Dictionary Definition
outhouse n : a small outbuilding with a bench
having holes through which a user can defecate [syn: privy, earth-closet,
jakes]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- An outbuilding, a small structure located away, or not directly accessed from, a main building.
- An outdoor toilet, (or often just a seat over a cesspool) in a wooden cubicle, where the term is usually referring to a permanent facility. Where an outdoor toilet is installed on a temporary basis, the term portable toilet is generally used. The slang terms john and johnny house are sometimes used to identify an outdoor toilet; see also privy.
Related terms
Translations
outbuilding
- Chinese:
- Finnish: ulkorakennus
- German: Nebengebäude
outdoor toilet
Extensive Definition
An outhouse, (also known as a netty, privy,
dunny, thunderbox, kybo, biffy, jakes (originally pronounced, and
occasionally spelled "jacks"), shit house or earth-closet) usually
refers to a type of toilet in a small structure
separate from the main building which does not have a flush or
sewer attached.
Terminology
The term outhouse originally referred to an
outbuilding, or any small structure away from a main building, used
for a variety of purposes, but mainly for activities not wanted in
the main house. Outhouses are used for storage, animals, and
cooking, to name a few uses. Larger structures have names such as
barn or
stable.
In North
American English, an outhouse (sometimes also called a
backhouse) is now a small enclosure around a pit that is used as a
toilet. Other names
include the "shitter", "shithouse", "longdrop", "crapper", "the
johnny on the spot", "pool", "bank", the "one-holer" or "two-holer"
(for the more affluent and effluent) and more. One well-built
example had four large holes, and one child-sized.
The term in Chilean
Culture is Aldaco. In Brazil, especially
in rural areas of Rio
Grande do Sul, an outhouse is often called patente.
Dunny or Thunderbox
In Australia the
outdoor toilet is frequently referred to as a dunny or "thunderbox". Waste
deposited in earth closets was also euphemistically referred to as
"nightsoil". In
suburban areas not connected to the sewerage, such outhouses were
not built over pits. Instead, waste was collected into large cans,
or "dunny-cans", which were positioned under the toilet, to be
collected by contractors (or "nightsoil collectors") hired by the
local council. Collected waste matter would then be removed from
the premises and disposed of elsewhere. The contractors would
replace the used cans with empty, cleaned cans. Until the 1970s
Brisbane
relied heavily on this form of sanitation. [] See also, the
discussion of Australia's Kosciusko National Park, infra.
Long Drop
In New Zealand
such toilets are referred to as 'long-drops'. These are the usual
toilet-variety found on tramping tracks and other locations where
water is unavailable for flushing. Less commonly bachs
may have these instead of flush toilets.
Biffy
The term biffy is sometimes encountered in the
context of U.S. Girl Scouting, and may have originated with the
"BFI" logo of
what was at one time Browning-Ferris
Industries (now part of Allied
Waste Industries), a waste collection company whose trade lines
in some markets include the servicing of portable toilets. Campers
are told the term is an acronym for "Bathroom in the Forest For
You." An alternate explanation: when backpackers prepare a cathole
or trench latrine in their overnight campsite (even embellishing it
with fresh-cut flowers), they call it the BIFF - Bathroom In Forest
Floor. A backpacking group will carry a zip-lock bag with a trowel,
toilet
paper, and a lighter (to burn the used tissue); this bag is
known as "the BIFF key".
The term "biffy" appears to have originally been
a localism in Minnesota and adjoining places. Students studying
linguistics in the mid-20th century were given the sample sentence,
"If I said 'meet me at the biffy' what would you think?" Hysterical
laughter would convulse the class as the professor queried students
from other regions and logged their responses.
