Goldfish swallowing
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (February 2013) |
Goldfish swallowing was an American school fad starting in the 1920s, where a live goldfish is swallowed.
It is not clear how the fad emerged: various people have made claims. A 1963 letter to the New York Times claimed that the fad began in late 1938 when Lothrop Withington Jr., a Harvard freshman with "[class] presidential aspirations," was encouraged by his "campaign managers" to do so as a publicity stunt: "Reporters and photographers were inadvertently present in the Harvard Freshman Union when Withington swallowed his live goldfish (with a mashed potato chaser) and started a nationwide fad in the spring of 1939." The editor replied that "unless the Editor's memory is deceiving him, the goldfish-swallowing craze among school and college boys had begun at least as early as 1930."[1] However, a Time magazine noted in a 1939 article, "Harvard Freshman Lothrop Withington Jr., son of a onetime (1910) Harvard football captain, started the fad sweeping U. S. campuses...".[2]
See also
References
- ^ Newman, Harry, Jr. "The Goldfish Swallowers." Letter to New York Times, February 27, 1963, p. 6
- ^ "Goldfish Derby". Time. April 10, 1939. Retrieved 2007-10-04.
External links
- Goldfish Swallowing at Bad Fads Museum
- College Fads from The St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture[dead link]