that grows on a riverbankDoggin it traveling by bus especially on the Greyhound bus lineEasy mark a hobo sign or mark that identifies a person or place where one can get food and a place to stay overnightElevated under the influence of drugs or alcoholFlip to board a moving trainFlop a place to sleep by extension flophouse a cheap hotelGlad rags one s best clothesGraybacks liceGrease the track to be run over by a trainGump a chicken 17 Honey dipping working with a shovel in the sewerHot 1 a fugitive hobo 2 a hot or decent meal I could use a hot and a flop Hot shot a train with priority freight stops rarely goes faster synonym for Cannonball Jungle an area off a railroad where hoboes camp and congregateJungle buzzard a hobo or tramp who preys on his ownKnowledge bus a school bus used for shelterMaeve a young hobo usually a girlMain drag the busiest road in a townMoniker Monica a nicknameMulligan stew a type of community stew created by several hoboes combining whatever food they have or can collectNickel note a five dollar billOn the fly jumping a moving trainPadding the hoof to travel by footPossum belly to ride on the roof of a passenger car one must lie flat on his her stomach to avoid being blown off Pullman a railroad sleeper car most were once made by the George Pullman companyPunk any young kidReefer a compression or refrigerator car Road kid a young hobo who apprentices himself to an older hobo in order to learn the ways of the roadRoad stake the small reserve amount of money a hobo may keep in case of an emergencyRum dum a drunkardSky pilot a preacher or ministerSoup bowl a place to get soup bread and drinksSnipes cigarette butts sniped e g from ashtrays or sidewalks Spare biscuits looking for food in a garbage canStemming panhandling or begging along the streetsTokay blanket drinking alcohol to stay warmYegg a traveling professional thief or burglarMany hobo terms have become part of common language such as big house glad rags main drag and others Hobo signs and graffiti Edit 1920s guide to a supposed traditional beggar s code in France 1 Poor welcome disagreeable people 2 Danger 3 Beware of prison 4 Nothing doing 5 Eats 6 Can get anything by threatening 7 Do not threaten the people in the house 8 Take vengeance 9 Might give in 10 Look out for the dog 11 Brutal owner 12 Money given here 13 Men and dogs ready to attack 14 Woman alone with child or servant 15 Hard luck stories are profitable 16 Charity given 17 Insist and they ll give in 18 Talk religion Almost from the beginning of the existence of hoboes as early as the 1870s 18 it was reported that they communicated with each other by way of a system of cryptic hobo signs which would be chalked in prominent or relevant places to clandestinely alert future hoboes about important local information Many listings of these symbols have been made A few symbols include A triangle with hands signifying that the homeowner has a gun 19 A horizontal zigzag signifying a barking dog 20 A circle with two parallel arrows meaning Get out fast as hoboes are not welcome in the area 20 A cat signifying that a kind lady lives here 20 Reports of hoboes using these symbols appeared in newspapers and popular books straight through the Depression and continue to turn up in American popular culture for example John Hodgman s book The Areas of My Expertise features a section on hobo signs listing signs found in newspapers of the day as well as several whimsical ones invented by Hodgman 21 and the Free Art and Technology Lab released a QR Hobo Code with a QR stenciler in July 2011 22 Displays on hobo signs have been exhibited in the Steamtown National Historic Site at Scranton Pennsylvania operated by the National Park Service and in the National Cryptologic Museum in Annapolis Junction Maryland 23 24 and Webster s Third New International Dictionary supplies a listing of hobo signs under the entry for hobo 25 Mailbox at Jimmy Carter National Historical Park The symbols on the post were originally drawn by hoboes during the Great Depression Despite an apparently strong record of authentication however there is doubt as to whether hobo signs were ever actually in practical use by hoboes They may simply have been invented