In Orson
Welles’ classic film, Citizen Kane,
a newsreel crew spends the entire film looking for the meaning of Kane’s dying
word, Rosebud. The producer is hopefully optimistic; he
muses, “it’ll probably
turn out to be a very simple thing.”
But despite reading his banker’s diary, and interviewing his business partner,
buddy, ex-wife and butler, the news crew never finds the answer.
As the film nears its final frame, however, the viewers
learn the truth. In an incinerator,
going up in smoke with the detritus of Kane’s eventful but ultimately empty
life, the camera zooms in on Kane’s childhood sled – the sled he was riding when
the bankers took him from his mother; the name on the sled – Rosebud.
The meaning of the cryptic term monkey wrench – “a wrench with one fixed and one adjustable jaw at
right angles to a straight handle” [i]
– has similarly frustrated investigators.
The many twists and turns in the story have made it nearly impossible to
get a firm grasp on the matter. It may have turned out, however, to be a very simple thing after all. An obscure, century-old reference provides a
simple, plausible, Rosebud-like clue; the name may derive from a simple
children’s toy – a toy that was popular throughout the 1800s and into the early
1900s – a “monkey on a stick.”
But like Citizen Kane, we need to run through the entire
cast of characters, sifting through all of the evidence, to fully appreciate
the deceptively simple pay-off at the end.
Charles Monk
The traditional folk-etymology of monkey wrench holds that it was named after its inventor, Charles
Moncky (sometimes Monkay[ii]),
who sold his invention for $2000 and bought a small cottage in Brooklyn or
Williamsburg, New York. The earliest example of the story I could find is from
1885:
We see it stated that such great manufactures as Krupp,
Whitworth, Armstrong and Hotchkiss have to send to America for all their screw-bar
wrenches. About 80,000 dozen are
exported to Europe annually. The
inventor, Charles Moncky, lives in a small
cottage in Brooklyn.
Engineering Mechanics,
November 1885, page 324.
The story was repeated dozens of times in various
periodicals during the following few years; sometimes in nearly identical
language, and sometimes adding further details:
That handy tool, the “monkey-wrench” is not so named because
it is a handy thing to monkey with, or for any kindred reason. “Monkey” is not its name at all, but
“Moncky.” Charles Moncky, the inventor
of it, sold his patent for $2000, and invested the money in a house in
Williamsburg, Kings County, where he now lives.
Iron, a London trade paper,
says that 80,000 dozen Moncky wrenches are exported to Europe annually. “The toolmakers and machinists of Euorpe,”
says Iron, “such as Krupp, of
Germany; Whitworth & Armstrong, of England, and Hotchkiss, of France, with
their vast resources are unable to produce a Moncky or screw-bar wrench equal
to the American wrenches, and consequently they have to import these tools from
the United States.”
Notes and Queries,
Volume 4, November 1887, Number 11, page 408.
This apparently all-too-cute explanation is generally
dismissed for want of actual evidence of invention. There is evidence, however, that the man
actually existed; and he may actually have lived in a small cottage in
Brooklyn.
The US Census for 1880 lists a man named Charles Monk, age
52, living with his wife and children at 190 16th Street, a quaint
residential street in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, New York. His occupations are listed as – wait for it .
. . – “moulder and tool-maker.” Is this the Charles Moncky of urban legend?
A molder makes molds used in the fabrication of cast-metal
pieces at a foundry. Charles Monk was
more than just a working stiff, however. He also manufactured his own line of molders’ tools. The business appears to have been fairly
substantial, as his tools were advertised in a tool-supply catalogue based in
far-off Detroit, Michigan. If the tools
illustrated in this one catalogue are representative of his entire line of
products, it looks as though he may not have made wrenches and the like; all of
the tools pictured appear to be molders’ shaping tools, not mechanics’ tools:
Chas. A. Strelinger, A Book of Tools, Being a Catalogue of
Tools, Supplies, Machinery, and Similar Goods,
Detroit, Michigan, Chas. A.