Kybo
The term "kybo" is popular within the Scout Movement
worldwide. The term "kybo" may have originated at the Farm and Wilderness Camps in Vermont where it
came from the coffee cans (Kybo brand coffee) that held the lye or
more often lime used to keep odor to a minimum and aid
decomposition. It was only after Kybo coffee (Motto: a cup full of
satisfaction) was no longer available and the cans were no longer
used that folks began to come up with other possible reasons for
the term "kybo". The word is believed by some to have originated as
an acronym for "Keep
Your Bowels
Open" although this may be a backronym. An interesting
aside is that toilet paper
is often referred to as "Kybo Tape" or "Kybo Wrap". The term
appears in summer camp
folklore as a parody of
"Downtown":
-
- When you are sleepy and it's time to go peepee there's a place
to go… kybo
- When you are droopy and it's time to go poopy there's a place to go… kybo
- Just listen to the rhythm of the froggies in the toilet,
- Even though it's smelly I am sure you will enjoy it
- The lights are not on in there, but you forget all your worries,
- Forget all your cares in the kybo
- Isn't it fun to go… kybo
- When you are droopy and it's time to go poopy there's a place to go… kybo
- When you are sleepy and it's time to go peepee there's a place
to go… kybo
Kybos are firmly woven into the lore of RAGBRAI, the
Register's Annual Great Bicycle Ride Across Iowa. Although Kybo
portable toilets were eventually replaced by other brands, the term
"kybo" is still commonly used. "Kybo Roulette", in which riders
waiting in line guess which toilet door will open next, is a common
and celebrated diversion on the ride. See external link below to
view "Adopt-A-Kybo" humor piece.
Controversies, trends and records
Outhouse design, placement and maintenance has long been recognized as being important to the public health. See posters created by the Works Project Administration.The growing popularity of paddling, hiking and
climbing has created special waste disposal issues throughout the
world. It is a dominant topic for outdoor organizations and their
members. [] In fact, a grass roots organization -- Hikers
Against Doo-Doo, also known as HADD -- exists dedicated to
providing information, insight and strategies for addressing the
problem of waste disposal. [] The response to the growing problem
has varied around the world.
- On August 29, 2007, the highest outhouse in the continental United States — which sat atop Mount Whitney at about 4,418 meters (14,494 feet) above sea level, offering a magnificent panorama to the user — was removed. Two other outhouses, in the Inyo National Forest, will be closed within the year. All were closed due to the expense and danger involved in transporting out large sewage drums via helicopter. The annual 19,000 or so hikers of the Mount Whitney trail, who must pick up National Forest Service permits, are now given Wagbags (a double-sealed sanitation kit) and told how to use them. "Pack it in; pack it out" is the new watchword. [] Solar powered toilets did not sufficiently compact the excrement, and the systems were judged failures at that location. Additionally, by relieving park rangers of latrine duty, they were better able to concentrate on primary ranger duties, e.g., talking to hikers. [] The use of Wagbags and the removal of outhouses is part of a larger trend in U.S. parks. []
- In 2007, Europe's highest outhouses (two) were helicoptered to the top of France's Mont Blanc at a height of 4,260 meters (13,976 feet). The dunny-cans are emptied by helicopter. The facilities will service 30,000 skiers and hikers annually; thus helping to alleviate the deposit of urine and feces that spread down the mountain face with the spring thaw, and turned it into 'Mont Noir'. [] More technically, the 2002 book Le versant noir du mont Blanc (The black hillside of Mont Blanc) exposes problems in conserving the site. []
- However, atop the 5,642 meters (18,510-feet) Mount Elbrus -- Russia's highest peak, the highest mountain in all of Europe and (at least) topographically dividing Europe from Asia -- sits the world's "nastiest outhouse" at 4,206 meters (13,800 feet). It is in the Caucasus Mountains, near the frontier between Georgia and Russia and a 'stone's throw' from troubled Chechnya. As one writer opined, ". . . it doesn't much feel like Europe when you're there. It feels more like Central Asia or the Middle East" (Per Outside Magazine 1993 search and article). [] The outhouse is surrounded by and covered in ice, perched off the end of a rock, and with a pipe pouring effluvia onto the mountain. It consistently receives low marks for sanitation and convenience, but is considered to be a unique experience. See []
- Australia's highest "dunny" -- located at Rawson's Pass in the Main Range in Kosciuszko National Park which each year receives more than 100,000 walkers outside of winter and has a serious human waste management issue -- is scheduled to be completed in 2007, before the snow arrives. []
- A stone outhouse in Colca Canyon Peru has been claimed to be "the world's highest." []
- Many reports document the use of Dunny cans (complete with pictures) for the removal of excrement, which must be packed in and packed out on Mount Everest. Also known as "expedition barrels" [] or "bog barrerls," [] the cans are weighed to make sure that groups don't dump them along the way. [] "Toilet tents" are erected. [] [] This would seem to be an improvement over the prior practices, including the so-called "McKinley system"; there has been an increasing awareness that the mountain needs to be kept clean, for the health of the climbers at least. See []
- An important feature which distinguishes an outhouse from other forms of toilets is the lack of connection to plumbing, sewer, or septic system.