early on by a writer or writers seeking to add to the folklore surrounding hoboes soon after they acquired the name an invention perpetuated and embellished by others over the years aided occasionally by amenable hoboes themselves 18 Several hoboes during the days that the signs were reportedly most in use asserted that they were in fact a popular fancy or a fabrication 18 Nels Anderson who both hoboed himself and studied hoboes extensively for a University of Chicago master s thesis 18 wrote in 1932 Another merit of the book Godfrey Irwin s 1931 American Tramp and Underworld Slang is that the author has not subscribed to the fiction that American tramps have a sign language as so many professors are wont to believe 26 Though newspapers in the early and peak days of hoboing 1870s through the Depression printed photos and drawings of hoboes leaving these signs these may have been staged in order to add color to the story Nonetheless it is certain that hoboes have used some graffiti to communicate in the form of monikers sometimes monicas These generally consisted simply of a road name moniker a date and the direction the hobo was heading then This would be written in a prominent location where other hoboes would see it Jack London in recounting his hobo days wrote Water tanks are tramp directories Not all in idle wantonness do tramps carve their monicas dates and courses Often and often have I met hoboes earnestly inquiring if I had seen anywhere such and such a stiff or his monica And more than once I have been able to give the monica of recent date the water tank and the direction in which he was then bound And promptly the hobo to whom I gave the information lit out after his pal I have met hoboes who in trying to catch a pal had pursued clear across the continent and back again and were still going 27 The use of monikers persists to this day although since the rise of cell phones a moniker is more often used simply to tag a train car or location Some moniker writers have tagged train cars extensively one who tagged under the name Bozo Texino during the 1970s and 80s estimated that in one year where I went overboard he marked over 30 000 train cars 28 However not all moniker writers or boxcar artists are hoboes Bozo Texino in fact worked for the railroad though others such as A No 1 and Palm Tree Herby rode trains as tramps or hoboes 28 29 Ethical code Edit Hobo culture though it has always had many points of contact with the mainstream American culture of its day has also always been somewhat separate and distinct with different cultural norms Hobo culture s ethics have always been subject to disapproval from the mainstream culture for example hopping freight trains an integral part of hobo life has always been illegal in the U S Nonetheless the ethics of hobo culture can be regarded as fairly coherent and internally consistent at least to the extent that any culture s various individual people maintain the same ethical standards That is to say any attempt at an exhaustive enumeration of hobo ethics is bound to be foiled at least to some extent by the diversity of hoboes and their ideas of the world This difficulty has not kept hoboes themselves from attempting the exercise An ethical code was created by Tourist Union 63 a hobo union created in the mid 1800s to dodge anti vagrancy laws which did not apply to union members 30 during its 1889 National Hobo Convention 31 Decide your own life don t let another person run or rule you When in town always respect the local law and officials and try to be a gentleman at all times Don t take advantage of someone who is in a vulnerable situation locals or other hoboes Always try to find work even if temporary and always seek out jobs nobody wants By doing so you not only help a business along but ensure employment should you return to that town again When no employment is available make your own work by using your added talents at crafts Do not allow yourself to become a stupid drunk and set a bad example for locals treatment of other hoboes When jungling in town respect handouts and do not wear them out another hobo will be coming along who will need them as badly if not worse than you Always respect nature