Hobo Symbols From The Great Depression: The Secret Language Of America’s Itinerant Workers – Design You Trust — Design Daily Since 2007

Hobo Symbols From The Great Depression: The Secret Language Of America’s Itinerant Workers

In 1972 American industrial designer Henry Dreyfuss (March 2, 1904 – October 5, 1972) published The Symbol Sourcebook, A Comprehensive Guide to International Graphic Symbols.

“A ready reference aid and an inspiration to designers . All in all the best book now available on symbols.” –Library Journal.

This visual database of over 20,000 symbols provided a standard for industrial designers around the world. He included a section of 60 hobo signs, used by ‘transient working class men and women who traveled by train to communicate with one another in the Great Depression, late nineteenth and early twentieth century.

“This unparalleled reference represents a major achievement in the field of graphic design. Famed industrial designer Henry Dreyfuss recognized the importance of symbols in communicating more quickly and effectively; for many years he and his staff collected and codified graphic symbols as they are used in all walks of life throughout the world. The result is this “dictionary” of universally used graphic symbols. Henry Dreyfuss designed this sourcebook to be as practical and easy to use as possible by arranging the symbol information within ingeniously devised sections: Basic Symbols represents a concise and highly selective grouping of symbols common to all disciplines (on-off, up-down, etc.).

Disciplines provides symbols used in accommodations and travel, agriculture, architecture, business, communications, engineering, photography, sports, safety, traffic controls, and many other areas. Color lists the meanings of each of the colors in various worldwide applications and cultures. Graphic Form displays symbols from all disciplines grouped according to form (squares, circles, arrows, human figures, etc.) creating a unique way to identify a symbol out of context, as well as giving designers a frame of reference for developing new symbols.”

More: Amazon h/t: flashbak, we find wildness

Jules J. Wanderer noted in his 2001 paper ‘Embodiments of bilateral asymmetry and danger in hobo signs’ one way these signs worked was by tapping into the American brain’s natural bias for right over left:

“For example, paths, roads, or trails were not marked with words indicating they were ‘preferred directions’ to travel or places to be ‘avoided.’ Instead objects were marked with hobo signs that discursively differentiate paths and roads by representing them in terms of bilateral asymmetry, with right-handed directions, as convention dictates, preferred over those to the left.”

If you want more awesome content, subscribe to 'Design You Trust Facebook page. You won't be disappointed.

More Inspiring Stories

Mildly Uplifting Drawings by Worry Lines
This Mural Was Painted Upside-Down To Reflect Off Of The Water
Artist Creates Beautiful Paintings Based On Vintage Images To Merge The Past And Present
This German Grandma Spends 30 Thousand Euros To Tattoo Her Whole Body
Metal Gear Rising: Reveangance Promo Murals
Man Spent $13,000 To Turn His Apartment Into A Baked Beans Museum
Into The Canvas: One Model, Incredible Makeup, And No Photoshop
"Unminding Sky": Hyperrealistic Oil Paintings Looking Through Rainy Windshields
Finally, 2022 Texts From My Cat Calendar Is Here!
Rock ’N’ Roll On Wheels: 30 Photos Of The Coolest Customized Vans Of The 1970s
This Artist Paints Icons from Star Wars as Renaissance War Generals and Religious Figures
Astonishing Nano Sculptures By Jonty Hurwitz
Jenny On The Job: 8 Posters Of An Ideal Woman Emancipated By World War 2
Prada Marfa: The IIlegal Roadside Ad
"Journey to the East": The Superb Concept Art Works by Dom Lay
The Unintentionally Homoerotic Chinese-Soviet Communist Propaganda Posters, 1950-1960
Bodies Of Strange Creatures Were Found In The Basement Of An Old House In London
Feather Paintings by Julie Thompson
"Wake Up, Beauty!": The Superb Digital Concept & Fantasy Art Works of Tony Sart
A Collection of Fabulous Potato-Themed Real Photo Postcards From the Early 20th Century
Amazing Van Gogh Paintings Re-Created On Matchboxes By Salavat Fidai
Incredible Color Photographs That Show What Life Was Really Like in Britain in the 1950s
Artist Shows In Comics How She And Her Husband Are Spending Days In Self-Isolation
This Dino-Man Photoshops Himself Into Famous People's Photos