See also: camboose (def. 3) camp (def. 1c) log shanty (def. 2) lumber shanty (def. 1)
- 1829  As these people live in huts in the woods . . . which huts are houses only for a season, they are called shanties, and hence, shantymen. . . .
- 1883  Monahan's shanty . . . is a capital specimen . . . of backwoods architecture.
- 1961  This [museum] . . . includes a full-size replica of a logging shanty or camboose camp. . . .
1c n. Hist. a boarding-house or bunkhouse erected at a work camp for the accommodation of miners, loggers, etc.
See also: sleeping camp
- 1861  (1965)  There are now upwards of 600 persons at work at the gold fields. A number of "shanties" have been erected for the accomodation of the "diggers". . . .
- 1905  The camp was situated in the woods, and consisted of board shanties sufficient to accomodate 500 people.
- 1945  Straight ahead was "the shanty," where the Indians lived. . . .
2a n. Hist. a camp at which logging (def. 2) is carried on.
See also: camboose camp (def. 2) chantier (def. 2) logging (def. 2) logging camp lumber shanty (def. 2)
- 1829  In these shanties they pass the time pretty well, considering them to be made up of Highlandmen, Irishmen, and Yankees.
- 1834  Last winter in a "shanty" at Lassomption a few American sleighs (dragged by one horse) tracked a road for themselves, which was free from Cahots. . . .
- 1911  At dinner time . . . most o' the men's working close to the shanty, so they come in for dinner.
- 1960  In the early period of the trade, the shanty was an unruly haven of the "rugged individual."
2b n. Hist. See quote.
- 1829  . . . but there is something more attached to the name shanty than mere hut, in the lumberman's dictionary. Thus, so many men, oxen, so much pork, flour, &c. compose a shanty.
2c n. Hist. the gang of loggers who work together and live in the same dwelling.
- 1883  So the very next day the two confederates who were causing all the trouble in the other shanty, were ordered . . . to go to work in Larry's shanty, and their place was supplied by two of his best and most peaceful men.
- 1902  (1957)  Every man in the shanty, cook included, got on the piece [a monster mast] and danced . . . to the music of the fiddle for the two miles' distance between the shanty and the landing place at the forks of the Ouse.
2d n. Hist. go to shanty, enter the bush in winter to work as a logger in the shanties (def. 2a).
See also: shanty ((n.)) (def. 2a)
- 1870  The stalwart lumbermen "go to shanty" without the slightest dread of cold. . . .
- 1947  Paddy Farrell of Pembroke, who for many years was a "walking boss" for camps operated by the Gillies Company, recalls the first time he ever "went to shanty."
- 1964  What it was that took thousands of men up the Opeongo Line, can only be guessed or dimly felt by those of us who never "went to shanty."
2e n. Hist. put in shanty, establish a logging camp.
- 1945  In the busy years, the firm often "put in shanty" in the Rideau Lakes area . . . to cut floats and traverses. . . .
3a n. Hist. a crude one-room dwelling of logs patterned after the shanty (def. la) and much used by the pioneers, usually to serve as a temporary dwelling until a more substantial house could be built.
See also: shanty ((n.)) (def. 1a)
- 1833  (1926)  I incline myself to the regular routine; a wigwam the first week; a shanty till the loghouse is up; and the frame, brick or stone house half a dozen years hence, when I have a good clearing and can see which will be the best situation.
- 1840  (1842)  The shanty is a sort of primitive hut in Canadian architecture, and is nothing more than a shed built of logs, the chinks between the round edges of the timbers being filled with mud, moss, and bits of wood. . . .
- 1961  A shanty [as opposed to a cabin or a house] had just two openings, one for a door and one in the roof to permit the smoke to escape.
3b n. a rude dwelling, especially one of wood, usually in a rundown condition.