Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Wangan
Wan′gan
,Noun.
[American Indian.]
A boat for conveying provisions, tools, etc.; – so called by Maine lumbermen.
[Written also
wangun
.] Bartlett.
Definition 2024
wangan
wangan
English
Alternative forms
- wangun, wanigan, wannigan
Noun
wangan (plural wangans)
- (US, Maine, lumber trade) A boat for conveying provisions, tools, and so forth.
- (US, Maine, lumber trade) Any location or cache of equipment, such as a camp, building, or chest of supplies or tools.
- 1942, Dickinson Rich, Louise, We Took to the Woods, JB Lippincott Co, LCCN 42024308, OCLC 405243, page 183-184:
- I should explain "wangan." It is an Indian word, and can mean almost anything, like the Latin res. It can mean a camp or building. Pond-in-the-River wangan—or Pondy wangan, as the drivers call it—is a long, low shack a third of a mile above us, where the Rapid River crew lives during the drive. There is a sign in the bunk-house that reads, "Wangan open an hour after supper." That refers to the store where the cook sells candy, tobacco, snuff, and clothing. (It really is a big box in the kitchen [...].) The cook may say, "I lost my wangan when the work boat swamped," and that means that his dishes are at the bottom of the lake. Or he may complain, "The wangan's runnin' low," meaning this time that he's short of food. Or a man may take his wangan and fly—leave the job with his little bundle of personal belongings. You can tell only by the context what the word means, and it's a very convenient word to know."
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- (US, Maine, lumber trade) The company store debt of lumbermen.
References
- ↑ 1910, Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico, edited by Frederick Webb Hodge, part 2, page 910