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Subermarine Toilets
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Does anyone know why a toilet on a subermarine is called the 'Head' in the US?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Not just submarines, but vessels in general. The term was used in the UK around the 1700s, but is now generally regarded as an American expression.
The front of a vessel is called the head, and that's where sailors used to hang over the side to do their business - that way the bow-wave would wash the side of the hull and keep it clean.
The front of a vessel is called the head, and that's where sailors used to hang over the side to do their business - that way the bow-wave would wash the side of the hull and keep it clean.
Some claim it is an abbreviation of �cathead', the beam that protrudes for a few feet at each side of the bow and which the anchor used to be hauled up to. (Personally, I find it hard to imagine some poor Jack Tar squatting on an exposed, projecting beam in a force 9 gale!)
Whichever, the latrine was "at the front"...ie head...of the vessel, as Heathfield says above.
Whichever, the latrine was "at the front"...ie head...of the vessel, as Heathfield says above.
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