Why is it Called a Sadie Hawkins Dance?

By the late 1930s and early 1940s, colleges and high schools across the United States had adopted “Sadie Hawkins Day” as a lighthearted social event.

The term “Sadie Hawkins Dance” originates from the American comic strip Li’l Abner, created by cartoonist Al Capp in 1934. In the storyline, which first introduced the concept in 1937, there was a character named Sadie Hawkins, described as “the homeliest gal in the hills.” Her father, desperate to find her a husband, declared a special day—“Sadie Hawkins Day”—on which all the unmarried women of Dogpatch, the fictional setting of the strip, would chase the town’s bachelors.

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