www.fgks.org   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

Jump to content

Alligator bait: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
→‎Bibliography: Indent=yes
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit Advanced mobile edit
 
(439 intermediate revisions by 54 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{primary|date=July 2023}}
<!-- Please do not remove or change this AfD message until the discussion has been closed. -->
{{Short description|Urban legend and racist trope}}
{{Article for deletion/dated|page=Black children as alligator bait|timestamp=20221211131308|year=2022|month=December|day=11|substed=yes}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2023|cs1-dates=ly}}
<!-- Once discussion is closed, please place on talk page: {{Old AfD multi|page=Black children as alligator bait|date=11 December 2022|result='''keep'''}} -->
{{use American English|date=February 2023}}
<!-- End of AfD message, feel free to edit beyond this point -->
{{use shortened footnotes|date=May 2023}}
{{short description|Purported historical practice}}
[[File:1900sc Postcard-Alligator 01.jpg|thumb|upright=1.5|alt=Three black babies near an alligator. The top of the postcard reads "Alligator Bait, Florida".|A postcard from the 1900s depicting black children used as alligator bait]]
[[File:1900sc Postcard-Alligator 01.jpg|thumb|alt=Illustration of a swampy scene in Florida; three young black children are seated on a log across a small pool of water from an alligator displaying its open mouth. The middle child wears a broad-brimmed hat. In the background are palm trees and a cabin next to open fields. The top of the postcard reads "Alligator Bait, Florida".|Early 20th century postcard depicting black children as "alligator bait"]]
Popular American folklore, both during and after the period of [[slavery in the United States|legal chattel slavery]] in the United States, frequently used the imagery of [[African Americans|black]] children or [[infant]]s being used as [[Bait (luring substance)|bait]] for [[alligator]]s. There is no meaningful evidence that black children were ever used in this way, but the motif is present in a wide array of media – including newspaper reports, songs, [[sheet music]], and visual art. In contemporary American [[slang]], '''''alligator bait''''' is a [[racial slur]], and the purported practice remains in the cultural consciousness.


Depicting [[African-American]] children as '''alligator bait''' was a common [[Trope (literature)|trope]] in American popular culture in the 19th and 20th centuries. The motif was present in a wide array of media, including newspaper reports, songs, sheet music, and visual art. There is an [[urban legend]] claiming that black children or [[Infant|infants]] were in fact used as [[Bait (luring substance)|bait]] to lure [[American alligator|alligators]], although there is no meaningful evidence that children of any race were ever used for this purpose. In American [[slang]], ''alligator bait'' is a [[racial slur]] for African-Americans.
== Origins ==
The reasons for first identifying black babies as alligator bait are unknown, but the identification may be a consequence of earlier associations of African [[crocodile]]s – a relative of American alligators – with Africa and [[List of ethnic groups of Africa|its people]].{{sfn|Dean|2000|p=33}} American alligators largely live in the [[swamp]]lands of the [[Southern United States|South]], which were one place [[Fugitive slaves in the United States|people escaping enslavement]] hid to evade capture.{{sfn|Dean|2000|p=33}} According to popular legend, enslaved people who disappeared in swamps may have been killed by alligators; children were understood as particularly vulnerable to attacks by alligators, and that identification may have evolved into the bait image.{{sfn|Dean|2000|p=33}}


== Popular culture ==
The image is a subtype of the racist [[pickaninny]] caricature and [[Stereotypes of African Americans|stereotype of black children]], where they were represented as [[dehumanization|almost unhuman]], filthy, and unlovable.{{sfn|Fulton|2006|pp=127–128}}
In the American popular imagination, black children were commonly used as bait for [[hunting alligators]],{{sfnp|Dean|2000|p=22}} which are one of the central [[apex predators]] of the [[folklore of the United States]], along with [[Puma concolor|cougars]], [[bear]]s and [[Wolf|wolves]].{{sfnp|Mechling|1987|p=75}} The reasons for dubbing black babies "alligator bait" are unknown, but the identification may be a consequence of earlier associations of [[African crocodile]]s{{mdash}}a relative of [[American alligator]]s{{mdash}}with Africa and [[Negroid|its people]].{{sfnp|Dean|2000|p=33}} Gators largely live in the [[swamp]]lands of the [[Southern United States]], which were one place [[Fugitive slaves in the United States|people escaping enslavement]] hid to evade capture.{{sfnp|Dean|2000|p=33}} According to popular legend, enslaved people who disappeared in swamps may have been killed by alligators; children were understood as particularly vulnerable to attacks by alligators, and that identification may have evolved into the bait image.{{sfnp|Dean|2000|p=33}} Alligator lore draws from "a shared dread of these reptilian creatures that come out of the water to eat dogs and children."{{sfnp|Mechling|1987|p=73}}


The alligator bait image is a subtype of the racist [[pickaninny]] caricature and [[Stereotypes of African Americans|stereotype of black children]], where they were represented as [[dehumanization|almost unhuman]], filthy, unlovable,{{sfnp|Fulton|2006|pp=127–128}} unkempt,{{sfnp|King|2005|p=123}} "unsupervised and dispensible."{{sfnp|Slate|2009|p=93}} In 19th and 20th century American popular media, stereotyped depictions of black children were common:
== Popular imagination ==
In the American popular imagination, both during and after [[slavery in the United States|legal slavery]], black children were commonly used as bait for alligators, the apex predator of American folklore.{{sfn|Dean|2000|p=22}} Drawings of black babies luring alligators were printed by companies like [[Underwood & Underwood]]{{sfn|Finley|2019|p=18}} on [[postcard]]s,<ref>{{cite journal |title="Alligator Bait" |journal=[[The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education]] |volume=24 |year=1999 |page=22 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/2999048}}</ref> [[cigar box]]es, [[sheet music]] covers,{{sfn|Dean|2000|pp=22–23}} and in paintings.{{sfn|Tuck|2009|p=417}} Several stories were printed in American newspapers about the alleged practice.{{sfn|Hughes|2013}} Due to the popularity of the idea, [[letter opener]]s were manufactured in designs resembling alligators, some of which came equipped with small replicas of black children's heads to be placed in the alligator's mouth.{{sfn|Dean|2000|p=23}}<Ref>{{cite journal |title=Symbolic Slavery: Black Representations in Popular Culture |first=Steven C. |last=Dubin |journal=Social Problems |year=1987 |volume=34 |issue=2 |pages=122-140 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/800711}}</ref> The sheet music drawings were almost purely symbolic; the images of black children being hunted by alligators were not represented in almost any corresponding music, though some songs (without the iconography) did have alligator bait as a component.{{sfn|Pearson|2021|pp=32–33}} In general, the drawings reinforced the racist belief that black people were victims to nature{{sfn|Cox|2010|p=207}} and that their race made it reasonable to assume they should die terribly.<ref>{{cite book |chapter=A collection of people: migration, settlement and frontiers |title=Canada in the Frame: Copyright, Collections and the Image of Canada, 1895-1924 |first=Philip J. |last=Hatfield |publisher=UCL Press |year=2018 |pages=106-132 |url=https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv3hvc7m.9}}</ref>


{{blockquote |[Black children in popular media had] wide toothy grins, rolling white eyes, shiny dark faces, and uncontrollably kinky hair...Supportive props [included] [[watermelon stereotype|watermelon]], bales of cotton, and alligators...The more vicious scenes devalued black children's lives to the extent that entrepreneurs claimed they were 'dainty morsel,' 'free lunches' or 'gator bait' for carnivorous reptiles. |author=Wilma King |title=''African American Childhoods''{{sfnp|King|2005|p=123}} }}
The concept of children luring predators separately existed during the [[British Ceylon period|period of British rule]] over [[Sri Lanka]]; Sri Lankan children were said to have been used as bait for crocodiles, and several newspapers published stories and drawings of the purported practice.{{sfn|de Silva|Somaweera|2015|p=6806}}


