bushwhacker DCHP-1 (pre-1967)
THIS ENTRY MAY CONTAIN OUTDATED INFORMATION, TERMS and EXAMPLES
1 n.
a person who takes up land in the bush, clears it, and makes a home there, back from the centres of civilization; backwoodsman.
See also: backwoodsman
- c1902  (1912)  And were the men carving a way through the wilderness only the bushwhackers who have pioneered other forest lands?
- 1845  The bush whacker is nothing of the "bog trotter" in his appearance. . . .
- 1959  It is on the subject of pioneers--trailbreakers, bushwhackers, sodbusters, homesteaders--that [he] waxes most eloquent. . . .
2 n.
a country person; a rough, unrefined backwoodsman.
- 1833  There are, perhaps, few children of the same age in Halifax that read better than this little bush-whacker of Tatamagouche.
- 1887  There was a lot of country fellows, regular bushwhackers, laying around . . . asking us all sorts of questions. . . .
- 1916  . . . I am not sure whether it was one of Macdonald's plugs or another sort . . . which furnished bushwhacker wags with the bogus five-cent pieces that sometimes dropped into the collection plate.
3 n.
a person living in the bush and familiar with its ways.
See also: bushman (def. 2)
- 1910  "Come on, this old bush-whacker ought to be glad to see us, if it's only to hear a voice that isn't his own!"
- 1963  [The Canada jay] is the companion and familiar of the backwoodsman, the bushwhacker, the lumber jack and the trapper.