Lo`co*fo"co (?), n. [Of uncertain
etymol.; perh. for L. loco foci instead of fire; or, according
to Bartlett, it was called so from a self-lighting cigar, with a
match composition at the end, invented in 1834 by John Marck of New
York, and called by him locofoco cigar, in imitation of the
word locomotive, which by the uneducated was supposed to mean,
self-moving.] 1. A friction match.
[U.S.]
2. A nickname formerly given to a member of
the Democratic party. [U.S.]
&fist; The name was first applied, in 1834, to a portion of the
Democratic party, because, at a meeting in Tammany Hall, New York, in
which there was great diversity of sentiment, the chairman left his
seat, and the lights were extinguished, for the purpose of dissolving
the meeting; when those who were opposed to an adjournment produced
locofoco matches, rekindled the lights, continued the meeting,
and accomplished their object.