do not leave garbage where you are jungling If in a community jungle always pitch in and help Try to stay clean and boil up wherever possible When traveling ride your train respectfully Take no personal chances Cause no problems with operating crew or host railroad Act like an extra crew member Do not cause problems in a train yard another hobo will be coming along who will need passage through that yard Do not allow other hoboes to molest children expose all molesters to authorities they are the worst garbage to infest any society Help all runaway children and try to induce them to return home Help your fellow hoboes whenever and wherever needed you may need their help someday If present at a hobo court and you have testimony give it Whether for or against the accused your voice counts Conventions EditGeneral Edit There are numerous hobo conventions throughout the United States each year The ephemeral ways of hobo conventions are mostly dependent on the resources of their hosts Some conventions are part of railroad conventions or railroad days others quasi private affairs hosted by long time hoboes still others surreptitious affairs on private land as in abandoned quarries along major rivers citation needed Most non mainstream conventions are held at current or historical railroad stops The most notable is the National Hobo Convention held in Britt Iowa citation needed The town first hosted the Convention in 1900 but there followed a hiatus of thirty three years Since 1934 the convention has been held annually in Britt on the second weekend in August 32 Notable persons EditNotable hoboes Edit Jack Black author of You Can t Win 1926 OCLC 238829961 Maurice W Graham a k a Steam Train Maury Joe Hill Leon Ray Livingston a k a A No 1 Harry McClintock Utah Phillips Robert Joseph Silveria Jr a k a Sidetrack who killed 34 other hoboes before turning himself in to the authorities T Bone Slim Bertha Thompson a k a Boxcar Bertha was widely believed to be a real person Sister of the Road was penned by Ben Reitman and presented as an autobiography Jim Tully an author who penned several pulp fiction books 1928 through 1945 Steven Gene Wold a k a Seasick Steve Notables who have hoboed Edit Nels Anderson American sociologist Raul Hector Castro Mexican American politician diplomat and judge 33 Ralph Chaplin author of labor anthem Solidarity Forever Yvon Chouinard Stompin Tom Connors Canadian Singer Songwriter Ted Conover sociologist who rode the rails researching his book Rolling Nowhere W H Davies Welsh poet who also lived as a tramp Jack Dempsey U Dhammaloka Loren Eiseley Woody Guthrie American folk musician James Eads How wealthy community organizer Alfred E Johann de German adventurer and novelist Harry Kemp American poet and prose writer Jack Kerouac American author Louis L Amour 34 Jack London American author Chris McCandless American adventurer who sometimes referred to himself as Alexander Supertramp Robert Mitchum Frederick Niven Canadian author 35 Bob Nolan Singer and Songwriter 36 George Orwell British author 37 John Patric Harry Partch Al Purdy Ben Reitman anarchist and physician Carl Sandburg Emil Sitka Philip Taft labor historian Mike Brodie photographer Dave Van Ronk 38 Dale Wasserman 39 In mainstream culture EditBooks Edit All the Strange Hours The Excavation of a Life by Loren Eiseley 1975 ISBN 978 0803267411 American Travels of a Dutch Hobo 1923 1926 by Gerard Leeflang nl 1984 ISBN 978 0813808888 40 A Period of Juvenile Prosperity 2013 by Mike Brodie ISBN 978 1936611027 The Areas of My Expertise by John Hodgman Humor book which features a lengthy section on hoboes including a list of 700 hobo names which spawned an online effort to illustrate the complete list The Autobiography of a Super Tramp by W H Davies 1908 Bottom Dogs by Edward Dahlberg Beggars of Life 1924 by Jim Tully Evasion by Anonymous From Coast to Coast with Jack London by A No 1 Leon Ray Livingston The Freighthopper s Manual for North America Hoboing in the 21st Century by Daniel Leen ISBN 0963291270 Hard Travellin The Hobo and His History by Kenneth Allsop ISBN 978 0340025727 Hobo by Eddy Joe Cotton 2002 ISBN 978 0609607381 The Hobo The Sociology of the Homeless Man by Nels Anderson 