Drawings of black babies luring alligators were printed by companies like [[Underwood & Underwood]]{{sfnp|Finley|2019|p=18}} on [[postcard]]s,{{sfnp|''Journal of Blacks in Higher Education''|1999}} [[cigar box]]es, and [[sheet music]] covers,{{sfnp|Dean|2000|pp=22–23}} The trope also appeared in films{{sfnp|Leab|1973|pp=61}} and in paintings.{{sfnp|Tuck|2009|p=417}} The sheet music drawings were almost purely symbolic; the images of black children being hunted by alligators were not represented in almost any corresponding music, though other songs (without the iconography) did have alligator bait as a component.{{sfnp|Pearson|2021|pp=32–33}} In general, the drawings reinforced the racist belief that black people were victims to nature,{{sfnp|Cox|2010|p=207}} and that their race made it reasonable to assume they should die terribly.{{sfnp|Hatfield|2018|p=124}} Alligator-bait-themed postcards and greeting cards were part of a larger genre of anti-black racist ephemera known as ''[[coon card]]s''.{{sfnp|''Journal of Blacks in Higher Education'' (2)|1999}} [[American Mutoscope and Biograph Company]] produced a pair of short films in 1900{{sfnp|"The 'Gator and the Pickaninny (1900)"}} called ''The 'Gator and the Pickaninny'' and ''Alligator Bait''. In the former, "a black man with an ax unhesitatingly attacks an alligator that has swallowed a small black boy; as a result, the boy, [[Jonah and the Whale|Jonah]]-like, is restored."{{sfnp|Leab|1973|pp=61}} In the latter, according to the film-company catalog, "A little colored baby is tied to a post on a tropical shore. A huge 'gator comes out of the water, and is about to devour the little pickaninny, when a hunter appears and shoots the reptile."{{sfnp|"Alligator Bait (1900)"}} Due to the popularity of the idea, [[letter opener]]s were manufactured in designs resembling alligators, some of which came equipped with small replicas of black children's heads to be placed in the alligator's mouth.<ref>{{harvp|Dean|2000|p=23}}; {{harvp|Dubin|1987|pp=}}</ref>
== Historical accuracy and contemporary culture ==
In May 2013, Franklin Hughes of the [[Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia]] argued that due to the number of periodicals which mention the use of black children as bait for alligators, it likely occurred, though it was not widespread or became a normal practice.{{sfn|Hughes|2013}} Four years later, Hughes argued again that it likely occurred, though he also found an article from ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]'' magazine, contemporaneous to one alleged incident printed in newspapers, which denied that the practice ever occurred and that the report was a "silly lie, false and absurd".{{sfn|Hughes|2017}}


[[File:Alligator bait photograph collage lithograph 1897 McCrary & Branson Knoxville Tennessee.jpg|left|thumb|"Alligator Bait" photograph published by [[McCrary & Branson]], 1897 ([[British Library]])|alt=Nine dark-skinned African-American children, all naked, several with exposed male genitalia, all appearing to be toddlers between ages one and three, sit or stand in a variety of body positions; original caption reads Alligator bait with a copyright notice by McCrary & Branson of Knoxville, Tennessee dated 1897]]
A [[Snopes]] article from 2017 was unable to find any meaningful evidence that the practice occurred; Patricia Turner, a historian on black [[folklore]] and the alligator bait cultural phenomenon, told Snopes it likelier never did.{{sfn|Emery|2017}} The Snopes writer said it was impossible to [[Burden of proof (philosophy)#Proving a negative|prove a negative claim]], and that no proponents of the historicity of the practice have met their [[Burden of proof (philosophy)|burden of proof]] by providing any evidence of the practice.{{sfn|Emery|2017}}


The title "Alligator Bait" for an 1897 collage of nine African-American babies posed "on a sandy [[bayou]]" was supposedly suggested by a hardware-store employee in Knoxville, Tennessee as part of a naming contest with a cash prize. By 1900, the photo had sold 11,000 copies and brought in {{USD|5000|1900|link=yes|round=-1|about=yes}} for [[McCrary & Branson]].{{sfnp|Moser|1900}}{{sfnp|Knoxville ''Journal and Tribune''|1900}} In 1964, a New Jersey editorial writer recalled a copy of the photo—meant to "elicit an amused appreciation"—that had once hung in a local shop. The newspaper editor described the image as "immoral" and equivalent to "viciously pornographic pictures."{{sfnp|''Madison Eagle''|1964}} [[American studies]] professor Jay Mechling concludes his essay (about how alligators are used in cultural messaging) on a similar note:
In 1920, the Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia shared a letter from a researcher sharing his research into the "alligator bait" phenomenon.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Reitan |first1=Peter |title=2020-Letter to the Jim Crow Museum |url=https://www.ferris.edu/HTMLS/news/jimcrow/letters/2020/alligatorbaitESPN.htm |website=Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia |access-date=3 December 2022}}</ref> He found that the author of the earliest-known description of alligator or crocodile hunting using live-human bait (published in 1888, about supposed hunting practices by British hunters in Ceylon) had been written by a military-humor cartoonist. He also found that the author of one of the articles frequently cited as "evidence" of the historical truth of the practice (published in 1923, related to alligator hunting in Chipley, Florida) had been written by a man better known as a "sex philosopher." The letter shared a link to an article surveying dozens of similar stories.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Jensen-Brown |first1=Peter |title=Live Human Alligator Bait - Fact or Fiction |url=https://esnpc.blogspot.com/2020/04/live-human-alligator-bait-fact-or.html |website=Early Sports 'n' Pop-Culture History Blog |access-date=3 December 2022}}</ref> The earliest such story suggesting similar alligator hunting practices in the United States related to using "a nice, fat baby" rented from a (presumably white) "cracker mother to whom a half dollar is ample recompense for the risk that her child is to run."<ref>{{cite news |title=The Topeka State Journal |date=September 29, 1899}}</ref> The detail about renting the babies from their parents for a small fee is a common theme in most of the crocodile/alligator bait stories, beginning with the original one out of Ceylon (Sri Lanka) through the one from Chipley, Florida.
{{clear}}
{{Blockquote|text=To discover the ways in which these symbols and stories carry anti-female and anti-black meanings is to see the ideology packed into our most taken-for-granted attitudes toward the world. Thinking anew about the symbolic alligator becomes a moral act, perhaps a moral duty, as we resist the power of the 'myths that think themselves in our minds.'|author=Jay Mechling|title=''American Wildlife in Symbol and Story''{{sfnp|Mechling|1987|p=92}} }}


[[File:Honey_come_down_we_are_waiting_for_you_in_Florida.jpg |alt=Two alligators menace a stereotyped black man clambering into a stereotyped palm tree, a woman in colorful dress runs away comically screaming; original caption: "Honey come down we are waiting for you in Florida"|right|thumb|"Topics: Racism, ethnic wit and humor, 1898-1920" ([[National Museum of American History]])]]
In American [[slang]], ''alligator bait'' (or ''{{'}}gator bait'') is a chiefly Southern slur aimed at black people, particularly children, though it also has currency in the North; the term implies that the target is worthless and expendable.{{sfn|Herbst|1997|p=8}} The image of black children being put in peril to lure alligators remains in popular culture.{{sfn|Hinton|2009|pp=101, 103}} In 2020, the [[University of Florida]] ended the "Gator Bait" chant during athletic events; university historian [[Carl Van Ness]] said the chant likely started after the 1950s, and though it may not have originated from the racial slur, the two were connected.{{sfn|Van Ness|2020}}


Adult black males{{sfnp|Slate|2009|p=94}} were presented in a similar manner as the babies: A 2003 [[Museum of Florida History]] exhibit called ''The Art of Hatred: Images of Intolerance in Florida Culture'' included postcards that "depict black people getting eaten by alligators as a joke. 'Free lunch in the Everglades, Florida' reads one."{{sfnp|Hauserman|2003}} Such postcards were common well into the 1950s.{{sfnp|Slate|2009|p=95}} The image of black children being put in peril to lure alligators remains present in popular culture in the 21st century.{{sfnp|Hinton|2009|pp=101, 103}}
== References ==

===Citations===
In her 1994 book ''Ceramic Uncles & Celluloid Mammies: Black Images and Their Influence on Culture'', [[Patricia Turner]], an [[African American studies]] professor who has researched the alligator bait cultural phenomenon, notes that stories of "alligator bait" are invariably narrated by whites, sometimes grouping "Negroes and dogs" together as similarly overawed with fear of alligators. There are no equivalent stories in 19th and 20th century black folklore collections.{{sfnp|Turner|1994|pp=32–35}}

Turner argues that the repetitive, insistent "alligator bait" iconography of partially clothed young children placed in danger of predation by large reptiles is not so much a stereotype or an urban legend as wishcasting: "They implicitly advocate...aggression in eliminating an unwanted people{{sfnp|Turner|1994|pp=36}}...the alligator is an accomplice in an effort to eradicate, or at least intimidate, the black."{{sfnp|Turner|1994|pp=38}} Mechling is more sexually explicit, arguing that white storytellers use the culturally constructed idea of "alligator-ness" in these images and stories to symbolically [[emasculate]] African American and [[Native Americans in the United States|Native American]] men alike.{{sfnp|Mechling|1987|pp=78–84}} Claudia Slate, a professor of English at Florida Southern College, makes an analogy to the [[Terrorism|terroristic]] practice of [[lynching in the United States]] and argues "Containment of African Americans was a top priority for southern whites, and instilling fear, whether by actual ropes or imagined reptile attacks, served this purpose."{{sfnp|Slate|2009|p=91}}

