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Locofocos
Lucifer-matches; self-lighting cigars were so called in North
America in 1834. (Latin, loco-foci, in lieu of fire.)
“In 1835 during an excited meeting of the party in Tammany Hall, New
York, when the candles had been blown out to increase the confusion,
they were lighted with matches then called ‘locofocos.’” —Gilman: The American People, chap. xxi.
Locofocos.
Ultra-Radicals, so called in America because, at a grand meeting
in Tammany Hall, New York, in 1835, the chairman left his seat, and the
lights were suddenly extinguished, with the hope of breaking up the
turbulent assembly; but those who were in favour of extreme measures
instantly drew from their pockets their locofocos, and relighted the
gas. The meeting was continued, and the Radicals had their way. (See Gilman: The American People, chap. xxi.)
Source: Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, E. Cobham Brewer, 1894 More on Locofocos from Infoplease:
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