1923 The Hobo Handbook A Field Guide to Living by Your Own Rules by Josh Mack 2011 ISBN 978 1440512278 Book on the Hobo lifestyle written by one who has ridden the rails in recent years Ironweed by William Kennedy 1983 A Pulitzer Prize winning novel also adapted for a 1987 film see below The Jungle by Upton Sinclair contains a section in which the main character Jurgis Rudkus abandons his family in Chicago and becomes a hobo for a while Knights of the Road by Roger A Bruns 1980 ISBN 978 0416007213 Lonesome Road by Thomas Minehan 1941 Lonesome Traveler by Jack Kerouac The Vanishing American Hobo The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane by Kate DiCamillo Muzzlers Guzzlers and Good Yeggs by Joe Coleman Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck On the Road by Jack Kerouac Once a Hobo 1999 by Monte Holm One More Train to Ride The Underground World of Modern American Hobos by Clifford Williams Riding the Rails Teenagers on the Move During the Great Depression 41 by Errol Lincoln Uys Routledge 2003 ISBN 978 0415945752 Riding Toward Everywhere by William T Vollmann 2008 ISBN 978 0061256752 The Road by Jack London Rolling Nowhere Riding the Rails with America s Hoboes by Ted Conover Paperback 304 pages Publisher Vintage 2001 ISBN 0375727868 Sister of The Road The Autobiography of Boxcar Bertha as told to Dr Ben Reitman Stumptown Kid By Carol Gorman and Ron J Finley Tales of an American Hobo 1989 by Charles Elmer Fox Tramping on Life 1922 and More Miles 1926 by Harry Kemp Tramping with Tramps 1899 by Josiah Flynt Waiting for Nothing Tom Kromer Wild Honey 1927 by Frederick Niven You Can t Win by Jack Black Yankee Hobo in the Orient 1943 by John Patric Down and Out in Paris and London by George OrwellComics Edit Kings in Disguise 1988 by James Vance and Dan Burr Laugh Out Loud Cats webcomic by Adam Koford featuring two anthropomorphic cats as hoboes The Avenger and master archer in Marvel Comics Hawkeye is aware of and can read hobo code in Matt Fraction and David Aja s 2012 run on the character USA Comics 2 1941 introduced Vagabond a police officer named Pat Murphy who created an alter ego Chauncey Throttlebottom III a well spoken hobo to fight crime USA Comics 5 1941 had a character Butch Brogan alias Fighting Hobo that helps save a kidnapped puppy in The Dog Nappers The TaleSpin comic The Long Flight Home reveals Kit Cloudkicker was once a hobo prior to working for Don Karnage citation needed Documentaries Edit Hobo 1992 a documentary by John T Davis following the life of a hobo on his travels through the United States American Experience Riding the Rails 1999 a PBS documentary by Lexy Lovell and Michael Uys narrated by Richard Thomas detailing the hoboes of the Great Depression with interviews of those who rode the rails during those years The American Hobo 2003 a documentary narrated by Ernest Borgnine featuring interviews with Merle Haggard and James Michener The Human Experience 2008 a documentary by Charles Kinnane The first experience follows Jeffrey and his brother Clifford to the streets of New York City where the boys live with the homeless for a week in one of the coldest winters on record The boys look for hope and camaraderie among their homeless companions learning how to survive on the streets Fictional characters Edit Examples of characters based on hoboes include Charlie Chaplin s Little Tramp Emmett Kelly s Weary Willy Red Skelton s Freddy the Freeloader Bagdad Hobo Detective featured in the pulp magazine Popular Detective 1937 amp 1938 42 43 Films Edit Charlie Chaplin and Jackie Coogan in The Kid 1921 The Circus 1928 directed by Charlie Chaplin Beggars of Life 1928 directed by William A Wellman City Lights 1931 directed by Charlie Chaplin Number Seventeen 1932 directed by Alfred Hitchcock Wild Boys of the Road 1933 directed by William A Wellman City Limits 1934 directed by William Nigh Modern Times 1936 directed by Charlie Chaplin Father Steps Out 1941 directed by Jean Yarbrough Sullivan s Travels 1941 directed by Preston Sturges Jack London 1943 biopic directed by Alfred Santell It Happened on Fifth Avenue 1947 directed by Roy Del Ruth Joe Hill 1971 directed by Bo Widerberg Boxcar Bertha 1972 directed by Martin