Strelinger & Co., 1895, page 290
|
Charles Monk is also absent from the old patent records;
suggesting that perhaps he was not the inventor. And, in any case, he was not old enough to
have invented, coined, or inspired the term, monkey wrench; he would have been only twelve years old in 1840
when the earliest known accounts of monkey
wrenches appeared in print.
Monkey Wrench
The earliest accounts of monkey
wrenches that I found in print[iii]
are all from the railroad industry. Surprisingly,
perhaps, the earliest example is from England, where what Americans call
wrenches are generally referred to as spanners:
Every engine-man shall have with him at all times in his
tender, the following tools, viz: a complete set of screw keys, one large and
one small monkey wrench . . . .
1 January 1840 By Order of the Board of Directors [North Union Railway]
1 January 1840 By Order of the Board of Directors [North Union Railway]
Five Reports from the
Select Committee (of the House of Commons) on Railway Communication, Fifth
Report, dated 10 July 1840 (North Union Railway), Appendix, No. 1 (North Union
Railway), page 422. A similar rule may have been in place on the Liverpool to Manchester line as early as March 1839. See, Whishaw (endnote iv), pages 211, 217.
This early locomotive regulation was soon co-opted and
adopted by railroads in Britain, France, the United States and Canada;
frequently copied verbatim.[iv] In the United States, the “one large and one
small monkey wrench” rule was included in a set of “Rules and Regulations for
the Management of a Locomotive Engine,” adopted at the meeting of the United
States’ Institute of Civil Engineers in 1845.[v]
Although the early paper trail, so far as I can tell, is
entirely from the railroading documents, it is not clear that use of the term originated
in, or whether its use was restricted to, the railroad industry. But even if it had been so limited, it was
not confined to railroading for long. It
appears to have been common and widespread, at least in other technical
circles, by the 1850s. In 1850 alone, Monkey wrenches were listed in
requisitions of the US Army quartermaster in California and the US Navy Bureau
of Construction in Washington DC, as well as in a British technical dictionary and
an American magazine targeting farmers.
American Farmer, Volume 6, 1850, Pictorial Farmer (Baltimore) |
Monkey wrench
appeared with increasing frequency throughout the 1850s, and seems to have become
very common by the 1860s. The following
item about possible fraud, waste and abuse in Civil War-era military
procurement reveals that some things never change:
I found there that monkey-wrenches,
the fair price of which was from twelve to fifteen dollars a dozen, were bought
by the Navy Department at Portsmouth for $150 a dozen.
The Congressional
Globe, Twenty-Eighth Congress, 2d Session, New Series Number 54, February
18, 1865, Page 851.
As technology advanced and mechanical contraptions became
more common, familiar and accessible to regular folks in their everyday lives,
the monkey wrench eventually earned a
permanent place in pop-culture; but not until after it proved to be dangerous –
at least in the wrong hands.
[Update: October 19, 2015. Since posting this piece, I was able to find one earlier example of "monkey wrench" in print, from before Charles Monk was born; he was clearly not responsible for the name, or the wrench. In August, 1826, William Darlington of Chester, England, was arrested on charges of stealing a "monkey wrench." One of the reports of the arrest seems to suggest that the term was not common:
[Update: October 19, 2015. Since posting this piece, I was able to find one earlier example of "monkey wrench" in print, from before Charles Monk was born; he was clearly not responsible for the name, or the wrench. In August, 1826, William Darlington of Chester, England, was arrested on charges of stealing a "monkey wrench." One of the reports of the arrest seems to suggest that the term was not common:
AN OLD OFFENDER:
William Darlington, aged [illegible], a bricklayer, was charged with stealing a piece of iron, called a monkey wrench, the property of . . . .
William Darlington, aged [illegible], a bricklayer, was charged with stealing a piece of iron, called a monkey wrench, the property of . . . .