== Historicity debate ==
The idea that anyone was intentionally using children for alligator hunting was debunked in print as early as 1918; a Florida guidebook reassured potential tourists that "upon reliable authority [an alligator] will not attack a human, regardless of the fiction that pickaninnies are good alligator bait."{{sfnp|Winter|1918}}{{Primary source inline|date=February 2023}} In 1919 a [[Port St. Lucie, Florida|Port St. Lucie]] newspaper column complained, "Many years ago this serious error was perpetrated on Florida by an advertising agent of a railroad running through the South...Florida's portion was [advertised with] pictures of [[Spanish moss|moss hung]] swamps, [[Florida rattlesnake|rattlesnakes]], alligators, and negro babies labelled 'alligator bait'... this harmful psychology became very popular..doubtless many foreigners believing that these babies were actually used for alligator bait."{{sfnp|''St. Lucie News Tribune''|1919}}{{Primary source inline|date=February 2023}} In 1926 a columnist for ''[[The Eustis Lake Region]]'' called it "a piece of Florida fiction going the rounds which ancient spinsters in snowbound lands delighted to repeat as truth. It gave them a feeling of virtuous superiority over the denizens of the pleasant land of Florida."{{sfnp|''Eustis Lake Region''|1926}}{{Primary source inline|date=February 2023}}
In May 2013, Franklin Hughes of the [[Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia]] at [[Ferris State University]] in Michigan argued that due to the number of periodicals which mention the use of black children as bait for alligators, it likely occurred, though it was not widespread or became a normal practice. Hughes essentially argues that since there was no discernible limit to the dehumanization and degradation of African Americans in the U.S. national history, feeding children to animals for sport cannot be precluded as a possible reality.{{sfnp|Hughes|2013}} Four years later, Hughes argued again that it likely occurred, though he also found an article from ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]'' magazine, contemporaneous to one alleged incident printed in newspapers, which denied that the practice ever occurred and that the report was a "silly lie, false and absurd".{{sfnp|Hughes|2017}} In the 19th and early 20th century several stories were printed in American newspapers about the alleged practice.{{sfnp|Hughes|2013}} Academics have not assessed the authorship and likely veracity of these scattered news items, but [[Snopes]] article from 2017 was unable to find any meaningful evidence that the practice occurred; Patricia Turner told Snopes it likely never did.{{sfnp|Emery|2017}} The Snopes writer said it was impossible to [[Burden of proof (philosophy)#Proving a negative|prove a negative claim]], and that no proponents of the historicity of the practice have met their [[Burden of proof (philosophy)|burden of proof]] by providing any evidence of the practice, although the trope of black children being the favorite food of alligators was already widespread in the [[antebellum United States]].{{sfnp|Emery|2017}} Jay Mechling's study of the American folklore of the alligator notes that "A common folk idea among whites is that alligators have a preference for blacks as a food source."{{sfnp|Mechling|1987|pp=85–87}} For example, a 1850 article in ''[[Fraser's Magazine]]'' reported that alligators "prefer the flesh of a negro to any other delicacy".<ref>{{harvp|Emery|2017}}; {{harvp|''Fraser's Magazine''|1850}}</ref> Per Mechling, the earliest instance of this lore is in a 1565 [[Atlantic slave trade|slave trader]]'s account, and as late as the mid-20th century, in a story by Florida writer [[Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings]], a gator forgoes a group of naked white guys for the opportunity to gorge itself on an individual black man instead.{{sfnp|Mechling|1987|pp=85–87}}

[[File:Have_you_met_the_Florida_Gator%3F_He_is_the_champion_negro_hater.jpg|left|thumb|''Have you met the Florida Gator? He is the champion negro hater''; this postcard image and lyric first appeared in the 1930s{{sfnp|Slate|2009|p=94}} ([[Florida International University|Florida International University Libraries]])|alt=Alligator with black man in his jaws; card caption is "Free lunch in the Fla. Everglades"; full text of "The Florida Gator" poem is "Have you met the Florida Gator? He is the champion negro hater Although he finds many things to eat his favorite morsel is Negro meat"]]

== Linguistic use ==
In American [[slang]], ''alligator bait'' (or ''{{'}}gator bait'') is a chiefly [[Southern American English|Southern]] slur aimed at black people, particularly children; the term implies that the target is worthless and expendable.{{sfnp|Herbst|1997|p=8}} A variant use, albeit also expressing distaste, was ''alligator bait'' as World War II-era U.S. military slang for prepared meals featuring [[chopped liver]].{{sfnp|Dickson|2014|p=117}} The use of ''alligator bait'' to mean ''poor food'' (poor in senses of both flavor and socioeconomic class) had fallen out of use in the military by 1954.{{sfnp|Wallrich|1954}}

The derogatory use of ''alligator bait'' is likely [[American Civil War|pre-Civil War]] in origin.{{sfnp|Spears|1981|p=7}}{{sfnp|Calt|2010|p=4}} In 1905 a [[Vienna, Georgia]] paper reported high [[cotton]] prices and wrote "The bench-legged pickaninny, once so attractive as alligator bait, is now tenderly nurtured and gets three 'squares' a day, for on him hangs the future hopes of big crops."{{sfnp|''Vienna News''|1905}} In 1905 a postcard with no alligator imagery but picture of a crying black baby was sent to one Delia with the message "this is great alligator bait."{{sfnp|Baldwin|1988|pp=}} In 1923 the [[Moline, Illinois]] sports page reported "The [[Moline Plowboys|Plows]] used a wee hunk of alligator bait as [[Batboy|bat boy]] yesterday, but the luck turned the other way. At any rate it must be admitted that the little fellow's presence added color."{{sfnp|Anderson|1923}}{{Primary source inline|date=February 2023}} [[University of Florida]] fans were using the "uncomplimentary phrase" against [[Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets]] players in 1939.{{sfnp|Bradberry|1939}}{{Primary source inline|date=February 2023}}

''Alligator bait'' appears in the lyrics of a 1940s [[Swing era|swing-era]] jazz song called "Ugly Chile" (originally published 1917 as "Pretty Doll" by [[Clarence Williams (musician)|Clarence Williams]]). The song, which ends with a joke shared between performer and audience, is described as a "exorcism of an unacceptable fact" that is "funny and cogent in even the most unprivileged of readings.{{sfnp|Adams|Park|1956|pp=18–19}} The version recorded by [[George Brunies]] goes:
{{poem quote|
text=Oh how I hate you
You alligator bait you
You knock-kneed, pigeon-toed, box-ankled too,
There's a curse on your family and a spell on you.}}

In 1968 [[Major League Baseball]] pitcher [[Bob Gibson]] recalled the slur being used against him while playing in [[Columbus, Georgia]]: "There was a particular fan there who used to ride me. He called me ''alligator bait''. But then I found out just for kicks local folks would tie Negro youngsters to the end of a rope and drag them through swamps, trying to lure the alligators...That's where Negroes stood in Columbus."{{sfnp|Chapin|1968}}{{Primary source inline|date=February 2023}} The Columbus [[sports page]] editor wrote a column castigating Gibson for bringing it up: "All local citizens, white and Negro, have already recognized [alligator bait] for the myth that it is...I wouldn't be naive enough to deny that there were probably some rough things hurled at Gibson...but swamps and alligators? Really, Bob?"{{sfnp|Darby|1968}}{{Primary source inline|date=February 2023}} In 2020, the University of Florida ended the [[Gator Bait chant|"Gator Bait" chant]] during athletic events; university historian [[Carl Van Ness]] said the chant likely started after the 1950s, and though it may not have originated from the racial slur, the two were connected.{{sfnp|Van Ness|2020}} In the late 1990s African-American UF player [[Lawrence Wright (American football)|Lawrence Wright]] popularized the phrase "If you ain't a Gator, you must be Gator Bait."{{sfnp|Staples|2020}}

== Similar tropes ==
The concept of children luring predators separately existed in [[British Ceylon|colonial Ceylon]] (today's [[Sri Lanka]]). Sri Lankan children were said to have been used as bait for crocodiles, and several newspapers published stories and drawings of the purported practice.{{sfnp|de Silva|Somaweera|2015|p=6806}}

== Image gallery ==
{{gallery | title =Alligator bait | mode = packed
| File:1909 Postcard Quincy Florida-Alligator.jpg|Alligator bait postcard from Quincy, Florida, 1909
|File:Haiti revolution United States alligator bait editorial cartoon.jpg|[[Editorial cartoon]] about [[United_States_occupation_of_Haiti#Haitian_instability|political instability]] in Haiti (Cartoonist: May, Detroit ''Journal'', reprinted in ''[[American Review of Reviews]]'', Jan. 1909)
|File:1911 Postcard-Alligator Bait 01.jpg|Alligator bait postcard, 1911
|File:"Fooled dis time, Cully. Dis cotton aint gwine to break". Merrick Thread Co. Best Six Cord 8 (front).jpg|"Fooled dis time, Cully. Dis cotton aint gwine to break" (Merrick Thread Co. advertisement, late 1800s)
|File:Alligator bait 1878 Cox Palmer That Stanley.jpg|"The usual bait could not be found, But pickaninnies played around" ([[Palmer Cox]], '' That Stanley!'', 1878)
| File:AAMS22AfricanAmericanPostcard_Side_1.jpg|Later "alligator bait" postcards [[plagiarized]] the Knoxville lithograph{{sfnp|Slate|2009|p=92}} ([[University of Southern Maine]])
}}

