The idiom was once common in literature and film, and has also appeared in musical lyrics.
Dr. Seuss used the term in a 1929 print cartoon "Cross-Section of The World's Most Prosperous Department Store", wherein customers browse through a department store looking for items to make their lives more difficult. The panels show a series of scenarios based on popular figures of speech: a man with a net trying to catch a
fly for his ointment, another looking at
monkey wrenches to throw into his machinery, one examining
haystacks with matching needles, and finally a man looking at a selection of people—drawn with stereotypical Black features—for his woodpile. An American film comedy titled
A Nigger in the Woodpile was released in 1904. Other silent films used the phrase on
intertitles. A visual gag in the
Looney Tunes animated cartoon ''
Porky's Railroad'' from 1937 refers to the phrase. In a 1936
Perry Mason novel reissued in 1988,
The Case of the Stuttering Bishop, Mason says, "And, mind you, unless there is a nigger in the woodpile somewhere, the woman the bishop is inquiring about on the manslaughter business is the mother of the Brownley girl."
Contemporary use by public figures The phrase declined in use during the 20th century, and now its occasional use by public figures has often been followed by controversy and apology. Examples include: During
BBC Sport's coverage of the
1990 FIFA World Cup, Sir
Geoff Hurst, in discussion with
Bob Wilson, used the expression while sitting next to
Garth Crooks, a Black man. In 1994, judge
Inge Bernstein used the term in a summation to a
Liverpool county court jury. She immediately apologised. The plaintiff, who was Black, brought a damages action to the
Court of Appeal supported by
Peter Herbert, the chair of the
Society of Black Lawyers. The appeal was rejected in 1996, ruled as an inadvertent (but highly offensive and inappropriate) mistake which was immediately withdrawn, and one which did not refer to the plaintiff or prejudice the jury against him. In July 2017, the phrase was again used by Conservative Party politician
Anne Marie Morris who said that
Brexit without a deal with the European Union was the "real nigger in the woodpile". She later said, "The comment was totally unintentional. I apologise unreservedly for any offence caused." However, she was suspended the same day by the party's
chief whip, on the orders of the party leader, Prime Minister
Theresa May. The Conservative Party whip was restored to Morris on 12 December 2017, one day before a crucial vote on the Brexit process. Although Morris voted with the Conservative Government, the Government was defeated by four votes. In 2018, it was revealed that
Irish race-car driver and commentator
Derek Daly had used the phrase in a radio interview in May 1983. Daly explained he was a foreign driver now in America, driving for an American team, with an American crew, and with an American sponsor—and that if things did not go well, he would be the only nigger in the woodpile. His comment caused an immediate uproar from people listening in
Gasoline Alley as they warned him of the volatility of that phrase. Daly apologized and said the phrase had been an Irish colloquialism, and was not intended as a racial slur. Once it was revealed, Daly lost his commentator job.
His son, who had not been born at the time the comments were made, also lost his sponsor for
the weekend. In 2019, the
Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) ruled that radio station
2GB breached the Commercial Radio Code of Practice when the broadcaster
Alan Jones used a "racially charged phrase" during a segment in 2018. ACMA received numerous complaints after Jones used the controversial phrase in August 2018, while discussing the looming second
Liberal Party of Australia leadership spill. "The nigger in the woodpile here, if one can use that expression – and I'm not going to yield to people who tell us that certain words in the language are forbidden – the person who's playing hard to get is
Mathias Cormann", Jones told listeners. ACMA found that, while the phrase was widely considered racist, its use in the broadcast did not likely incite "hatred", "serious contempt" or "severe ridicule". 2GB's management agreed the term would not be used on-air again. In November 2019, a former
Downing Street aide alleged that
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor (then entitled Prince Andrew, Duke of York), had used the phrase during a private meeting in 2012 about trade. In June 2020, a city
councillor in
Taupō, New Zealand, was subject to official complaints and a code of conduct investigation after using the phrase in a council meeting. In November 2021, the vice chairman of
South Kesteven District Council in
Lincolnshire, England, Councillor Ian Stokes, was suspended from his party and later resigned after using the phrase while chairing a governance and audit committee on 20 October. The meeting had been broadcast live on
YouTube and sparked a petition calling for his resignation. == See also ==