I had a great grandfather who was Jewish. I grew up in Tennessee and I’m over 50 and I never heard of this horn thing until I saw this thread.
BTW, on the topic of body odor. Back then most people smelled. Bathing everyday isn’t that common unless you had access to a shower. Because of differences of diet and stuff, there are differences in body odor and naturally you don’t notice the familiar smells. It is the unfamiliar odors that smell bad.
A woman I knew reasonably well told us (at Passover, in fact) that when her family moved to rural West Virginia in the early '80’s, she and her sister were searched for horns on their first day of school. It was ostensibly a lice inspection, but it was completely concentrated on the upper forehead.
When I was in the UK in the 1960’s, I met several people who firmly believed that Mormons had horns, and was quite surprised that I didn’t. I also met more than one person who was absolutely convinced that the Mormons in the 1850’s had built a huge tunnel underneath the Atlantic Ocean all the way to Salt Lake City, so that they could carry away the young girls and marry them.
I wish that I didn’t believe that people are stupid enough to believe in these kinds of things, but unfortunately bitter experience with the human race has taught me that many complete idiots walk among us. I totally do believe that there are people that stupid still out there.
For those who have had to deal with this kind of stupidity, how do you manage not to become hateful yourself after being confronted with this kind of thing???
Unfortunately, she probably thought you were staring at her horns.
As astro’s link shows, Bess Truman was a bigot who would have been spectacularly unprepared to have Jesus over as a dinner guest, but I didn’t see anything there about her believing in the horns.
Few people know this, but David Susskind had both horns and a tail. As proof, he was always seen on camera fully clothed and sitting down.
In an oral history of black soldiers in WWI they recalled that white soldiers told french kids that the black soldiers had tails. So the french kids were following around the black soldiers to get a glimpse of them…
I’ve heard the jews have horns theory years ago… not shortage to the ignorance that occurs due to lack of diversity…
Not sure about the first, though kids are liable to believe all kinds of things.
As for the second; yes, but I think it may be more likely it said “Hebrew” (like with job ads) or Jews were just considered ‘Colored’. One of the country clubs here opened for Jews in the 1920s because they were excluded from the others. (The club was sold this year- I suppose the new membership can join any club now?)
There was also an ideological “No Jews Allowed” sign when the St. Louis arrived with nearly 1,000 refugees in 1939, but I suppose that’s a bit different.
Perhaps the explicit ‘No Jews Allowed’ signs were more prominent in Canada?
Considering the blatant racism and psuedoscience that prevailed until recent memory about non-whites, I can see adults thinking Jews had little bumps on the tops of their head or something.
Irish I know for sure from family lore (and not joking). My mom’s side of my family is all Irish. The oldtimers told me they personally saw signs reading “Help wanted. No Irish need apply.”
Also, Harvard had a policy of restricting Jews on the basis that ‘they cheat’, and other universities had quotas. It was harder for Jews to get housing in certain areas or be hired for certain jobs.
So I think some of things things just weren’t as overt…but here’s your sign.
Not only that, stories of antisemitism (everywhere, not just the South) in America are in many Jewish history books and documentaries. So to deny that is to imply we’ve made it up.
At one point the father’s sister decides to come West to her brother’s family, She’s a very strict Catholic, and her brother is laughing because he tells everyone that his sister Cathy “firmly believes that all Mormons have horns.”
So the author’s brother find his siblings cow horns and they tie them to their foreheads to greet their aunt, who promptly faints at the sign of them.
Of course the happy ending of this story is that the bigoted Aunt Cathy finally loses her bigotry, falls in love with a Mormon man, and converts to his faith.
According to the book I just read, during the Great Depression there were signs in California that said “No Niggers, no Okies, no Arkies.” The last being migrants from Arkansas.
I used to know a French girl who was convinced that Mormons and Amish people were the same thing and practiced polygyny while living in rural farming villages with no modern technology or colorful clothes.