Chester Chronicle (Cheshire, England), August 11, 1826 (I only had access to an OCR excerpt of the article; but two other reports of the same incident reported that the "monkey wrench" was property of the "Canal . . . ." See, Chester Chronicle, August 4, 1826; Chester Courant (Cheshire, England), August 8, 1826).]
Monkey Wrench in the Machine/Works
Actual Wrenches
A monkey wrench is a very useful and versatile tool for maintaining
and repairing machinery. When handled
carelessly, it can be just as dangerous:
Winfield Wickham, foreman in the box making department of a
Cedar Rapids creamery and dairy supply house, met with a fearful accident. While at work he dropped
a wrench on a moving pulley which was revolving at the rate of 2,500 times
a minute. The high speed broke the
wrench, and the pieces flew in different directions, the large, heavy end
striking Wickham in the face. His nose
was crushed flat, and a deep cut was made in the right cheek just below the
eye.
Iowa State Bystander,
June 22, 1894, page 2.
In 1903, Robert Gordon, an employee of the Paducah Cooperage
Co. (they made barrels), was injured:
He was working near a machine when his
wrench slipped and threw him into the planer. His left hand was caught in the machine and
the thumb badly cut.
The Paducah Sun
(Kentucky), February 13, 1903, page 7.
In 1906, the village of McGraw, New York nearly burned to
the ground because of a dropped wrench:
Wrench Dropped and Town Burned. The little village of McGraw, four miles east
of Cortland, was threatened with extermination by a fire early this morning
which destroyed twelve of the fifteen stores and shops in Main st., with a loss
estimated at $60,000. . . . An old fashioned hand engine constitutes the
village equipment, and that was put out of commission at the start by one of
the firemen dropping a wrench into the valve.
New York Tribune,
January 29, 1906, page 3.
The problem was common enough in 1910 that a technical
journal included specific precautions against dropping wrenches into machinery:
While it is essential to use a great deal of care in working
the knife on the stave machine – especially instructing the machinist not to
drop his wrench in the machine, but to keep it
in his toolbox, where it belongs when not in use . . . .
Barrel and Box (Chicago,
Illinois), Volume 14, Number 3, May 1909, page 34.
Metaphoric Wrenches
By 1907, the San
Francisco Call put the dangers of mislaid monkey wrenches to metaphoric
use:
The clearing house association has now laid a heavy hand on
all this business. Speculative banking
constitutes, of course, but a small fraction of the financial system, but, like the man who throws a monkey wrench into a machine,
it causes a temporary derangement and the wheels stop for a short space while
repairs are made.
The San Francisco Call,
November 2, 1907, page 8.
There appears to be an unfortunate impediment in the
legislative reasoning apparatus, as if somebody had
dropped a monkey wrench into the machine.
The San Francisco Call,
March 10, 1911, page 6.
Others soon followed:
New York, Aug. 16. – [A]t the opening of the present
[baseball] season someone threw a monkey wrench into
the works and the old machine buckled up. In other words, the members of the team
allowed spite and jealousies to creep in and the smooth running harmony,
essential to a pennant race, was gone. . . .
The Salt Lake Tribune
(Utah), August 17, 1913, sporting section, page 4.
Quack press threatened to throw the
monkeywrench into the works of Babb, Sheridan and Barber by neat first
page double-leaded expose. Heavy on the
last syllable of exposay. I believe it’s
French.
The Day Book
(Chicago, Illinois), June 2, 1914, page 13.
Curiously, the several reports of actual wrenches I dug up used
the word, “wrench,” without monkey. The
several, early metaphoric uses, however, specifically refer to monkey wrenches. Perhaps the word “monkey” is just more funny;
or perhaps monkey wrenches were so ubiquitous that they naturally came to mind.
Monkey wrenches
became common, household items, in large part, through the efforts of one man;
Loring Coes, the inventor of the modern monkey wrench.