== See also ==
* [[Gator bait (disambiguation)]]
* {{slink|Alligator wrestling#Native American historical origins}}
* {{anl|Ethnic Notions|''Ethnic Notions''}}
* {{anl|Nadir of American race relations}}

== Notes ==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


===Bibliography===
== Bibliography ==
{{refbegin}}
{{refbegin|indent=yes}}
===References===
* {{cite journal |last=Cox |first=Nicole C. |title=Selling seduction: Women and feminine nature in 1920s Florida advertising |journal=[[Florida Historical Quarterly]] |volume=89 |issue=2 |date=2010 |pages=186–209 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/29765166}}
* {{cite journal |last=Dean |first=Carolyn |author-link=Carolyn Dean |title=Boys and girls and 'boys': Popular depictions of African-American children and childlike adults in the United States, 1850–1930 |journal=[[Journal of American and Comparative Cultures]] |volume=23 |issue=3 |date=2000 |pages=17–35 |doi=10.1111/j.1537-4726.2000.2303_17.x}}
* {{Cite journal |last1=Adams |first1=Hazard |last2=Park |first2=Bruce R. |date=1956 |title=The State of the Jazz Lyric |journal=Chicago Review |language=en |volume=10 |issue=3 |pages=5–20 |doi=10.2307/25293241 |jstor=25293241}}
* {{cite journal |last=Finley |first=Cheryl |author-link=Cheryl Finley |title=Photography and the archive |journal=[[Critical Arts]] |volume=33 |issue=6 |date=2019 |pages=8–23 |doi=10.1080/02560046.2019.1695868}}
* {{cite journal |author1=<!--anonymous author, no byline--> |title=Alligator Bait |journal=The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education |date=1999 |issue=24 |page=22 |jstor=2999048 |ref={{harvid|''Journal of Blacks in Higher Education''|1999}} |issn=1077-3711}}
* {{Cite journal |author1=<!--anonymous author, no byline--> |title="Coon Cards": Racist Postcards Have Become Collectors' Items |date=Autumn 1999 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/2999393 |journal=The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education |issue=25 |pages=72–73 |doi=10.2307/2999393 |jstor=2999393 |issn=1077-3711 |ref={{harvid|''Journal of Blacks in Higher Education'' (2)|1999}} |access-date=2023-03-08 |archive-date=2023-03-08 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230308234956/https://www.jstor.org/stable/2999393 |url-status=live }}
* {{cite web |last=Emery |first=David |title=Were black children used as alligator bait in the American South? |website=[[Snopes]] |date=June 9, 2017 |url=https://www.snopes.com/news/2017/06/09/black-children-alligator-bait/ |access-date=September 2, 2022}}
* {{cite web |ref={{harvid|"Alligator Bait (1900)"}} |title=Alligator Bait (1900) |website=AFI Catalog of Feature Films: The First 100 Years 1893–1993 |publisher=American Film Institute |location=Los Angeles |date=n.d. |url=https://catalog.afi.com/Catalog/moviedetails/43108 |access-date=8 March 2023 |archive-date=2023-03-08 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230308220618/https://catalog.afi.com/Catalog/moviedetails/43108 |url-status=live }}
* {{cite book |last=Fulton |first=DoVeanna S. |title=Speaking power: Black feminist orality in women's narratives of slavery |publisher=[[State University of New York Press]] |date=2006}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Baldwin |first=Brooke |date=1988 |title=On the Verso: Postcard Messages as a Key to Popular Prejudices |journal=The Journal of Popular Culture |language=en |volume=22 |issue=3 |pages=15–28 |doi=10.1111/j.0022-3840.1988.2203_15.x}}
* {{cite encyclopedia |last=Herbst |first=Philip H. |title=Alligator bait |encyclopedia=The color of words: An encyclopedic dictionary of ethnic bias in the United States |publisher=[[Intercultural Press]] |page=8 |date=1997}}
* {{cite book |last=Hinton |first=KaaVonia |title=Sharon M. Draper: Embracing literacy |publisher=[[Scarecrow Press]] |date=2009}}
* {{Cite book |last=Calt |first=Stephen |title=Barrelhouse Words: A Blues Dialect Dictionary |date=2010-10-01 |publisher=University of Illinois Press |isbn=978-0-252-09071-4}}
* {{cite journal |last=Cox |first=Nicole C. |title=Selling seduction: Women and feminine nature in 1920s Florida advertising |journal=Florida Historical Quarterly |volume=89 |issue=2 |date=2010 |pages=186–209 |jstor=29765166 |issn=0015-4113 |url=https://stars.library.ucf.edu/fhq/vol89/iss2/4/ |format=PDF |access-date=2022-12-14 |archive-date=2022-12-14 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221214225105/https://stars.library.ucf.edu/fhq/vol89/iss2/4/ |url-status=live }}
* {{cite web |last=Hughes |first=Franklin |title=Alligator bait |website=[[Jim Crow Museum]] |publisher=[[Ferris State University]] |date=May 2013 |url=https://www.ferris.edu/HTMLS/news/jimcrow/question/2013/may.htm |access-date=September 2, 2022}}
* {{cite journal |last1=de Silva |first1=Anslem |author-link1=Anslem de Silva |last2=Somaweera |first2=Ruchira |title=Were human babies used as bait in crocodile hunts in colonial Sri Lanka? |journal=Journal of Threatened Taxa |volume=7 |issue=1 |date=26 January 2015 |pages=6805–6809 |doi=10.11609/jott.o4161.6805-9 |issn=0974-7907 |url=https://www.threatenedtaxa.org/JoTT/article/view/1790 |format=PDF |doi-access=free |access-date=2022-12-14 |archive-date=2022-12-14 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221214225102/https://www.threatenedtaxa.org/JoTT/article/view/1790 |url-status=live }}
* {{cite web |last=Hughes |first=Franklin |title=Alligator bait revisited |website=[[Jim Crow Museum]] |publisher=[[Ferris State University]] |date=June 2017 |url=https://www.ferris.edu/HTMLS/news/jimcrow/question/2017/junejuly.htm |access-date=September 2, 2022}}
* {{cite journal |last=Pearson |first=Erin |title=Consuming monsters: Hungry animals in the discourse on slavery |journal=[[Arizona Quarterly]] |volume=77 |issue=2 |date=2021 |pages=25–53 |doi=10.1353/arq.2021.0009}}
* {{cite journal |last=Dean |first=Carolyn |author-link=Carolyn Dean |title=Boys and girls and 'boys': Popular depictions of African-American children and childlike adults in the United States, 1850–1930 |journal=Journal of American and Comparative Cultures |volume=23 |issue=3 |date=2000 |pages=17–35 |doi=10.1111/j.1537-4726.2000.2303_17.x |issn=1542-7331}}
* {{Cite book |last=Dickson |first=Paul |title=War Slang: American Fighting Words & Phrases Since the Civil War |publisher=Courier Corporation |year=2014 |isbn=978-0-486-79716-8 |edition=3rd |pages=117 |language=en |author-link=Paul Dickson (writer)}}
* {{cite journal |last1=de Silva |first1=Anslem |author-link1=Anslem de Silva |last2=Somaweera |first2=Ruchira |title=Were human babies used as bait in crocodile hunts in colonial Sri Lanka? |journal=[[Journal of Threatened Taxa]] |volume=7 |issue=1 |date=26 January 2015 |pages=6805–6809 |doi=10.11609/jott.o4161.6805-9}}
* {{cite journal |last=Tuck |first=Eve |author-link=Eve Tuck |title=Suspending damage: A letter to communities |journal=[[Harvard Educational Review]] |volume=79 |issue=3 |date=2009 |pages=409–428 |doi=10.17763/haer.79.3.n0016675661t3n15}}
* {{cite journal |last=Dubin |first=Steven C. |title=Symbolic Slavery: Black Representations in Popular Culture |journal=Social Problems |year=1987 |volume=34 |issue=2 |pages=122–140 |jstor=800711 |doi=10.2307/800711 |issn=0037-7791}}
* {{cite journal |last=Finley |first=Cheryl |author-link=Cheryl Finley |title=Photography and the archive |journal=Critical Arts |volume=33 |issue=6 |date=2019 |pages=8–23 |doi=10.1080/02560046.2019.1695868 |s2cid=219415308 |issn=0256-0046}}
* {{cite news |last=Van Ness |first=Carl |title=Here’s what UF's historian says about the 'Gator Bait' history and controversy |work=[[Tampa Bay Times]] |date=June 27, 2020 |url=https://www.tampabay.com/opinion/2020/06/27/heres-what-ufs-historian-says-about-the-gator-bait-history-and-controversy-column/ |access-date=September 2, 2022 |department=Opinion}}
* {{cite web |last=Emery |first=David |title=Were black children used as alligator bait in the American South? |website=Snopes |date=June 9, 2017 |url=https://www.snopes.com/news/2017/06/09/black-children-alligator-bait/ |access-date=2022-09-02 |archive-date=2021-11-30 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211130080621/https://www.snopes.com/news/2017/06/09/black-children-alligator-bait/ |url-status=live }}
* {{cite book |last=Fulton |first=DoVeanna S. |title=Speaking power: Black feminist orality in women's narratives of slavery |publisher=State University of New York Press |date=2006 |isbn=978-0-7914-8231-5}}
* {{cite web |ref={{harvid|"The 'Gator and the Pickaninny (1900)"}} |title=The 'Gator and the Pickanniny (1900) |website=AFI Catalog of Feature Films: The First 100 Years 1893–1993 |publisher=American Film Institute |location=Los Angeles |date=n.d. |url=https://catalog.afi.com/Catalog/moviedetails/31814 |access-date=8 March 2023 |archive-date=2022-12-25 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221225023009/https://catalog.afi.com/Catalog/moviedetails/31814 |url-status=live }}
* {{cite book |last=Hatfield |first=Philip J. |chapter=A collection of people: migration, settlement and frontiers |title=Canada in the Frame: Copyright, Collections and the Image of Canada, 1895-1924 |publisher=UCL Press |year=2018 |pages=106–132 |isbn=978-1-78735-301-5 |doi=10.2307/j.ctv3hvc7m.9 |doi-access=free |jstor=j.ctv3hvc7m.9 |jstor-access=free}}
* {{cite book |last1=Herbst |first1=Philip |title=The Color of Words: An Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Ethnic Bias in the United States |date=1997 |publisher=Intercultural Press |location=Yarmouth, Maine |isbn=978-1-877864-42-1 |page=8 |url=https://archive.org/details/colorofwordsency0000herb/page/8/mode/1up?view=theater |url-access=registration |via=[[Internet Archive]] }}
* {{cite book |last=Hinton |first=KaaVonia |title=Sharon M. Draper: Embracing literacy |publisher=Scarecrow Press |location=Lanham, Md. |date=2009 |isbn=978-0-8108-5985-2}}
* {{cite web |last=Hughes |first=Franklin |title=Alligator bait |publisher=Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia, Ferris State University |date=May 2013 |url=https://www.ferris.edu/HTMLS/news/jimcrow/question/2013/may.htm |access-date=September 2, 2022 |archive-date=2020-08-10 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200810192438/https://www.ferris.edu/HTMLS/news/jimcrow/question/2013/may.htm |url-status=live }}
* {{cite web |last=Hughes |first=Franklin |title=Alligator bait revisited |publisher=Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia |date=June 2017 |url=https://www.ferris.edu/HTMLS/news/jimcrow/question/2017/junejuly.htm |access-date=September 2, 2022 |archive-date=2019-05-24 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190524114619/https://www.ferris.edu/HTMLS/news/jimcrow/question/2017/junejuly.htm |url-status=live }}
* {{cite book |last=King |first=Wilma |chapter=The Long Way from the Gold Dust Twins to the Williams Sisters: Images of African American Children in Selected Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Print Media |date=2005 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/africanamericanc0000king/page/119/mode/1up?view=theater |chapter-url-access=registration |title=African American Childhoods |pages=119–136 |place=New York |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |language=en |doi=10.1007/978-1-349-73165-7_8 |isbn=978-1-4039-6251-5 |via=Internet Archive }}
* {{Cite journal |last=Leab |first=Daniel J. |date=1973 |title=The Gamut from A to B: The Image of the Black in Pre-1915 Movies |jstor=2148648 |journal=Political Science Quarterly |volume=88 |issue=1 |pages=53–70 |doi=10.2307/2148648 |issn=0032-3195}}
* {{Cite book |last=Mechling |first=Jay |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/americanwildlife0000unse/page/73/mode/2up |title=American wildlife in symbol and story |date=1987 |publisher=University of Tennessee Press |isbn=0-87049-522-4 |editor-last=Gillespie |editor-first=Angus K. |location=Knoxville, Tenn. |pages=73–98 |chapter=The Alligator |oclc=14165533 |editor-last2=Mechling |editor-first2=Jay |via=Internet Archive }}&nbsp;{{limited access}}
* {{cite journal |last=Pearson |first=Erin |title=Consuming monsters: Hungry animals in the discourse on slavery |journal=Arizona Quarterly |volume=77 |issue=2 |date=2021 |pages=25–53 |doi=10.1353/arq.2021.0009 |s2cid=235717975 |issn=0004-1610}}
* {{cite web |last1=Reitan |first1=Peter |date=2020 |title=Letter to the Jim Crow Museum |url=https://www.ferris.edu/HTMLS/news/jimcrow/letters/2020/alligatorbaitESPN.htm |publisher=Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia |access-date=3 December 2022 |archive-date=2023-04-13 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230413043748/https://www.ferris.edu/HTMLS/news/jimcrow/letters/2020/alligatorbaitESPN.htm |url-status=live }}
* {{cite book |last=Slate |first=Claudia |date=2009 |editor-last=Slate |editor-first=Claudia |editor-last2=Van Camp |editor-first2=April |chapter=Wish You Weren't Here: African American Portrayal in Vintage Florida Postcards |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EytJDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA91 |title=Florida Studies: Proceedings of the 2008 Annual General Meeting of the Florida College English Association |location=Newcastle upon Tyne |publisher=Cambridge Scholars Publishing |pages=91–100 |isbn=978-1-4438-1171-2 |oclc=667048214 |access-date=2023-03-09 |archive-date=2023-03-09 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230309005342/https://books.google.com/books?id=EytJDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA91 |url-status=live }}&nbsp;{{free access|via=Google Books}}
* {{cite book |last1=Spears |first1=Richard A. |title=Slang and Euphemism: A Dictionary of Oaths, Curses, Insults, Sexual Slang and Metaphor, Racial Slurs, Drug Talk, Homosexual Lingo, and Related Matters |date=1981 |publisher=David Publishers |location=Middle Village, N.Y. |page=7 |isbn=978-0-8246-0259-8 |url=https://archive.org/details/slangeuphemismdi0000spea/page/7/mode/1up?view=theater |url-access=registration |via=Internet Archive }}
* {{cite journal |last=Tuck |first=Eve |author-link=Eve Tuck |title=Suspending damage: A letter to communities |journal=Harvard Educational Review |volume=79 |issue=3 |date=2009 |pages=409–428 |doi=10.17763/haer.79.3.n0016675661t3n15 |issn=0017-8055 |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/268000737 |format=PDF |via=[[ResearchGate]] }}
* {{cite book |last1=Turner |first1=Patricia A. |author-link=Patricia Turner |title=Ceramic Uncles & Celluloid Mammies: Black Images and Their Influence on Culture |date=1994 |publisher=Anchor Books |isbn=978-0-385-46784-1 |edition=1st |location=New York |pages=31–40 |chapter=Alligator Bait |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/ceramicunclescel00turn/page/31/mode/1up?view=theater |chapter-url-access=registration |via=Internet Archive }}

