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stories: Nagging Question

What’s the Origin of the Phrase “Dive Bar”?

By Roxanne Webber

It’s much older than the hipsters who frequent them

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the colloquial use of the word dive to describe a “drinking den” or “other disreputable place of resort” comes from the fact that these types of establishments were originally housed in cellars or basements, into which “frequenters may ‘dive’ without observation.”

The OED says the first documented use of the phrase appeared in the New York Herald in July 1871: “One of the gayly decorated dives where young ladies … dispense refreshments to thirsty souls.” It appears again in 1882, then in an 1883 edition of Harper’s Magazine (“opium-smoking dives”). It is directly used in reference to a tavern in 1886: “A grand entrance takes the place of the tavern, which is relegated to down below, and is called a ‘dive.’”

CHOW’s Nagging Question column appears every Friday. Got a Nagging Question of your own? Email us.

Roxanne Webber is an associate editor at CHOW.

Published October 23, 2008

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