Scorsese and starring Barbara Hershey as a sexy hobo girl during the Great Depression Emperor of the North Pole a k a Emperor of the North 1973 directed by Robert Aldrich Loosely based on Jack London s The Road Hard Times a k a The Streetfighter 1975 directed by Walter Hill his directorial debut and starring Charles Bronson as a hobo turned street fighter The Billion Dollar Hobo 1977 starring Tim Conway and Will Geer Pee Wee s Big Adventure 1985 starring Pee wee Herman directed by Tim Burton Pee wee meets Hobo Jack when he hops a freight train on his way to the Alamo Vagabond 1985 French title Sans Toit Ni Loi directed by Agnes Varda tells the story of a traveling woman s untimely death through flashbacks and interviews with the people who met her The Journey of Natty Gann 1985 starring Meredith Salenger as a young girl riding the rails to find her father Ironweed 1987 directed by Hector Babenco and based on the Pulitzer Prize winning novel by William Kennedy who also wrote the screenplay Life Stinks 1991 directed by and starring Mel Brooks Tokyo Godfathers 2003 an anime directed by Satoshi Kon Into the Wild 2007 directed by Sean Penn based on Jon Krakauer s non fiction book about Christopher McCandless Resurrecting the Champ 2007 starring Samuel L Jackson and Josh Hartnett directed by Rod Lurie Kit Kittredge An American Girl 2008 Hobo with a Shotgun 2011 an exploitation film directed by Jason Eisener and written by John Davies starring Rutger Hauer as a vigilante hobo The Muppets 2011 the film features a character named Hobo Joe played by Zach Galifianakis and some Whatnot hoboes They later appeared in the sequel Muppets Most Wanted 2014 Man of Steel 2013 depicts Clark Kent living as a homeless itinerant worker before ultimately taking the mantle of Superman and finding work as a reporter at the Daily Planet Nomadland 2020 directed by Chloe Zhao Many animated cartoons depict hoboes as main or secondary characters hobo related activities such as traveling by train with a bindle or in the company of hoboes For example Warner Brothers Box Car Blues 1930 with Bosko Hobo Gadget Band 1939 MGM s Henpecked Hoboes 1946 with George and Junior in their first appearance Mouse Wreckers 1948 8 Ball Bunny 1950 with Bugs Bunny and The Easter Bunny Is Comin to Town 1977 Music Edit Artists Edit Musicians known for hobo songs include Tim Barry Baby Gramps Railroad Earth Harry McClintock Ramblin Jack Elliott Utah Phillips Jimmie Rodgers Seasick Steve and Boxcar Willie citation needed Songs Edit Examples of hobo songs include Be a Hobo by Moondog Big Rock Candy Mountain by Harry McClintock recorded by various artists including Burl Ives Tom Waits Lisa Loeb Baby Gramps The Restarts and Harry Dean Stanton Driver Pull by Tim Barry Hallelujah I m a Bum recorded by Harry McClintock Al Jolson and others Hard Travelin and Hobo s Lullaby by Woody Guthrie Here Comes Your Man by the Pixies about hoboes travelling on trains in California and dying because of earthquakes 44 Here I Go Again by Whitesnake featuring the lyric Like a hobo I was born to walk alone later changed to like a drifter Hobo by The Hackensaw Boys Hobo Bill I Ain t Got No Home and Mysteries of a Hobo s Life performed by Cisco Houston Hobo Bill s Last Ride by Jimmy Rogers 45 also recorded by Manfred Mann s Earth Band Hobo Blues and The Hobo by John Lee Hooker Hobo Chang Ba by Captain Beefheart Hobo Flats by Oliver Nelson Hobo Flats by Count Basie Hobo Jungle by The Band Hobo Humpin Slobo Babe by Whale band Hobo Kinda Man by Lynyrd Skynyrd Hobo You Can t Ride This Train by Louis Armstrong The Hobo by Merle Haggard The Hobo Song by John Prine also covered by Johnny Cash The Hobo Song by Jack Bonus also recorded by Jerry Garcia s bluegrass group Old amp In the Way The Hobo Song by Kevin Roth from the Shining Time Station s Christmas special Tis a Gift Hobo s Lullaby a k a Weary Hobo by Goebel Reeves recorded by various artists including Woody Guthrie Arlo Guthrie Emmylou Harris Pete Seeger The Kingston Trio and Ramblin Jack Eliot Hobo s Meditation by Jimmie Rodgers recorded by Linda Ronstadt on the album Trio Hobos on Parade by Shannon Wright Homeless Brother by Don McLean Hopscotch Willie by Stephen Malkmus I Am a