===Primary sources===
* {{Cite news |last=<!--anonymous author, no byline--> |date=1919-11-28 |title=Advertising Psychology |language=en |page=10 |newspaper=St. Lucie News Tribune |location=Port St. Lucie, Fla. |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/884627108/?clipping_id=119787160 |url-access=limited |access-date=2023-01-08 |via=[[Newspapers.com]] |ref={{harvid|''St. Lucie News Tribune''|1919}} |archive-date=2023-02-27 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230227012936/https://www.newspapers.com/image/884627108/?clipping_id=119787160 |url-status=live }}
* {{Cite news |date=1900-11-25 |last=<!--anonymous author, no byline--> |title=Alligator Bait |language=en |page=5 |newspaper=The Journal and Tribune |location=Knoxville, Tenn. |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/584225903/?clipping_id=89726944 |url-access=registration |access-date=2023-01-08 |via=Newspapers.com |ref={{harvid|Knoxville ''Journal and Tribune''|1900}} |archive-date=2023-02-27 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230227010023/https://www.newspapers.com/image/584225903/?clipping_id=89726944 |url-status=live }}
* {{cite news |date=1964-02-13 |title=Alligator Bait |page=4 |newspaper=The Madison Eagle |department=Editorial |location=Madison, N.J. |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/244363218/?&clipping_id=119785112 |url-access=registration |access-date=2023-01-08 |via=Newspapers.com |ref={{harvid|''Madison Eagle''|1964}} |archive-date=2023-02-27 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230227010224/https://www.newspapers.com/image/244363218/?&clipping_id=119785112 |url-status=live }}
* {{cite news |last=Anderson |first=Curley |title=The Sports Spotlight |newspaper=Moline Daily Dispatch |location=Moline, Ill. |date=1923-07-11 |page=13 |url-access=limited |access-date=2023-02-28 |url=http://www.newspaperarchive.com/other-articles-clipping-jul-11-1923-3756011/ |via=[[NewspaperArchive.com]] |archive-date=2023-02-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230228231447/https://www.newspaperarchive.com/other-articles-clipping-jul-11-1923-3756011/ |url-status=live }}
* {{Cite news |last=Bradberry |first=Johnny |date=1939-11-27 |title=Jacket Cripples Better, May Start Saturday |pages=15 |work=The Atlanta Constitution |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/397814857/?&clipping_id=116643652 |url-access=limited |access-date=2023-01-08 |via=Newspapers.com |archive-date=2023-01-17 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230117054737/https://www.newspapers.com/image/397814857/?&clipping_id=116643652 |url-status=live }}
* {{Cite news |last=Chapin |first=Dwight |date=1968-07-05 |title='Respect or Hypocrisy?' Bob Gibson: Black Man Nobody Wanted—Until He Was a Hero |pages=III1, III10 |work=Los Angeles Times |department=Part III: Sports |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/383157478/?&clipping_id=116643564 |url-access=limited |access-date=2023-01-08 |via=Newspapers.com |archive-date=2023-01-17 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230117054736/https://www.newspapers.com/image/383157478/?&clipping_id=116643564 |url-status=live }}
* {{Cite news |last=Darby |first=Cecil |date=1968-07-12 |title=Alligator Bait |page=3 |work=The Columbus Ledger |location=Columbus, Ga. |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/856884517/?&clipping_id=116643214 |url-access=limited |access-date=2023-01-08 |via=Newspapers.com |archive-date=2023-01-17 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230117054737/https://www.newspapers.com/image/856884517/?&clipping_id=116643214 |url-status=live }}
* {{Cite news |last=Hauserman |first=Julie |date=2003-03-07 |title="No dogs, no blacks, no Jews' |newspaper=Tampa Bay Times |url=https://www.tampabay.com/archive/2003/03/07/no-dogs-no-blacks-no-jews/ |url-status=live |access-date=2023-02-26 |archive-date=2021-09-02 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210902130840/https://www.tampabay.com/archive/2003/03/07/no-dogs-no-blacks-no-jews/ }}
* {{Cite news |last=Moser<!--this article is unbylined but identical text appears elsewhere with Moser credit line--> |first=James Henry |date=1900-04-02 |title=Branson, of Knoxville, an American Artist Who Really Enjoys His Obscurity |language=en |page=6 |newspaper=The Journal and Tribune |location=Knoxville, Tenn. |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/584104560/?clipping_id=119732265 |url-access=registration |access-date=2023-01-08 |via=Newspapers.com |archive-date=2023-02-26 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230226100149/https://www.newspapers.com/image/584104560/?clipping_id=119732265 |url-status=live }}
* {{cite news |last=<!--anonymous author, no byline--> |title=Interesting Letter on Cotton Crop |newspaper=Vienna News |location=Vienna, Ga. |date=1905-12-15 |page=1 |url=http://www.newspaperarchive.com/other-articles-clipping-dec-15-1905-3756027/ |url-access=limited |access-date=2023-02-28 |via=NewspaperArchive.com |ref={{harvid|''Vienna News''|1905}} |archive-date=2023-02-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230228232222/https://www.newspaperarchive.com/other-articles-clipping-dec-15-1905-3756027/ |url-status=live }}
* {{cite magazine |last=<!--anonymous author, no byline--> |title=Leaves From the Note-Book of a Naturalist, Part VII |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MmAyAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA629 |magazine=Fraser's Magazine for Town and Country |date=December 1850 |volume=42 |page=629 |ref={{harvid|''Fraser's Magazine''|1850}} |oclc=5899443 |via=Google Books |access-date=2022-12-12 |archive-date=2022-12-12 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221212032058/https://books.google.com/books?id=MmAyAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA629 |url-status=live }} {{free access}}
* {{Cite news |last=<!--anonymous author, no byline--> |date=1926-09-02 |title=The Observer, For to Admire and to See—Kipling, Alligator Bait |page=2 |volume=45 |issue=5 |url=http://www.newspaperarchive.com/other-articles-clipping-sep-02-1926-3752710/ |newspaper=The Eustis Lake Region |via=NewspaperArchive.com |url-access=limited |access-date=2023-02-26 |ref={{harvid|''Eustis Lake Region''|1926}} |archive-date=2023-02-27 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230227065447/https://www.newspaperarchive.com/other-articles-clipping-sep-02-1926-3752710/ |url-status=live }}
* {{Cite web |last=Staples |first=Andy |date=2020-06-18 |title=Staples: 'Gator Bait' and the collision of history we don't know with history we do |url=https://theathletic.com/1881140/2020/06/18/staples-gator-bait-and-the-collision-of-history-we-dont-know-with-history-we-do/ |access-date=2023-02-27 |website=The Athletic |language=en |archive-date=2021-11-20 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211120012550/https://theathletic.com/1881140/2020/06/18/staples-gator-bait-and-the-collision-of-history-we-dont-know-with-history-we-do/ |url-status=live }}
* {{cite news |last=Van Ness |first=Carl |author-link=Carl Van Ness |title=Here's what UF's historian says about the 'Gator Bait' history and controversy |work=Tampa Bay Times |date=June 27, 2020 |url=https://www.tampabay.com/opinion/2020/06/27/heres-what-ufs-historian-says-about-the-gator-bait-history-and-controversy-column/ |access-date=September 2, 2022 |department=Opinion |archive-date=2022-09-02 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220902130413/https://www.tampabay.com/opinion/2020/06/27/heres-what-ufs-historian-says-about-the-gator-bait-history-and-controversy-column/ |url-status=live }}
* {{Cite magazine |last=Wallrich |first=Bill |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=I1jdZ3m2uFgC&dq=%22Alligator+bait%22+slang&pg=RA9-PP138 |title=Where the Air Force Gets Its Slang |magazine=Air Force: The Magazine of American Air Power |volume=37 |issue=9 |pages=118–126 |date=September 1954 |publisher=Air Force Association |language=en |via=Google Books |access-date=2023-02-27 |archive-date=2023-02-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230228223051/https://books.google.com/books?id=I1jdZ3m2uFgC&dq=%22Alligator+bait%22+slang&pg=RA9-PP138 |url-status=live }} {{free access}}
* {{Cite book |last=Winter |first=Nevin O. |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=loc.ark:/13960/t7hq4js21&view=1up&seq=442 |title=Florida, the land of enchantment |publisher=The Page Company |year=1918 |series="See America first" series |location=Boston, Mass. |pages=310 |language=en-us |lccn=18002916 |oclc=1511192 |via=[[HathiTrust]] |access-date=2023-02-27 |archive-date=2023-02-27 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230227013458/https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=loc.ark:/13960/t7hq4js21&view=1up&seq=442 |url-status=live }}&nbsp;{{free access}}
{{refend}}
{{refend}}

