DCHP-3

niggerhead

DCHP-1 (pre-1967)

Entry from the DCHP-1 (pre-1967)

This entry may contain outdated or offensive information, terms, and examples.

1n. Fur Trade

a slender, twisted plug of tobacco once common in the old Northwest.

Quotations

1922
I'll bet ye a pound of niggerhead that Old Joe's followin' us. . . .
1956
Groceries--particularly tea and "niggerhead" (a trade-tobacco for smoking and chewing)--are his more necessary "luxuries.
2an.

See 1898 quote.

Quotations

1898
But let him disembark and go inland and he will find the ground covered with what are locally known as "niggerheads," which consist of columns of decayed coarse grass peculiar to this region. They are formed by the annual growths of grasses decaying and falling down, while year after year the roots of the growing grasses bind this together into an almost solid column, which stands upon a bed of mud.
1938
Unless the train stopped near a creek, we had to scoop up water from the ditch or between the "niggerheads."
1958
They poled up the Klondike for two miles, left their boat in a backwater, shouldered their packs, and began to trudge through the wet mosses and black muck and the great clumps of grass "niggerheads" that marked the mouth of Rabbit.
2bn.

such mounds of grass collectively.

Quotations

1909
By muskeg hollow and nigger-head it wandered endlessly. . . .
1953
When he emerged from the niggerhead twenty minutes later, he was soaking wet and plastered with mud, but he had two tender young mallards in his sack.