Lonesome Hobo Only a Hobo and Ramblin Gamblin Willie by Bob Dylan I Take a Lot of Pride in What I Am by Merle Haggard Jack Straw by Robert Hunter and Bob Weir Jesus Blood Never Failed Me Yet a recording by composer Gavin Bryars of a hobo singing on a London street King of the Road by Roger Miller Kulkurin Valssi Hobo Waltz by Arthur Kylander Lannen lokari Western Logger by Hiski Salomaa Last of the Hobo Kings by Mary Gauthier Like a Hobo by Charlie Winston Mary Lane by Fred Eaglesmith Morning Glory by Tim Buckley lyrics by Larry Beckett My Traveling Star by James Taylor Never Tire of the Road by Andy Irvine Orange Claw Hammer by Captain Beefheart which contains the lyric I m on the bum where the hobos run the air breaks with filthy chatter Papa Hobo and Hobo s Blues by Paul Simon Ramblin Man by Hank Williams Sr Sergeant Small by Andy Irvine Streets of London by Ralph McTell Waiting for a Train by Jimmie Rodgers 46 Way Out There by Bob Nolan recorded by the Sons of the Pioneers Western Hobo by The Carter FamilyStage Edit King of the Hobos 2014 a one man musical that premiered at Emerging Artists Theatre in New York City is centered around the death of James Eads How known during his lifetime as the Millionaire Hobo 47 Television Edit Criminal Minds season 4 episode 5 Catching Out 2008 Mad Men season 1 episode 8 The Hobo Code 2007 Mannix season 6 episode 22 To Quote a Dead Man 1973 The Magic School Bus special A Magic School Bus Halloween features Lily Tomlin s character Archibald Dauntless 48 E I E I Annoyed Grunt Episode 5 of Season 11 of The Simpsons 1999 Sneed teases Homer about his shoes claiming they are Gucci loafers but Homer says he bought them from a hobo The Littlest Hobo long running Lassie esque franchise about a roving dog that lives the hobo lifestyle In The Simpsons episode The Old Man and the Key Grampa explains hobo symbols to Bart In another episode the Simpsons meet a hobo who tells them American folktales in exchange for a spongebath Shameless Season 9 Episode 10 and 11 Frank Gallagher becomes part of a hobo competition a competition looking for the best hobo in Chicago Reacher Season 1 Episode 2 Reacher confirms he is not a Vagrant he s a Hobo See also EditFreight Train Riders of America a gang of rogue freight train riders originally formed by Vietnam veterans Freighthopping Gutter punk Hobo nickel an art form associated with hoboes Hobo typeface designed by Morris Fuller Benton for American Type Founders in 1910 Kirby Texas the hobo capital of Texas Swagman roughly the equivalent in Australia Wobbly lingo the jargon of the Industrial Workers of the World Train surfingReferences Edit Hoboes from the Encyclopedia of Chicago a b c On Hobos Hautboys and Other Beaus OUPblog Oxford University Press November 12 2008 Retrieved August 5 2009 Murray Thomas E 1992 A New Look at the Folk Speech of American Tramps Western Folklore Western States Folklore Society 51 3 4 287 302 doi 10 2307 1499777 JSTOR 1499777 TBT Hobos Bums Tramps How Our Terminology of Homeless Has Changed National Coalition for the Homeless June 14 2018 On the road again Grammarphobia Blog July 25 2009 Archived from the original on May 5 2012 Hobo Merriam Webster Retrieved November 16 2021 Interview with Todd DePastino author of Citizen Hobo How a Century of Homelessness Shaped America from the University of Chicago Press website Bryson Bill 1998 Made in America Transworld Publishers Limited 161 ISBN 978 0380713813 Mencken H L 2000 The American Language An Inquiry Into the Development of English in the United States Knopf published 2006 ISBN 978 0394400754 via Google Books The New York Telegraph What Tramps Cost Nation page D2 The Washington Post June 18 1911 Virginia edu PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 17 2012 Retrieved May 7 2013 Mathers Michael H 1973 Riding the Rails Boston Gambit p 30 ISBN 0876450788 OCLC 757486 Life and Times of an American Hobo Allvoices September 21 2010 Archived from the original on October 13 2012 Retrieved November 1 2015 Still Riding the Rails Life as a Modern Hobo HowStuffWorks February 11 2016 MacGregor Jeff Schukar Alyssa The Last of the Great American Hobos Smithsonian Magazine Conover Ted 1984 Rolling Nowhere New York Viking