[[Category:African-American cultural history]]
==Further reading==
[[Category:Slavery in the United States]]
* {{Cite book |title=Ethnic notions : Black images in the white mind : an exhibition of Afro-American stereotype and caricature from the collection of Janette Faulkner : September 12-November 4, 1982 |date=1982 |publisher=Berkeley Art Center |others=Janette Faulkner, Robbin Henderson, Pamela Fabry, Adam David Miller |isbn=0942744004 | location=Berkeley, Calif. |lccn=82001314 | oclc=8219750 | quote=This collection contains a large number of functional items dating from 1847 to the present...The stereotyping, style, composition, and line of the items reflects society's responses to slavery, the Emancipation Proclamation, World Wars I and II, and the Civil Rights Movement of the sixties as experiences in this country and as these events were perceived abroad. This collection focuses on caricatures of blacks which have been used to convey fear, support, or rejection of assigned roles. In America, caricature was used to maintain the right to exclude black people, and thus insure a total separation of the races. European caricatures supported America's need to legislate exclusion of Afro-Americans. }}
[[Category:Stereotypes of African Americans]]

== External links ==
* {{YouTube|CQ5LIC2IqwE|"Ugly Chile" by George Brunis and his Jazz Band}}
* {{cite web |first=Will |last=Shetterly |date=2021-11-16 |url=https://medium.com/history-and-identity/why-anti-racists-believe-the-gator-baby-myth-and-more-about-the-history-of-this-racist-folklore-25949ab6b8ed |website=medium.com |title=Why Anti-racists believe the Gator Baby Myth, and More about the History of this Racist Folklore}}
* {{cite web |url=https://esnpc.blogspot.com/2020/04/live-human-alligator-bait-fact-or.html?m=1 |title=Live Human "Alligator Bait" - Fact or Fiction |last=Brown |first=Peter Jensen |date=2020-04-09 |website=Early Sports and Pop Culture History Blog}} - list of "alligator bait" newspaper reports, analysis of authorship, etc.

