“Everything is Bigger in Texas” –
with stops in New York City, Philadelphia, Nez Perce, Idaho and San Francisco - a History and Etymology of the Phrase
“Everything is bigger in Texas,”
they tell me; including their egos, I suppose, since Texans themselves seem to
relish in perpetuating the phrase as an expression of their out-sized love of their
out-sized state. But although the
popularity of the phrase may reflect their big egos (or just the truth;
depending on your perspective), the phrase may originally have reflected only the insecurities of
a scrawny newspaper writer from
New York City. - “New York
City?!”
Barry Popik’s online etymology
dictionary, The
Big Apple, says that the phrase, “everything is bigger in Texas” (and
similar variants) was popular by 1950. Although
the phrase may have reached a certain level of familiarity or popularity by that
date, the Texan attitude relating to the bigness of Texas and things-Texas predates
1950 by many years. The earliest-known appearance
of the phrase in print is from 1913, and similar sentiments appeared, in
slightly different forms, even earlier.
Remarks by a Texas nursery operator in 1906, for example, expressed the
big-in-Texas attitude. In opening
comments before the annual meeting of the Association of American Nurserymen, which
was held in Dallas, Texas that year, he warned out-of-state attendees about communicating
with the locals:
I want to tell you about these Texas
nurserymen, and Texas people in general. Don't misconstrue the things
which they say to you. When one of them starts talking to you in a manner which
in any other country would be called boasting, remember that it is not boasting
in Texas. . . . A Texas
nurseryman was in New York once and was talking with a New York real estate
man. . . . They were going down the street
together when the New York man happened to spy some very large pumpkins on the
other side of the street.
"Now, just gaze upon these," he
said. "Have you got anything in Texas to beat that?"
The Texas man said, "What are they, contaloupes?"
The New York man said, "Now, look here, Texas,
I know you Texas people have got nerve, but you haven't the nerve to
tell me that cantaloupes grow that big in Texas."
The Texas man said, "What are they?" "They are
pumpkins," replied the New York man. The Texas
man said, "Why, hell, fellow, the seed get that big
in Texas." (Laughter).
Report of Proceedings
of the 31st Annual Convention of the American Association of
Nurserymen; Commercial Club, Dallas, Texas, June 13, 14 and 15, 1906.
A joke from 1908 reflects the Texas-is-big
attitude, with respect to the size of the state itself, without extending the
phrase to “everything” from the state:
“Siberia contains one-ninth of all the
land on the globe. Great Britain and all
Europe except Russia, together with the whole of the United States, could be
inclosed within its boundaries,” said the man with the eyeglasses.
“Look here, partner,” said the man with
the broad-brimmed hat, “yer don’t mean t’ say it’s bigger’n Texas?” – Yonkers Statesman
Los Angeles Herald, June 4, 1908.
An article about Texas from a
financial newspaper went one step further a year earlier; suggesting, in words that
might have been used to describe the residents of Lake Wobegon, that:
Men grow bigger in Texas, women more
matronly and children healthier, while boys are “chips of the old block." Fruits and flowers come earlier and last
longer in Texas. Birds sing sweeter,
while sunshine comes nearly every day in the 365. Fresh vegetables are here when snow covers
the ground in the east, and cattle find comfortable sheds on the plains all the
year round beneath the canopy of heaven.
It isn’t a struggle to keep warm in Texas, but it is labor to keep the
chickweed from getting ahead of your strawberry patch in the middle of January.
Texas, The Great Lone Star State, Manufacturers’ Record, A Weekly Southern Industrial, Railroad and
Financial Newspaper (Baltimore, Maryland), Volume 51, No. 11, March 28,
1907, page 306 (reprinted in, The Western
Investors Review, Volume 15, Number 1, June 1908, page 21. (Note: the use of the idiom, "chips of the old block" was not a mis-print; before the idiom became settled as "chip off the old block," it was often, if not usually, rendered, "chip of the old block.")
The
phrase found its full expression five years later. The earliest known appearance of the phrase,
however, was not, as one might expect, penned by a Texan bragging about Texas,
but by a New Yorker kvetching about how women from the West, including women
from Texas, find the men from New York City to be “hollow-eyed and pale” – “weak
and feeble.”
In
1913, Miss Marvel Rainey, of Nez Perce, Idaho, visited the East Coast with
stops in New York and Philadelphia. She
must have been a woman of some prominence, as, on one of her stops, she met
with the Mayor of Philadelphia in an effort to arrange for the Liberty Bell to be
exhibited at the Panama-Pacific
Exposition (world’s fair) in San Francisco.