- Walls and a roof for privacy and to shield the user from the elements -- rain, wind, sleet and snow (depending on locale) and thus to a small degree, cold weather. Floor plans typically are rectangular or square, but hexagonal outhouses have been built.[] Thomas Jefferson designed and built two brick octagons at his vacation home.[]
- Outhouse door design: There is no standard for door design. The well-known crescent moon on American outhouses was popularized by cartoonists and had a questionable basis in fact. There are authors who believe the practice began during the colonial period as an early “mens”/ “ladies” designation for an illiterate populace. (The sun and moon being popular symbols for the genders during those times. . Others refute this by arguing that the claims are unverified . What is certain is that the purpose of the hole is for venting and light and there were a wide variety of shapes and placements employed.
- Outhouses are common throughout history. Outhouse
humor is likewise a constant, which usually involves someone
either being trapped in one, falling into the hole, or other social
faux
pas. Privy-tipping,
the act of knocking over the external structure to expose the
person within, also features in rural humor. Aside from generic
bathroom jokes, some are specific to outhouses, such as this
time-honored one-liner, which any rural sort might say, usually
making fun of his background:
- "We had a fire in the bathroom; luckily, it didn't spread to the house!"
- A 1559 oil-on-oak-panel painting, Netherlandish Proverbs (also known as "The Blue Cloak" or "The Topsy Turvy World") by Pieter Brueghel the Elder, depicts a land populated with literal renditions of Flemish proverbs of the day. Outhouses are humorously used to illustrate a couple of the aphorisms.
- A 1983 computer game for the TRS-80 Color Computer titled Outhouse by J. Weaver, Jr. distributed by Computer Shack, in which the player controls a flying saucer defending an outhouse from earthlings sticking its toilet paper in their backside and walking out with it.
- For those persons or avatars who inhabit a virtual world and have an electronic elimination problem, 3-dimensional digital privies are now available. []
- The Simpsons have explored the subject of outhouses from time to time. One eighth season episode mentioned a two-story outhouse. See also, Episode 357, "The Bonfire of the Manatees". []
- The double-decker outhouse has been used as an unflattering metaphor for the "Trickle-down theory" of politics, economics, command, management, labor relations, responsibility, etc. See [] See also [] Depending on who is depicted on top and below, it is an easy and familiar cartoon. []
- Speaking of cartoons, on November 10, 2003, a drawing of an outhouse was used by B.C. (comic strip) cartoonist Johnny Hart as a motif in a controversial and allegedly religiously-themed piece. []
- The Jeff Daniels play and movie Escanaba in da Moonlight features a scene where a man shoots a buck through the back wall of the deer camp's outhouse, having heard the animal sniffing around behind it as he was relieving himself within.
- Also in Michigan, the Upper Peninsula's Trenary has the largest outhouse race (Ripley's Believe It or Not, Hardcover - Sep 2004) ISBN 0439465532)[] but Mackinaw City is home to an annual and largest "outhouse race south of the Mackinac Bridge".[]
- Charles Chic Sale was a famous comedian in vaudeville and the movies. In 1929 he published a small book, The Specialist ISBN 0285632264 which was just earthy enough to be a hugely popular "underground" success, and just tactfully worded enough to not risk being banned. Its entire premise centered on sales of outhouses, touting the advantages of one kind or another, and labeling them in "technical" terms such as "one-holers", "two-holers", etc. See *The Specialist by Charles (Chic) Sale (as told in 1929). Over a million copies were sold. In 1931 his monolog "I'm a Specialist" was made into a hit record (Victor 22859) by popular recording artist Frank Crumit (music by Nels Bitterman). As memorialized in the "Outhouse Wall of Fame" [], the term "Chic Sale" became a rural slang synonym for privies, an appropriation of Mr. Sale's name that he personally considered unfortunate. Id.