{{commons category|Alligator bait}}
{{African American caricatures and stereotypes}}
{{Urban legends}}

[[Category:Alligators and humans]]
[[Category:American legends]]
[[Category:American legends]]
[[Category:Anti-African and anti-black slurs]]
[[Category:Anti-black racism in the United States]]
[[Category:Florida folklore]]
[[Category:Folklore of the Southern United States]]
[[Category:Anti-black racism in Florida]]
[[Category:History of racism in the United States]]
[[Category:History of racism in the cinema of the United States]]
[[Category:Stereotypes of African Americans]]
[[Category:Urban legends]]
[[Category:Urban legends]]
[[Category:Racism in the United States]]

Latest revision as of 03:23, 7 May 2024

Illustration of a swampy scene in Florida; three young black children are seated on a log across a small pool of water from an alligator displaying its open mouth. The middle child wears a broad-brimmed hat. In the background are palm trees and a cabin next to open fields. The top of the postcard reads "Alligator Bait, Florida".
Early 20th century postcard depicting black children as "alligator bait"

Depicting African-American children as alligator bait was a common trope in American popular culture in the 19th and 20th centuries. The motif was present in a wide array of media, including newspaper reports, songs, sheet music, and visual art. There is an urban legend claiming that black children or infants were in fact used as bait to lure alligators, although there is no meaningful evidence that children of any race were ever used for this purpose. In American slang, alligator bait is a racial slur for African-Americans.

Popular culture[edit]

In the American popular imagination, black children were commonly used as bait for hunting alligators,[1] which are one of the central apex predators of the folklore of the United States, along with cougars, bears and wolves.[2] The reasons for dubbing black babies "alligator bait" are unknown, but the identification may be a consequence of earlier associations of African crocodiles—a relative of American alligators—with Africa and its people.[3] Gators largely live in the swamplands of the Southern United States, which were one place people escaping enslavement hid to evade capture.[3] According to popular legend, enslaved people who disappeared in swamps may have been killed by alligators; children were understood as particularly vulnerable to attacks by alligators, and that identification may have evolved into the bait image.[3] Alligator lore draws from "a shared dread of these reptilian creatures that come out of the water to eat dogs and children."[4]

The alligator bait image is a subtype of the racist pickaninny caricature and stereotype of black children, where they were represented as almost unhuman, filthy, unlovable,[5] unkempt,[6] "unsupervised and dispensible."[7] In 19th and 20th century American popular media, stereotyped depictions of black children were common:

[Black children in popular media had] wide toothy grins, rolling white eyes, shiny dark faces, and uncontrollably kinky hair...Supportive props [included] watermelon, bales of cotton, and alligators...The more vicious scenes devalued black children's lives to the extent that entrepreneurs claimed they were 'dainty morsel,' 'free lunches' or 'gator bait' for carnivorous reptiles.

— Wilma King, African American Childhoods[6]

Drawings of black babies luring alligators were printed by companies like Underwood & Underwood[8] on postcards,[9] cigar boxes, and sheet music covers,[10] The trope also appeared in films[11] and in paintings.[12] The sheet music drawings were almost purely symbolic; the images of black children being hunted by alligators were not represented in almost any corresponding music, though other songs (without the iconography) did have alligator bait as a component.[13] In general, the drawings reinforced the racist belief that black people were victims to nature,[14] and that their race made it reasonable to assume they should die terribly.[15] Alligator-bait-themed postcards and greeting cards were part of a larger genre of anti-black racist ephemera known as coon cards.[16] American Mutoscope and Biograph Company produced a pair of short films in 1900[17] called The 'Gator and the Pickaninny and Alligator Bait. In the former, "a black man with an ax unhesitatingly attacks an alligator that has swallowed a small black boy; as a result, the boy, Jonah-like, is restored."[11] In the latter, according to the film-company catalog, "A little colored baby is tied to a post on a tropical shore. A huge 'gator comes out of the water, and is about to devour the little pickaninny, when a hunter appears and shoots the reptile."[18] Due to the popularity of the idea, letter openers were manufactured in designs resembling alligators, some of which came equipped with small replicas of black children's heads to be placed in the alligator's mouth.[19]

Nine dark-skinned African-American children, all naked, several with exposed male genitalia, all appearing to be toddlers between ages one and three, sit or stand in a variety of body positions; original caption reads Alligator bait with a copyright notice by McCrary & Branson of Knoxville, Tennessee dated 1897
"Alligator Bait" photograph published by McCrary & Branson, 1897 (British Library)

The title "Alligator Bait" for an 1897 collage of nine African-American babies posed "on a sandy bayou" was supposedly suggested by a hardware-store employee in Knoxville, Tennessee as part of a naming contest with a cash prize. By 1900, the photo had sold 11,000 copies and brought in US$5,000 (equivalent to about $183,120 in 2023) for McCrary & Branson.[20][21] In 1964, a New Jersey editorial writer recalled a copy of the photo—meant to "elicit an amused appreciation"—that had once hung in a local shop. The newspaper editor described the image as "immoral" and equivalent to "viciously pornographic pictures."[22] American studies professor Jay Mechling concludes his essay (about how alligators are used in cultural messaging) on a similar note:

To discover the ways in which these symbols and stories carry anti-female and anti-black meanings is to see the ideology packed into our most taken-for-granted attitudes toward the world. Thinking anew about the symbolic alligator becomes a moral act, perhaps a moral duty, as we resist the power of the 'myths that think themselves in our minds.'

— Jay Mechling, American Wildlife in Symbol and Story[23]
Two alligators menace a stereotyped black man clambering into a stereotyped palm tree, a woman in colorful dress runs away comically screaming; original caption: "Honey come down we are waiting for you in Florida"
"Topics: Racism, ethnic wit and humor, 1898-1920" (National Museum of American History)

Adult black males[24] were presented in a similar manner as the babies: A 2003 Museum of Florida History exhibit called The Art of Hatred: Images of Intolerance in Florida Culture included postcards that "depict black people getting eaten by alligators as a joke. 'Free lunch in the Everglades, Florida' reads one."[25] Such postcards were common well into the 1950s.[26] The image of black children being put in peril to lure alligators remains present in popular culture in the 21st century.[27]

In her 1994 book Ceramic Uncles & Celluloid Mammies: Black Images and Their Influence on Culture, Patricia Turner, an African American studies professor who has researched the alligator bait cultural phenomenon, notes that stories of "alligator bait" are invariably narrated by whites, sometimes grouping "Negroes and dogs" together as similarly overawed with fear of alligators. There are no equivalent stories in 19th and 20th century black folklore collections.[28]

Turner argues that the repetitive, insistent "alligator bait" iconography of partially clothed young children placed in danger of predation by large reptiles is not so much a stereotype or an urban legend as wishcasting: "They implicitly advocate...aggression in eliminating an unwanted people[29]...the alligator is an accomplice in an effort to eradicate, or at least intimidate, the black."[30] Mechling is more sexually explicit, arguing that white storytellers use the culturally constructed idea of "alligator-ness" in these images and stories to symbolically emasculate African American and Native American men alike.[31] Claudia Slate, a professor of English at Florida Southern College, makes an analogy to the terroristic practice of lynching in the United States and argues "Containment of African Americans was a top priority for southern whites, and instilling fear, whether by actual ropes or imagined reptile attacks, served this purpose."[32]

Historicity debate[edit]

The idea that anyone was intentionally using children for alligator hunting was debunked in print as early as 1918; a Florida guidebook reassured potential tourists that "upon reliable authority [an alligator] will not attack a human, regardless of the fiction that pickaninnies are good alligator bait."[33][non-primary source needed] In 1919 a Port St. Lucie newspaper column complained, "Many years ago this serious error was perpetrated on Florida by an advertising agent of a railroad running through the South...Florida's portion was [advertised with] pictures of moss hung swamps, rattlesnakes, alligators, and negro babies labelled 'alligator bait'... this harmful psychology became very popular..doubtless many foreigners believing that these babies were actually used for alligator bait."[34][non-primary source needed] In 1926 a columnist for The Eustis Lake Region called it "a piece of Florida fiction going the rounds which ancient spinsters in snowbound lands delighted to repeat as truth. It gave them a feeling of virtuous superiority over the denizens of the pleasant land of Florida."[35][non-primary source needed]