Her efforts were not in vain. The Liberty Bell went on a national tour
en-route to and on its return from the Panama-Pacific Exposition in 1915. The bell crossed into Idaho from Utah,
passed through Boise and Weiser, and traversed Oregon and into Washington.[i] It then passed close Ms. Rainey’s home in Nez
Perce, Idaho, on its way to Spokane, Washington,[ii]
before turning west for stops in Everett and Seattle, before continuing southward
to the world’s fair in San Francisco. The
Liberty Bell has not been moved since returning to Philadelphia after the fair.
In
her meeting with the Mayor of Philadelphia, Ms. Rainey reportedly praised the men
of Philadelphia as, “a glorious breed compared to the feeble New Yorker.” The criticism was not new, women from Texas
and the Pacific Coast had apparently made similar observations in the past. Women from Boston were also critical of New
York men, but on intellectual grounds.
In
recounting the litany of insults that the men of New York had suffered at the
hands of women from everywhere else, a writer for the New York Tribune wrote:
We have heard criticisms similar to this
before, as it happens. Texan maidens are
always particularly scornful on the point of size. Unless a man has a chest as broad as a sugar
barrel they cannot think of draping their fair heads upon him. Everything
is bigger in Texas than anywhere else, it seems, so naturally New Yorkers
are quite out of scale. The Pacific
Coast also sniffs on the question of stature.
And now comes Idaho. What Boston
thinks of our dull, untutored intellects has often been made plain.
A dwarfed and inferior race we plainly
must be. Life as it is lived at such
spots as the Forty second Street Country Club is certainly not conducive to
bronzed cheeks, clear eyes and stalwart shoulders – or deep thought. That is it, we suppose – the debilitating
climate of the Great White Way. How else
could the manly heroes from Boston, Texas, Idaho and points north, east, south
and west – by whom New York is principally populated – become the pulling
youths that our fair visitors decry.
New York Tribune, June 21, 1913.
But
while the phrase may not have been coined by a Texan, it just goes to show that
even non-Texans realize that - “Everything IS bigger in Texas.”
UPDATE (July 11, 2018):
Since first posting this piece, I have run across a couple less bragadocious precursors to the now popular catch-phrase, "Everything is bigger in Texas." Years before "everything" was "bigger" in Texas, everything "grew bigger" or was merely "big" in Texas.
In 1883, a Mr. Patterson, visiting Texas from Bloomington Illinois, sent a series of letters back to his hometown newspaper describing life in Texas. In one letter, he mentioned that he had run across a young newspaper that shared its name with the paper in Bloomington:
I have found one
of your infants out in Texas – the Big Springs Pantagraph. You see it is only a swaddling, a child of
about one year or less. But this is
fertile soil. Everything grows “big” in
Texas, especially on paper. I called on
the infant, and it was very anxious to claim kin, and promised to visit its
supposed ancestor, and likely has reached you ere this.
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois), July 17, 1883, page 3.
Although I could not find any similar expressions over the next few decades, the sentiment seems to have persisted. In the mid-19-aughts, several examples of something approaching the modern idiom appeared in print. But everything was not yet "bigger" - it was merely "big":
|
Big Baby
Weighed 22 Pounds - But Everything is Big in Texas.
Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Oklahoma), October 29, 1904, page 3.
One of the
interesting matters to come before the present session of the Texas legislature
is a deficit of $2,000,000. Everything
is big in Texas, even the deficits.
Daily Arkansas Gazette (Little Rock, Arkansas), January 13, 1905, page 4.
Ever been in Texas!
Glorious Texas! . . . How is that for superlative paint! Hip, hip, hurrah for
Texas! Everything is big in Texas – failures and all – but no State in the
Union is more thoroughly American or more wonderful in its development.
North Carolina Christian Advocate (Greensboro, North Carolina), August 2, 1905, page 2.
Everything is big in Texas and we are therefore not surprised when we find Sir Knight John Kidd's Report on Correspondence covering approximately 200 pages . . . .
Report on Fraternal Correspondence For the Year 1913, The Grand Commandery of Mississippi, Knights Templar in the State of Mississippi, page 70.
Everything is big in Texas, even the storms, and it take sfirst rank in the matter of rain with yesterday's report, for the storm which recently moistened the Coast moved westward, and in parts of southwestern Texas yesterday a precipitation of 12 inches was reported. Everything is afloat.
San Bernardino County Sun (San Bernardino, California), April 22, 1926, page 1.
And, even as the standard idiom grew from "big" to "bigger", everything continued to "grow bigger" from time to time - even those Texas Jack...
Cincinnati Enquirer (Cincinnati, Ohio), November 11, 1945, Pictorial Magazine, page 10. |
Everything grows big in Texas,
including the ears on jack rabbits.
. . . Rabbits.
[i] Ogden
(Utah) Standard., July 12, 1915.
[ii] The
Tacoma times., July 13, 1915, Image 1
This is super interesting, I have been looking for the origins of the term for a while and yours offers a complete set of answers! Could you tell us more about your sources??
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