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Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Towhead?

So I often got called a towhead as a child . The boys get called towheads all the time. I know it refers to someone with really light hair, but Anthony was wondering why people say that, and I had no clue. So here is what I found.

"A towhead also refers to a person with light blond hair. This is based on the hair's resemblance to tow which is coarse or broken flax prepared for spinning. It also refers to someone with 'tousled' hair--(disheveled)
In colonial times, families grew their own flax to make into fabric for clothing. Transforming the flax into thread was a complicated, involved process with many time-consuming steps. After the flax was harvested, it was soaked in water for several days to soften it so the inner fibers could be removed from the stalk. To separate the long, thin fibers from the shorter, coarser ones, the flax was pulled through a bed of nails or combed in a process called "towing." The shorter fibers that were extricated were of a lesser quality and were called "tow." This led to the term "towheads" to describe people, particularly children, whose hair resembled these strands."

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