In May 2013, Franklin Hughes of the Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia at Ferris State University in Michigan argued that due to the number of periodicals which mention the use of black children as bait for alligators, it likely occurred, though it was not widespread or became a normal practice. Hughes essentially argues that since there was no discernible limit to the dehumanization and degradation of African Americans in the U.S. national history, feeding children to animals for sport cannot be precluded as a possible reality.[36] Four years later, Hughes argued again that it likely occurred, though he also found an article from Time magazine, contemporaneous to one alleged incident printed in newspapers, which denied that the practice ever occurred and that the report was a "silly lie, false and absurd".[37] In the 19th and early 20th century several stories were printed in American newspapers about the alleged practice.[36] Academics have not assessed the authorship and likely veracity of these scattered news items, but Snopes article from 2017 was unable to find any meaningful evidence that the practice occurred; Patricia Turner told Snopes it likely never did.[38] The Snopes writer said it was impossible to prove a negative claim, and that no proponents of the historicity of the practice have met their burden of proof by providing any evidence of the practice, although the trope of black children being the favorite food of alligators was already widespread in the antebellum United States.[38] Jay Mechling's study of the American folklore of the alligator notes that "A common folk idea among whites is that alligators have a preference for blacks as a food source."[39] For example, a 1850 article in Fraser's Magazine reported that alligators "prefer the flesh of a negro to any other delicacy".[40] Per Mechling, the earliest instance of this lore is in a 1565 slave trader's account, and as late as the mid-20th century, in a story by Florida writer Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, a gator forgoes a group of naked white guys for the opportunity to gorge itself on an individual black man instead.[39]

Alligator with black man in his jaws; card caption is "Free lunch in the Fla. Everglades"; full text of "The Florida Gator" poem is "Have you met the Florida Gator? He is the champion negro hater Although he finds many things to eat his favorite morsel is Negro meat"
Have you met the Florida Gator? He is the champion negro hater; this postcard image and lyric first appeared in the 1930s[24] (Florida International University Libraries)

Linguistic use[edit]

In American slang, alligator bait (or 'gator bait) is a chiefly Southern slur aimed at black people, particularly children; the term implies that the target is worthless and expendable.[41] A variant use, albeit also expressing distaste, was alligator bait as World War II-era U.S. military slang for prepared meals featuring chopped liver.[42] The use of alligator bait to mean poor food (poor in senses of both flavor and socioeconomic class) had fallen out of use in the military by 1954.[43]

The derogatory use of alligator bait is likely pre-Civil War in origin.[44][45] In 1905 a Vienna, Georgia paper reported high cotton prices and wrote "The bench-legged pickaninny, once so attractive as alligator bait, is now tenderly nurtured and gets three 'squares' a day, for on him hangs the future hopes of big crops."[46] In 1905 a postcard with no alligator imagery but picture of a crying black baby was sent to one Delia with the message "this is great alligator bait."[47] In 1923 the Moline, Illinois sports page reported "The Plows used a wee hunk of alligator bait as bat boy yesterday, but the luck turned the other way. At any rate it must be admitted that the little fellow's presence added color."[48][non-primary source needed] University of Florida fans were using the "uncomplimentary phrase" against Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets players in 1939.[49][non-primary source needed]

Alligator bait appears in the lyrics of a 1940s swing-era jazz song called "Ugly Chile" (originally published 1917 as "Pretty Doll" by Clarence Williams). The song, which ends with a joke shared between performer and audience, is described as a "exorcism of an unacceptable fact" that is "funny and cogent in even the most unprivileged of readings.[50] The version recorded by George Brunies goes:

Oh how I hate you
You alligator bait you
You knock-kneed, pigeon-toed, box-ankled too,
There's a curse on your family and a spell on you.

In 1968 Major League Baseball pitcher Bob Gibson recalled the slur being used against him while playing in Columbus, Georgia: "There was a particular fan there who used to ride me. He called me alligator bait. But then I found out just for kicks local folks would tie Negro youngsters to the end of a rope and drag them through swamps, trying to lure the alligators...That's where Negroes stood in Columbus."[51][non-primary source needed] The Columbus sports page editor wrote a column castigating Gibson for bringing it up: "All local citizens, white and Negro, have already recognized [alligator bait] for the myth that it is...I wouldn't be naive enough to deny that there were probably some rough things hurled at Gibson...but swamps and alligators? Really, Bob?"[52][non-primary source needed] In 2020, the University of Florida ended the "Gator Bait" chant during athletic events; university historian Carl Van Ness said the chant likely started after the 1950s, and though it may not have originated from the racial slur, the two were connected.[53] In the late 1990s African-American UF player Lawrence Wright popularized the phrase "If you ain't a Gator, you must be Gator Bait."[54]

Similar tropes[edit]

The concept of children luring predators separately existed in colonial Ceylon (today's Sri Lanka). Sri Lankan children were said to have been used as bait for crocodiles, and several newspapers published stories and drawings of the purported practice.[55]

Image gallery[edit]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Dean (2000), p. 22.
  2. ^ Mechling (1987), p. 75.
  3. ^ a b c Dean (2000), p. 33.
  4. ^ Mechling (1987), p. 73.
  5. ^ Fulton (2006), pp. 127–128.
  6. ^ a b King (2005), p. 123.
  7. ^ Slate (2009), p. 93.
  8. ^ Finley (2019), p. 18.
  9. ^ Journal of Blacks in Higher Education (1999).
  10. ^ Dean (2000), pp. 22–23.
  11. ^ a b Leab (1973), pp. 61.
  12. ^ Tuck (2009), p. 417.
  13. ^ Pearson (2021), pp. 32–33.
  14. ^ Cox (2010), p. 207.
  15. ^ Hatfield (2018), p. 124.
  16. ^ Journal of Blacks in Higher Education (2) (1999).
  17. ^ "The 'Gator and the Pickaninny (1900)".
  18. ^ "Alligator Bait (1900)".
  19. ^ Dean (2000), p. 23; Dubin (1987)
  20. ^ Moser (1900).
  21. ^ Knoxville Journal and Tribune (1900).
  22. ^ Madison Eagle (1964).
  23. ^ Mechling (1987), p. 92.
  24. ^ a b Slate (2009), p. 94.
  25. ^ Hauserman (2003).
  26. ^ Slate (2009), p. 95.
  27. ^ Hinton (2009), pp. 101, 103.
  28. ^ Turner (1994), pp. 32–35.
  29. ^ Turner (1994), pp. 36.
  30. ^ Turner (1994), pp. 38.
  31. ^ Mechling (1987), pp. 78–84.
  32. ^ Slate (2009), p. 91.
  33. ^ Winter (1918).
  34. ^ St. Lucie News Tribune (1919).
  35. ^ Eustis Lake Region (1926).
  36. ^ a b Hughes (2013).
  37. ^ Hughes (2017).
  38. ^ a b Emery (2017).
  39. ^ a b Mechling (1987), pp. 85–87.
  40. ^ Emery (2017); Fraser's Magazine (1850)
  41. ^ Herbst (1997), p. 8.
  42. ^ Dickson (2014), p. 117.
  43. ^ Wallrich (1954).
  44. ^ Spears (1981), p. 7.
  45. ^ Calt (2010), p. 4.
  46. ^ Vienna News (1905).
  47. ^ Baldwin (1988).
  48. ^ Anderson (1923).
  49. ^ Bradberry (1939).
  50. ^ Adams & Park (1956), pp. 18–19.
  51. ^ Chapin (1968).
  52. ^ Darby (1968).
  53. ^ Van Ness (2020).
  54. ^ Staples (2020).
  55. ^ de Silva & Somaweera (2015), p. 6806.
  56. ^ Slate (2009), p. 92.

Bibliography[edit]

References[edit]

Primary sources[edit]

Further reading[edit]

  • Ethnic notions : Black images in the white mind : an exhibition of Afro-American stereotype and caricature from the collection of Janette Faulkner : September 12-November 4, 1982. Janette Faulkner, Robbin Henderson, Pamela Fabry, Adam David Miller. Berkeley, Calif.: Berkeley Art Center. 1982. ISBN 0942744004. LCCN 82001314. OCLC 8219750. This collection contains a large number of functional items dating from 1847 to the present...The stereotyping, style, composition, and line of the items reflects society's responses to slavery, the Emancipation Proclamation, World Wars I and II, and the Civil Rights Movement of the sixties as experiences in this country and as these events were perceived abroad. This collection focuses on caricatures of blacks which have been used to convey fear, support, or rejection of assigned roles. In America, caricature was used to maintain the right to exclude black people, and thus insure a total separation of the races. European caricatures supported America's need to legislate exclusion of Afro-Americans.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)

External links[edit]