Talk:Hiring and mop fairs

Latest comment: 7 years ago by DavidBrooks in topic Etymology

Wales and Ireland

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High Street, Omagh

A search for "hiring fair" in Wikimedia Commons brings up several pictures from Wales and Ireland which mention hiring fairs. Information about Welsh or Irish hiring fairs could be included here.--Johnsoniensis (talk) 20:28, 10 June 2014 (UTC)Reply

Etymology

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I see three different origins for the term "mop fair" on the main page:

  • housemaids held brooms or mops; this is why some hiring fairs were known as mop fairs.
  • A servant with no particular skills would carry a mop head[citation needed].
  • The 'tassle' worn on their lapel was the emblem of the employee's trade and was known as a 'mop' — hence the term "mop fair".

and not a citation amongst the lot. Unfortunately, I wouldn't know where to start looking, but someone certainly should. Please? Meanwhile, I think I need to add citation tags to the two origins that don't already have them.

*Septegram*Talk*Contributions* 21:07, 2 June 2015 (UTC)Reply

@Septegram:: The second paragraph of the Hiring article in the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica talks about these fairs. Most significantly, it defines the Mop Fair as a later second round of the Hiring Fair. It has two derivations for the name: the third of those listed above, and yet another (mop=fool). It also claims "Runaway Mop" as another name for Mop Fair. There are no citations for any of that, which is routine for EB1911. I don't have access to the more modern scholarship cited in this article, so someone else can decide whether the EB1911 material is worth inclusion. I'm removing the inline EB1911 cite because it does not relate to the footnoted text, and changing the {{EB1911}} to a {{Cite EB1911}} because there is no attributable text in the WP article. David Brooks (talk) 20:16, 17 October 2017 (UTC)Reply