I just got to the end of the TLS letters section featured in yesterday’s post, and found another gem:
Stepneys
It seems odd that a child born at sea should have a birthplace “Stepney” because of a Welsh street where a car’s attachable spare tyre design originated, as Bernard Richards suggests (Letters, December 11). A quick delve into historical commentary shows that the link is likely to be traceable to an old rhyme in London’s East End, taken to mean that children born on British ships can claim to belong to Stepney parish: “He who sails on the wide sea / Is a parishioner of Stepney”. At the beginning of the twentieth century, Stepney borough was formed and its official seal highlighted a sailing ship, at least partly in acknowledgement of the legend. Shipping had been the area’s major industry from its medieval maritime origins.
Alex Faulkner
Lewes, East Sussex
The “spare wheel” sense of the word was mentioned here in 2006, and our favorite Martian, Siganus Sutor, said:
Re: stepney. The word is (still) used in another language in which it also means “spare wheel”, and it is in Mauritian French.
The OED has an entry (not updated since 1933 except to add citations):
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