
Clara Bow – 1921 public domain via wikimedia commons
Flappers.
Usually when we hear the word flapper we think of young women in the 1920s with bobbed hair, short skirts who smoked, drank gin martinis, and might even have occasionally gone to bed with men they were not married to.
F. Scott Fitzgerald has a lot to answer for.
Over the last year or so, I’ve been researching the Friends of Russian Freedom, a loose group of early English socialists, Tolstoyans and dreamers who allied themselves with with groups of middle class escapees from Tsarist repression in pre revolutionary Russia.
In the press at the time the catch all term for Russian political exiles was ‘anarchist’ – not socialist, not communist, not Tolstoy’s utopian peasant anarchism, but just plain anarchist.
This is where we get the image of the anarchist throwing a bomb – it was often the preferred means by which revolutionists still inside Russia used to assassinate tsarist officials such as senior police officers and city governors.

Now as part of this research, I’ve been looking into the meetings of Russian political exiles in England – before World War One the British government adopted a relaxed attitude letting Russian politicals come and go provided they didn’t commit any acts of violence on British soil – something that was reciprocated on the revolutionist’s side with no less a person than Lenin vetoing terrorist acts in Britain – afterall they might need a bolthole if the victory of the proletariat didn’t eventuate.
But what struck me about this report from 1914 was the use of the word ‘flapper’.
Like most people I’d seen its use as a 1920s thing.
So I checked with Google’s ngram viewer to get an impression of the usage of the word

and while the peak is in the early 1920s, there’s a gradual increase in usage from 1900 onwards.
Searching Trove for mentions in newspapers produced, in among articles about duck hunting, a few articles describing flappers, or Oxford flappers, as young women who wore their hair down and affected short skirts – something outrageous in the Edwardian era


Unfortunately I’ve not been able to find a photograph of an Edwardian period flapper, so we’ll have to use our imaginations, but it’s clear it was a recognised female subculture of the time

The best I could manage was this 1913 cartoon from the Cambrian Mail saterizing older women who adopted flapper styles.
A hunt through Welsh Newsapers online was enough to convince me that a flapper was a recognised female subculture in Edwardian Britain

At the same time, I did wonder if the ‘Oxford Flapper’ was another term for ‘bluestocking’, those brave young women who studied at Oxford and Cambridge before women were awarded degrees and were properly admitted to university education, but I’ve found no proof of this.
Finally I tried the Oxford English Dictionary

and there we have it two different usages, one from before World War One and one from after.
(If you have access to the OED online it’s worth doing a search and scrolling down to the examples they cite showing how the usage changed…)













