Humans have always depended on animals. From the beginning of human history, wild animals provided food, clothing and sometimes medicine.
We may not depend as much on wild animals now. But we hear about them every day. Americans use the names of animals in many ways.
Many companies use animals to make us want to buy their goods. Automobile companies, for example, love to show fast horses when they are
trying to sell their cars. They also name their cars for other fast powerful animals.
Automobile manufacturers and
gasoline companies especially like to use big cats to sell their products. They like lions, tigers and
wildcats.
When Americans say
wildcat, they usually mean a lynx, an ocelot or a bobcat. All these cats attack quickly and fiercely. So
wildcats represent something fast and fierce.
What better way is there to sell a car than to say it is as fast as a
wildcat. Or, what better way is there to sell
gasoline than to say that using it is like putting a tiger in your tank.
An early American use of the word
wildcat was quite different. It was used to describe members of Congress who declared war on Britain in eighteen twelve. A magazine of that year said the
wildcat congressmen went home. It said they were unable to face the responsibility of having involved their country in an unnecessary war.
Wildcat also has been used as a name for money. It was used this way in the eighteen hundreds. At that time, some states permitted banks to make their own money. One bank in the state of Michigan offered paper money with a picture of a
wildcat on it.
Some banks, however, did not have enough gold to support all the paper money they offered. So the money had little or no value. It was called a
wildcat bill or a
wildcat bank note. The banks who offered this money were called
wildcat banks.
A newspaper of the time said those were the days of
wildcat money. It said a man might be rich in the morning and poor by night.
Wildcat was used in another way in the eighteen hundreds. It was used for an oil well or gold mine that had almost no oil or gold in it. Dishonest developers would buy such property. Then they would sell it and leave town with the money. The buyers were left with
worthless holes in the ground. Today,
wildcat oil wells are in areas that are not known to have oil.
Yet another kind of
wildcat is the
wildcat strike. That is a strike called without official
approval by a union. During World War Two, an American
publication accused
wildcat strikers of slowing government production.
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