ISBN 978 0670603190 Bruns Roger 1980 Knights of the Road A Hobo History New York Methuen Inc p 201 ISBN 041600721X a b c d Wray Mike Wray Charlie 2018 Hobo Signs Code of the Road Historic Graffiti Society Retrieved February 25 2020 Moon Gypsy Done and Been p 198 Indiana University Press 1996 a b c Moon Gypsy Done and Been p 24 Indiana University Press 1996 Hodgman John 2006 The areas of my expertise an almanac of complete world knowledge compiled with instructive annotation and arranged in useful order Riverhead trade pbk ed New York Riverhead ISBN 978 1594482229 OCLC 70672414 QR Code Stencil Generator and QR Hobo Codes F A T Free Art and Technology Lab July 19 2011 Retrieved July 18 2012 Rothstein Edward August 1 2014 Security Secrets Dated but Real The New York Times Retrieved August 2 2014 National Cryptological Museum Virtual Tour Retrieved October 5 2010 Webster s third new international dictionary of the English language unabridged Gove Philip Babcock Springfield Mass Merriam Webster 1993 ISBN 0877792011 OCLC 27936328 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Anderson Nels March 1932 American Tramp and Underworld Slang Godfrey Irwin book review American Journal of Sociology 37 5 842 doi 10 1086 215902 London Jack 2005 1907 The Road Project Gutenberg a b Daniel Bill Who Is Bozo Texino documentary Self published billdaniel net 2005 Wray Mike Wray Charlie 2018 Moniker Mark of the Tramp Historic Graffiti Society Retrieved February 25 2020 Iowa s Hobo Convention www mentalfloss com January 21 2014 Retrieved December 20 2019 Hobo Code National Hobo Museum Archived from the original on July 24 2011 Retrieved April 20 2014 Lammle Rob January 21 2014 Strange States Iowa s Hobo Convention Mental Floss Retrieved November 1 2015 Tucson Citizen Morgue Tucsoncitizen com April 6 2009 Retrieved May 7 2013 Louis L amour A brief biography louislamour com Retrieved December 7 2008 Niven Frederick 1927 Wild Honey New York Dodd Mead amp Company Bob Nolan AllMusic Down and Out in Paris and London Archived from the original on October 10 2012 Retrieved December 7 2012 Van Ronk Dave The Mayor of MacDougal Street 2005 Dale Wasserman 94 Playwright Created Man of La Mancha obituary by Dennis McLellan of the Los Angeles Times printed in The Washington Post December 29 2008 Leeflang Gerard 1984 American Travels of a Dutch Hobo 1923 1926 ISBN 978 0813808888 The Great Depression The Story of 250 000 Teenagers Who Left Home and Ride the Rails Erroluys com 1933 Archived from the original on May 5 2013 Retrieved May 7 2013 Thrilling Detective Heroes John Locke amp John Wooley eds Silver Spring MD Adventure House 2007 Series List Here Comes Your Man Frankblack net Retrieved May 7 2013 Hobo Bill s Last Ride by Jimmie Rodgers 1929 on YouTube Waiting for a Train by Jimmie Rodgers 1928 on YouTube King of the Hobos www brownpapertickets com Retrieved October 11 2014 HOOP DREAMS Chicago Tribune Further reading EditBrady Jonann 2005 Hobos Elect New King and Queen ABC Good Morning America includes Todd Ad Man Waters last ride as reigning Hobo King plus hobo slide show with Adman s photo s taken on the road Bannister Matthew 2006 Maurice W Graham Steam Train Grand Patriarch of America s Hobos who has died aged 89 Last Word BBC Radio Matthew Bannister talks to fellow King of the Hobos Ad Man Waters and to obituary editor of The New York Times Bill McDonald Davis Jason 2007 The Hobo On The Road 30 minute special KSTP television Covers Ad Man Waters taking his daughter out on her first freight ride Harper Douglas 2006 1986 Waiting for a Train Excerpt from Good Company A Tramp Life ISBN 978 1594511844 Johnson L Anderson Riding the Rails for the Homeless The New York Times July 12 1983 p B3 col 3 Story on Ad Man Waters the Penny Route Oats Around the Jungle Fire I II amp III 1994 1997 2000 Interviews with several hoboes How they got their start and travels and travails Hoboes from the Encyclopedia of ChicagoExternal links Edit The dictionary definition of hobo at Wiktionary Media related to Hobos at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hobo amp oldid 1141144744, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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