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2007-05-23 10:35:56 · 17 answers · asked by Leesra aka college girl 4 in Society & Culture Cultures & Groups Other - Cultures & Groups

17 answers

hot dog
Origin: 1895

It was an old joke, with some truth to it: meat for sausages was said to come from dogs. In 1836 a New York newspaper declared, "Sausages have fallen in price one half, in New York, since the dog killers have commenced operations." Towards the end of the nineteenth century, clever students at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, began referring to the sausages themselves as dogs. A lunch wagon that operated there at night was called "The Kennel Club" because dogs were its specialty. A poem about it appeared in the Yale Record for October 5, 1895:

It remained only for the Yale wits to add hot. They did this in the October 19 issue of the Record, in a tall tale about abducting the "dog wagon." The proprietor supposedly woke up in the relocated lunch wagon at chapel time "and did a rushing trade with the unfortunates who had missed their breakfast.... They contentedly munched hot dogs during the whole service."

Even earlier, in 1894, hot dog was used as slang for a well-dressed young man. With the new meaning, hot dog soon showed up at other colleges and at ballparks, and by the early twentieth century it had become the standard name for a sausage on a bun, despite competition from red hot (1896) and the more polite frankfurter (1894) and wiener (1900). (Despite persistent legend, the hot dog was not named in a baseball cartoon by T. A. Dorgan of the New York Journal. No such cartoon exists.)

In the twentieth century, rather than an ingredient, the dog became the sausage itself, so today we can speak of turkey dogs and cheese dogs. The other meaning of hot dog persisted too, but now it refers more to daredevil behavior than to spiffy clothing.

2007-05-23 10:44:00 · answer #1 · answered by summerset.flower 2 · 2 2

The answer from 'sumerse' is largely correct but with this addition:

Hot Dogs where popular here and there around the turn of the century but it was at the 1904 World's Fair where they became better and more widely known.A vendor made a KILLING selling sausages on a bun there and the idea was then taken across the country and around the globe.

2007-05-30 06:34:54 · answer #2 · answered by Coffeeman 4 · 0 0

Look up hot dog on the Internet - more information than you ever will need or want to know about hot dogs - unless you run a hot dog stand.

2007-05-28 13:11:45 · answer #3 · answered by megan 3 · 1 0

Charles Feltman in 1867

2007-05-23 10:39:48 · answer #4 · answered by ☆Zestee☆ 5 · 0 2

Nathan Handwerker

2007-05-23 10:38:42 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

The Polish?

2014-11-13 12:08:54 · answer #6 · answered by Samuel 1 · 0 0

Oscar Meyer.

2007-05-23 10:38:44 · answer #7 · answered by meetbleek23 3 · 1 2

A German immigrant, circa 1910..

2007-05-23 10:39:22 · answer #8 · answered by tyvek1313 5 · 0 1

Frank Furter.

2007-05-23 10:39:13 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

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2016-11-26 20:55:55 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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