Loring Coes
1874 |
Loring Coes was no Charles Foster Kane, but he was a
successful businessman for nearly seventy years. When he died in 1906, the New York Tribune noted his, “reputation
of being the oldest man in the country actively engaged in the management of a
big manufacturing concern.”[vi] Although he did not invent the screw-wrench,
or monkey wrench, he did invent a
wildly successful new type of monkey
wrench that formed the basis of his long-lasting business empire.
Necessity is the mother of invention; but it wasn’t a new
tool that Coes needed in 1841 – it was a new business. His first business had failed; but not by any
fault of his own. It burned to the
ground in 1839 and he needed to do something to change his fortunes.
Loring Coes and his brother Aury were carpenters. Starting as apprentices, they quickly worked
their way up the ladder. In 1835, they purchased
the firm where they were both employed; Kimball & Fuller, located at Court
Mills, near Worcester, Massachusetts. Their
business (along with several others), however, were soon wiped out by a
devastating fire in 1839.
To help make ends meet and get their feet back on the
ground, the brothers moved to Springfield, Massachusetts. There, they put their carpentry skills to
good use; working as pattern-makers at a foundry for two years. It was during that period that Loring Coes perfected
his idea for an improved screw-wrench.[vii]
When the Coes Brothers arrived in Springfield, Massachusetts
in 1839, it was already a hot-bed of screw-wrench technology. It was home to Solyman Merrick, who had
invented a successful improvement to the earlier, English screw-wrenches that were operated
by twisting the handle. The foundry
where the Coes Brothers worked was precisely the sort of business that might
have helped manufacture Merrick’s wrenches.
We do not know whether they had any specific contact with Merrick, but
it seems likely that they may have had some exposure to the screw-wrench
industry in Springfield. But wherever
they got it, they were inspired; their invention transformed the wrench
industry.
Loring Coes, The New England Magazine, n.s., Volume 31, Page 486 |
Earlier Wrenches
Screw wrenches date back to at least the early 1800s. William Barlow, of His Majesty's Dock-Yard, Portsmouth, England, may have invented the first one in 1809. He received a "Premium of Five Guineas" for his efforts:
I have found, from long experience, the imperfections of the various wrenches in common use, for the screw-heads and nuts of engines in general, which are often materially injured for want of an instrument which would fit variety of sizes, and be applied with as much advantage as a solid wrench. . . .
This wrench, by means of a nut and screw, is adjusted with the greatest ease to the exact size required, and in that state rendered so steady that in use it is found equal to a solid wrench.
This wrench, by means of a nut and screw, is adjusted with the greatest ease to the exact size required, and in that state rendered so steady that in use it is found equal to a solid wrench.
Repertory of Arts, Manufactures, and Agriculture, Series 2, Volume 15, 1809 (London), page 44.
Repertory of Arts, Manufactures, and Agriculture, Series 2, Volume 15, 1809, Plate III, Figures 10-12. |
Other adjustable wrenches, more similar to what were later
called monkey wrenches, are believed
to have been made or imported into New England as early as the late 1700s.[viii]
Monkey wrench-type wrenches were
well-established by 1825; and their drawbacks were already apparent:
The screw-wrenches in general use
are actuated by a screw which passes up the middle of the handle, which so much
weakens them, that they are frequently broken in that part when used in heavy
work; and the chaps [(jaws)] are liable to open and be loosed from their hold
by the handle turning round.
The Register of Arts
and Journal of Patent Inventions (London), volume 2, Number 42, April 23,
1825, page 281.
In 1835, Solyman Merrick, of Springfield, Massachusetts, solved
one of the problems inherent in the English wrench. By adding an
adjustment nut to the shaft, just above the handle, he made it possible to adjust the position of the lower-jaw assembly without twisting the handle. The shaft was therefore more stable during
use, reducing inadvertent opening or loosening of the jaws during use.
Loring Coes’ wrench, patented in 1841, solved two more
problems. His wrench was stronger and could
be adjusted by the thumb of the hand holding the wrench; leaving the second
hand free. Coes introduced a separate
screw-assembly, mounted at the top of the handle, alongside the shaft. The screw assembly moved the lower jaw
portion of the wrench up and down along the shaft. Since the shaft was not threaded and did not
have to be round, as with earlier wrenches, the shaft could be made flat and
wider in the direction in which torque was applied; thereby reducing the
likelihood of bending or breaking the shaft.
