a boy (as a stableboy) who does menial work
I think both of the youn men in the article had been in trouble with the law. Or at least they both could have been in trouble, being young and in the wrong neighborhood. But to call them jackboys seemed like a localism I'd never heard elsewhere. Granted, parts of Jacksonville do have horse stables, but I assume when one uses the term for someone involved in a crime, it has nothing to do with the horse-stabling class.
I'm going to assume the term jackboy is akin to low-life or working-class-grunt. I didn't find any evidence it's a racist term, but I suppose it's ageist and classist. Maybe like a deckhand or hired-man on a farm, but I'm still not positive how it applies to a crime scenario.
Search New Jax Witty
|
Satisfamily - Articles about being happy as a family
Passive Ninja - Web Design in Jacksonville
McNewsy - Creative Writing
Educabana - Educational Resources
Brave New Church - Church Website Design
Voucher School - Pros and Cons of School Vouchers
Luthernet - Web Design for Lutheran Churches
Sitcom Life Lessons - What we've learned from sitcoms
Mancrush Fanclub - Why not?
Epic Folktale - Stories of the unknown
Wild West Allis - Every story ever told about one place
Educabana on Teachers Pay Teachers (mostly ELA lessons)
Real Wisconsin News - Satire from Wisconsin
Zoo Interchange Milwaukee - Community website
Chromebook Covers - Reviews and opinions
Brian Jaeger - Resume (I'm always interested)
Contact Me