The Big Potato (nickname for Chicago)?

One of my friends has insisted for years that one of the many nicknames for Chicago is “The Big Potato.”

His story is that the name came sometime during the industrial revolution (more to the point, Chicago’s industrial revolution). Supposedly, the nickname was given by folks in the Big Apple as essentially an insult ( i.e. Wouldn’t you rather have an apple than a potato) to discourage business from leaving NY for Chicago.

I’ve never heard anything like this from anyone but him. My grandmother was born and raised in Chicago and she never heard this.

Is this B.S., or just little known?

I’ve lived in Chicago for 60 years. Never heard the reference. And a brief peek at Google (“the big potato” and “the big potato” + chicago) yields zip. Sounds like something someone once said. Doesn’t make it a lie. Just extremely local.

Hog butcher to the world. The windy city. Chi Town. Any others?

Google is my friend:

Thanks guys/gals.

[quote]
The origin of the “Windy City” nickname is a bit more obscure. It is based not on the wind velocity, but on loud and windy boosterism. In the early part of the nineteenth century, Chicago promoters went up and down the East Coast loudly promoting Chicago as an excellent place to invest. Detractors claimed they were full of wind. Later, Chicago and New York were competing to hold the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition. Charles A. Dana, editor of the New York Sun, wrote an editorial advising against the “nonsensical claims of that windy city. Its people could not hold a world’s fair even if they won it.” This editorial is widely credited with popularizing the “Windy City” nickname.

[quote]

I’m wondering if he’s mixing this up with his industy theory and the “smelly onion.”
I’ll ask him. Thanks ~S

Purely on the post title, I guessed it was a reference to Chicago being the more Irish city.

Whatever you do, just don’t trust the “Windy City” explanation. Barry Popik will haunt you forever.
:eek:

Chicago was called the Windy City well before Dana wrote his editorial. And all it implied was how windy it was. Most of the rest of the info remains speculative. It was a popular name with out-or-state newspaper writers 20 years or more before Dana wrote his piece.

Also, tell your friend that the name “Big Apple” for NYC starts about 1910-20. That would probably help to defeat his assertion.

“Purely on the post title, I guessed it was a reference to Chicago being the more Irish city.”

In that case, it should really be called The Big Pierogie.