An actuator wheel located at the bottom of the screw assembly let the
user adjust the position of the lower-jaw assembly with the thumb of the same
hand that held the wrench: "Look ma, one hand!"
Figure 1 shows Loring Coes improvement over Merrick's wrench with the screw on the shank, represented by Figure 2. |
Each type of adjustable monkey
wrench, English, Merrick, and Coes, shared one thing in common; a lower-jaw
assembly that moved up and down the shaft of the wrench – like a monkey up a
tree, or the popular children’s toy, “monkey on a stick.”
“Monkey” Wrench
The most satisfactory suggestion for the meaning of “monkey,”
as applied to wrenches (and other tools), comes from comments in a biographical
sketch of Loring Coes, published during his lifetime, in 1904:
Henry W. Miller used to say that it was called “monkey”
wrench because an Englishman by the name of Monkay made a wrench having an
adjustable jaw, but requiring both hands for its application, and the
transition from Monkay to “monkey” was very easy, but the student of mechanics
must know that at least a dozen contrivances are labeled “monkey,” especially
wherever a portion of the same can be easily moved upon the other, there being
a suggestion of the monkey on a stick, that favorite toy of childhood.
“Worcester County Inventors,” George F. Hoar, The New England Magazine, N.S. Volume
31, Number 4, December 1904, page 490.
Monkey on a Stick
A “monkey on a stick” was a popular childrens’ toy for
decades; inspiring several other figurative uses as well:
The Sweep.
“A life on the chimney top
A home in the sooty
flue,
Where the wind blows down the ‘cock,’
And the sky a top
shines blue.
Like a monkey on a stick,
I pine on the dull
tame ground,
O, give me the smell of brick,
And the ashes a
settlin’ round.”
Squatter Sovereign
(Atchison, Kansas), October 23, 1855, page 1.
Up and Down. – The
Commercial [(a newspaper)] during the whole progress of the war has enacted
the part of a wooden-monkey attached to a stick,
manipulated by a string in the hands of a small boy. It has a penchant for climbing up and
dropping down that has made it a wooden-monkey reputation.
Dayton Daily Empire,
November 13, 1862, page 1.
Willie had a purple monkey climbing
on a yellow, stick.
And when he sucked
the paint all off, it made him deathly sick;
And in his latest hours he clasped that monkey in his hand,
And bid good-bye to
earth and went into a better land.
Eaton Weekly Democrat
(Eaton, Ohio), November 28, 1872, page 1.
As an amusing novelty, the beautiful person sometimes wears a
brooch which represents a flexible gold monkey on a
stick tipped with pearls; the animal is jointed and moves at will.
St. Paul Daily Globe,
September 6, 1885, page 12.
A monkey on a stick also has some similarity to jockeys who
stand up on short-stirrups and lean forward over the shoulders of a racehorse:
River Pirate was to-day a god colt and was ridden by Colburn
in a new style, which worked well. This
is called in England the “monkey on a stick”
style.[ix]
The San Francisco Call,
October 17, 1903, page 9.
All of which does not prove that a “monkey on a stick”
inspired the name, monkey wrench; but
it at least illustrates that the “monkey on a stick” was sufficiently popular
and well-known, so that it is plausible that it could have inspired the name monkey wrench.
The Cairo Bulletin (Cairo, Illinois), January 1, 1904 |
Other “Monkey” Machines
Although I have not been able to find the “dozen contrivances”
said to share the name, “monkey,” I was able to find a few; most notably, pile
drivers and similar devices:
The machine is worked with high-pressure steam, which . . .
raises the piston and ‘monkey.’ When the piston reaches the height intended,
it shuts the induction . . . and the monkey
falls.