- Folksinger Billy Edd Wheeler wrote and performed a song titled "The Little Brown Shack Out Back", a surprisingly sentimental look at the outhouse (lyrics are worth the read, and the song is worth the listen).[] The song is often played on the Dr. Demento radio show.
- Another comedy song written by Richard M. Sherman & Milt Larsen was recorded by the New Society Band (Spike Jones alumni) now on the CD, Bon Voyage Titanic: Sherman & Larsen's Smash Flops! (The Orchard, March 13, 2002) — "The True Legend of Jesse James" ("They shot him in the outhouse"). []
- Coincidentally, an outhouse is prominently featured as the setting of a pivotal shooting in Clint Eastwood's "Unforgiven".
- The U.S. National Park Service once built an outhouse that cost above $333,000.
- As a college student, Richard Nixon achieved renown by providing a three-hole outhouse to be tossed onto the traditional campus bonfire.
- The United States Army has long been concerned with outhouses and so-called natural functions. It is the subject of many colorful army acronyms and nicknames. Particularly on point is the so-called "John Wayne" which, among other things, refers to the toilet paper from the Meal, Ready-to-Eat, or MRE (pronounced "M-R-E") because "it's rough, it's tough, and it don't take shit from nobody." See List of U.S. Army acronyms and expressions.
- Bob Ross (not the painter or publisher) did several books of poetry that are centered in the outhouse (e.g., "Muddled Meandering In An Outhouse Number 2"), and is memorialized at the Outhouse Wall of Fame. []
- Surprisingly, outhouses have been the subject of haiku. []]
- Tsi-Ku also known as Tsi Ku Niang is described as the Chinese Goddess of the outhouse and divination. It is said that a woman could uncover the future by going to the outhouse to ask Tsi-Ku. []
- Old outhouse pits are seen as fertile ground (no pun intended) for archeological and anthropological digs, offering up a trove of common objects from the past -- a veritable inadvertent time capsule -- which yields historical insight into the lives of the bygone occupants. It is especially common to find old bottles, which seemingly were secretly stashed or trashed, so their content could be privately imbibed. See []
See also
- Clivus
- Composting toilet
- Dunny
- Ecological sanitation
- Feces
- Flush toilet
- Human feces
- Humanure
- Latrine
- Pay toilets
- Portable toilet
- Sanisette
- Sanitation
- Toilet
- Toilet history
- Toilet paper
- Urinal
Literature and further reading
- Ronald S Barlow: The Vanishing American Outhouse. Windmill Publishing 1992. ISBN 0-933846-02-9
- 'Jackpine' Bob Cary: The All-American Outhouse -- Stories, Design & Construction. Adventure Publications, Inc. 2003. ISBN 9781591930112
- Peter Joel Harrison: Garden Houses and Privies, Authentic Details for Design and Restoration. John Wiley & Sons, 2002. ISBN 0471203327 Member of the Outhouse Wall of Fame []
- Charles Chic Sale and William Kermode (Illustrator): The Specialist. Souvenir Press, 1994. ISBN 0285632264 | ISBN-13: 9780285632264
- Sewer History: Photos and Graphics Historical graphics, photos, and plans for outhouses]
- Colonial Williamsburg Journal Necessary and Sufficient (article about outhouses in colonial America)]
- Outhouses of America Tour
- Outhouse Wall of Fame
- Sewer history
- An outhouse near Traskwood, AR
outhouse in German: Plumpsklo
outhouse in French: Latrine à fosse simple
outhouse in Lithuanian: Išvietė
outhouse in Norwegian: Utedass
outhouse in Polish: Sławojka
outhouse in Finnish: Kuivakäymälä
outhouse in Swedish: Utedass
outhouse in Samogitian: Šikininks
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Nissen hut, Quonset hut, WC, backhouse, basement, bathroom, booth, can, closet, comfort station, convenience, crapper, crib, earth closet, gatehouse, head, hut, hutch, jakes, john, johnny, johnny house, kiosk, latrine, lavatory, lean-to, necessary, office, outbuilding, pavilion, powder room, privy, rest room, sentry box,
shack, shanty, shed, stall, toilet, toilet room, tollbooth, tollhouse, urinal, washroom, water
closet