Patrick Mutch
Miguel Gonzalez- Lehighton, Pa
Jennifer- Jersey City, NJ
Lori- Walnutport, PA
Rosa Uribe- Bethlehem, PA
Annette Hoiem- Waymart, PA
Misty D- Waymart, Pa

| Specific meaning " | To catch a fish with a hook" |
| is from c | He was even more popular with his men |
| so the stories go | because bands of prostitutes called “Hooker’s Brigade” or “General Hooker’s Army” followed his battalions and helped the men relax after a hard day on the battlefield |
| It wouldn’t be at all surprising that soldiers and others might have made the obvious connection between Hooker’s last name and the existence of prostitutes in and around Union army encampments during the Civil War | and that they made jokes about it |
| Among white Union soldiers there was a total of 73 | 382 syphilis cases and 109 |
| 397 gonorrhea cases | - |
| - | ” These stories became so common that they’ve spawned a famous myth — |
| that Fightin’ Joe’s last name was the origin of the slang term for a prostitute — | a hooker |
| Women could not enlist in the service | but they could marry a man in the service and enroll with him as a cook or laundress |
| The term hooker did not originate with Union General Joseph Hooker | but he certainly popularized it during the war |
| One early theory traces it to Corlear' | - |
| a section of New York City | ” “Additionally |
| soldiers quickly named the hordes of female camp followers that plied their trade on young and often naive soldiers | ‘Hookers Legions |
| ’ His men were a rowdy bunch and his headquarters was a den of iniquity | Rob Dalessandro |
| of the U | - |
| “Hookers” supposedly followed their namesake throughout the Civil War and | unfortunately for his otherwise |
| - | chaste reputation |
| that myth has stuck | ” So there’s very strong evidence from multiple sources that “hooker” for “prostitute” was in use well before the outbreak of the Civil War |
| Once they arrived back in Nashville | - |
| 3 1 Texas Bad Girls | Hussie |
| Harlots and Horse Thieves | That all public women found plying their vocation without a license and certificate be at once arrested and incarcerated in the workhouse for a period of not less than thirty days |
| And in recent years | of course |
| the innocent expression “hook up” has taken on a salacious meaning—to have casual sex | 975 would mean " |
| Maker of hooks | - |
| or else refer to an agricultural laborer who used a hook compare Old English " | Weed-hook" |
| - | HOOKER |
| - | That a building suitable for a hospital for the invalids be taken for that purpose |
| and that a weekly tax of fifty cents be levied on each prostitute for the purpose of defraying the expense of said hospital | General Hooker’s Hookers - Professor Buzzkill 3 minutes of reading Civil War Buzzkillers have been after me for months and months to put this commonly-heard legend to rest |
| Joseph Hooker | a skirt-chasing Union commander who briefly led the Army of the Potomac |
| responsible for the word “hooker” | - |
| General Hooker’s hankering for prostitutes was so well known that he’s credited with inspiring the name of a red-light district in Washington | “Hooker’s Division |
| - | - |