John Weale, Rudimentary
Dictinoary of Terms Used in Architecture, &c., London, J. Weale, 1850.
The term “monkey” was not limited to large, steam-powered
pile drivers. The term had earlier been
used in manual pile-drivers, and was also applied to large and small devices
that used a similar weight moving up and down, guided on a pole or between two
supports. The Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd Edition, includes an
entry for, “monkey-engine, a form of pile-driver having a monkey or ram moving
in a wooden frame (Knight Dict. Mech.
1875).” A how-to guide for making rockets
or pyrotechnics described the use of a small, manually operated, “monkey
machine,” that appears to operate under the same principle as a pile-driver:
To make them, erect a small monkey
machine, two uprights . . . [a] piece of beech for monkey . . . sliding
up and down between uprights . . . . A
ring and cord are fixed to monkey to raise it by the pulley, and a pin or other
contrivance for keeping the monkey suspended when required.
William E. A. Axon, The
Mechanic’s Friend, New York, 1875, page 292.
A technical encyclopedia described the process of drilling
tube-wells:
The process of driving tube-wells resembled pile-driving, but
with the distinction, that, while piles received the blows of the monkey on their heads, the tubes are not struck at
all, the blow being communicated by the clamp, which receives the blow near the
ground.
Appleton’s Cyclopaedia
of Applied Mechanics, Volume 2 (G-Z), New York, Appleton & Co., 1882,
page 928.
The following images illustrate the similarity between and
among three types of monkey wrenches,
a tube-well drilling apparatus, and a “monkey on a stick.” The three representative wrenches, Hewet (1840)[x]
(with rotating handle, similar to the English wrenches), Merrick (1835)[xi],
and Coes (1841)[xii],
each have a lower-jaw assembly grasping the shaft and moving up and down along
the shaft, much like a “monkey on the stick.”
The tube-well drill has a weight, or “monkey,” supported by and moving
up and down along a shaft, much like a “monkey on a stick.” The “monkey on a stick” has a monkey that
moves up and down along the shaft of a stick:
Conclusion
It is nearly certain that Charles Moncky (or Monkay) of
Brooklyn did not invent, coin, or inspire the term, monkey wrench; despite the actual existence of Charles Monk, the
tool-maker from Brooklyn. That story may
have been fabricated as a joke, given his tool-related occupation and playing
on the similarity of his last-name to the well-known wrench; or could have, I
suppose, been an honest mistake made somewhere along the line. In any case, he was too young to have been
responsible for either the expression or the tool.
The three general types of monkey wrench, English, Merrick and Coes, all share similarities
with the children’s toy, “monkey on a stick.”
Pile-drivers, well-drillers, monkey
engines and monkey machines also
share similar attributes. They all have a movable “monkey” that climbs up and down along shaft; like a monkey climbing a tree - or a “monkey on a stick.” The theory is at least simple, consistent across several different contexts, and plausible.
It is also (for what it's worth) the most sensible explanation I have seen. It's possible.
It is also (for what it's worth) the most sensible explanation I have seen. It's possible.
You be the judge.
----------------------------------------
Post Script:
A reader mentioned that they had always assumed that the name came from the long handle, which made it look like this:
The Sentiment is shared by others: "This item, with its rounded head and 'twist the tail' (handle) to adjust the mouth feature, could easily inspire the image of a monkey." See, e.g., Page, Herb. (Fall 2005). Reach for the wrench: Vintage auto wrenches. The Fine Tool Journal, pg. 16-18. (Excerpt at Davistownmuseum.org).
My sense is that whatever the initial impulse to name the wrench, the name may have stuck because it resonated in several ways; the "monkey" moves up and down the shaft, you twist the monkey's tail, it looks like a monkey, monkeys have a strong grip, and monkeys are funny.
[ii]
“Worcester County Inventors,” George F. Hoar, The New England Magazine, N.S. Volume 31, Number 4, December 1904,
page 490.
