smoked Irishman
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From the joint low status of blacks and the Irish in Britain and the United States during the 19th century.
Noun
[edit]smoked Irishman (plural smoked Irishmen)
- (derogatory, ethnic slur, dated) A black man.
- 1969, Harper's Magazine: Volume 239:
- The smoked Irishmen — the colored (no one says black; few even say Negro) — represent change and instability, kids who cause trouble in school, who get treatment that your kids never got, that you never got.
- 1972, John C. Livingston, Robert G. Thompson, The dissent of the governed: readings on the democratic process:
- "We get fairly good salaries, and this is a good neighborhood, one of the few good ones left. We have no smoked Irishmen around."
- 2010, Loren Avey, The Pole Creek Crossing, page 214:
- When asked about his Irish name, and how he came by that, McCracken replied "I's smoked Irish, Judge, just another smoked Irishman."