Has it been eradicate from our vocabulary in the past decade? Will anyone get TP'd tonight? I guess real violence has overtaken the harmless pranks and traditions of the little ghouls and goblins
Has it been eradicate from our vocabulary in the past decade? Did anyone get TP'd last night? I guess real violence has overtaken the harmless pranks and traditions of the little ghouls and goblins
Vermont as well.I grew up in Cresskill and we called it Cabbage night and I have no idea why.
We grew up calling it Goosey Night in Wayne. I didn't find out until I was virtually grown how isolated a regional term it was - mostly Passaic County and a few other nearby areas, and that's it. My wife grew up in Middlesex Co. and looks at me like I'm crazy every time I say it, but then again, she looks at me that way when I say a lot of things.
Yup. Mama Source grew up in Clifton, dad in Paterson, and that was their term, too. I never realized it wasn't universal (or at least all-Jersey) until I was at least late teens, maybe 20.Me too. Clifton.
My wife grew up in southern Bergen and they called it Mischief night
Those must have been some really hard-boiled eggs.It's good that it's going away imo. An occasion that encourages hooliganism is not something that should be tolerated.
I remember there was a case back in Australia 10-15yrs ago where a group off teens egged an old lady's house and ended up accidentally killing her.
Wow. I heard that Bedminster was a tough town,but this?When i was growing up it was called Hell Night. The teenagers used to throw rocks at cars driving by. Broke windows of cars that were parked. Broke house windows. Randomly mugged and jumped people.
And of course setting fires thus the name.
There is a street close to 35 (can't remember the name) where it is sanctioned.It was Mischief Night in West Orange. Limited to a couple eggs from the fridge and TP. Ring door bells and run away. Nothing sinister.
Habit makes me put the car in the garage down here even though it isn't necessary. Hell, I haven't even had a trick or treater in probably 15 years. Any kids in the area go into town to get candy and I guess, cause mischief.
I think hearing about this (I also have an association with Devil's Night and fires in Detroit after the '84 World Series) was my first awareness that the whole world didn't call it Goosey Night. I was 13.I grew up in Michigan: there we called it Devil's Night. Eggs, toilet paper and soap were the tools of choice back then.
Has it been eradicate from our vocabulary in the past decade? Will anyone get TP'd tonight? I guess real violence has overtaken the harmless pranks and traditions of the little ghouls and goblins
I grew up in Belleville and the Nutley area and we always called it Mischief night..Me too. Clifton.
My wife grew up in southern Bergen and they called it Mischief night
I grew up in Belleville and the Nutley area and we always called it Mischief night..
Mischief Night in South Jersey (Willingboro)Me too. Clifton.
My wife grew up in southern Bergen and they called it Mischief night