[iii]
Michael Quinion's WorldWideWords.org dates monkey wrench in the United States to "an issue of the Natchez Daily Courier for 1838." The word may be even older. Dave
Wilton’s Wordorigins.org
notes the term in, “a citation believed to be from 1807 that appears in E. S.
Dane’s Peter Stubs & Lancashire Hand
Tool Industry: Fleetwood, Richard…Parr, Rainford. Screw plates, lathes,
clock engines…monkey wrenches, taps. The
book they cite, however, was published in 1973.
The “believed to be” caveat used for the excerpt relied on may be
significant. Merriam Webster’s online
dictionary also lists the date of first use for monkey wrench as 1807; apparently based on the same source of
unknown reliability. The Oxford English Dictionary, 3nd
Edition, marks the date with a question mark.
[iv] See,
e.g. Francis Whishaw, The Railways of Great Britain and Ireland,
Second Edition, London, John Weale, 1842, page 211; August Chevalier, Mémoire sur l'exploitation des chemins de
fer anglais, Paris, Carilian-Goeury, 1847, page 36; Scribner’s Engineers’ and Mechanics’ Companion, New York,
Huntington & Savage, 1849, page 201; Rules
and Regulations to be Observed by the Officers and Men in the Employ of this
Company, Hamilton, Ontario, Great Western Railway Company, 1858 page 42.
[v]
The Power Plant, Volume 9, Number 1, January 1917, page 24.
[vi] New York Tribune, July 14, 1906, page 7.
[vii]
Charles G. Washburn, Industrial Worcester,
Worcester, The Davis Press, 1917.
[viii]
A thorough discussion and exhaustive
bibliography of tool-history sources can be found on the website of the
Davistown Museum, a tool, art, and regional history museum located in Hull Cove
Maine. See, e.g., “The Boston Wrench Group,” http://www.davistownmuseum.org/bioBostonWrench.htm.
[ix]
The style was apparently pioneered in England by American Jockey,
Tod Sloan, who caused a sensation in England in the late-1890s (“A ‘monkey
on a stick’ is what the wise sporting writers called him, because he did not
ride with long stirrups, sitting upright, as the English jockeys had been doing
from time immemorial.”). Tod Sloan was
the inspiration for George M. Cohan’s play, Little Johnnie Jones, that
introduced the song, “I’m a Yankee Doodle Dandy;” the
play helped popularize the expressions, “twenty-three” and “skidoo” in the
mid-19-aughts (see
my earlier post).
[x] US
Patent 1659, June 27, 1840, Screw-Wrench, Henry W. Hewet.
[xi] US
Patent 9030X, August 17, 1835, Wrench, Merrick.
[xii]
US Patent 2054, April 16, 1841, Method of Constructing Screw-Wrenches, Loring
Coes.
UPDATE: Updated May 7, 2022, to add the image of a "Monkey on a Stick" from Christmas Puck for 1886.
I am in awe of this beautifully-told, exhaustively-researched article. Bravo!
ReplyDeleteP.S. I had a "monkey-on-a-stick" plaything when I was a very young child in 1961.
I read about Charles Moncky in an old engineering handbook that described this moniker by which his invention was known as an affront to his good name. This has always stuck with me and in an idle moment today I googled and found by modern miracle this credible and exhaustive post. Thanks much for spending the time to put to rest this obscure piece of misinformation!
ReplyDeleteSaving the world from misinformation one, all-too-few readers at a time.
DeleteThanks for the research. I was just interviewed during this COVID-19 crisis for a seasonal position with a national hardware chain. The interviewer (millennial ?) was surprised when I said "monkey wrench." I'm not going to stop saying the expression - especially now that I know its origin. After all, knowledge is power. (As a girl, we had a wonderfully old "monkey on a stick" mantle toy that was out at Christmas. When properly set, Santa would climb down the North Pole and enter the chimney at the bottom of the toy. What fun!)
ReplyDeleteGlad to have been of service. Spread the good news. Sadly, some people are inclined to believe bad news, regardless of how easily disproved it is.
Delete