possible etymologiesPossibly from Victorian sporting slang, meaning young wildfowl in August which are full-sized, tender and worthwhile quarry, but are naive and unable to fly properly due to the late development of flight feathers in ducks and geese. Alternative derivations are also suggested. The word "flap" was slang in in the 17th century for a prostitute
James Mabbe (1572 – 1642), Celestina IX. 110 "Fall to your flap, my Masters, kisse and clip. Ibid. 112 Come hither, you foule flappes."
by the late 19th century in England "flapper" could mean either a very young prostitute
Barrere & Leland, Dictionary of Slang: "Flippers, flappers, very young girls trained to vice" (1889)
or a teenage girl too old to be a child and too young to be considered 'out' in society: "A 'flapper', we may explain, is a young lady who has not yet been promoted to long frocks and the wearing of her hair 'up'"
The Times, Thursday, Feb 20, 1908; pg. 15; Issue 38574; col F
.
The earliest documented use in the sense of "attractive young girl" is in the 1903 novel Sandford of Merton by Desmond Coke: "There's a stunning flapper."
Oxford English Dictionary, 1989 edition.
. The word also suggested a spirited girl of unconventional or mischievous disposition. An advertisement in the The Times
The Times, Wednesday, Jul 15, 1914; pg. 1; Issue 40576; col B
reads: "The father of a young lady, aged 15 – a typical “FLAPPER†– with all the self assurance of a woman of 30 would be grateful for the recommendation of a seminary (not a convent) where she might be placed for a year or two with the object of taming her."
By 1912 the word had apparently both crossed the Atlantic and evolved to mean a slightly older girl: British stage impresario John Tiller defined it for readers of the New York Times as meaning "a girl who has just "come out". She is at an awkward age, neither a child nor a woman..."
New York Times, March 31, 1912:'Some facts about the ballet'
. The word had clearly caught on, as a Mme. Nordica is quoted using it in the New York Times of January 1, 1913: "...a thin little flapper of a girl donning a skirt in which she can hardly take a step, extinguishing all but her little white teeth with a dumpy bucket of a hat..."
By 1920 in England it clearly meant any young woman of a pleasure-seeking disposition: a Dr R. Murray-Leslie criticized "the social butterfly type...the frivolous, scantily-clad, jazzing flapper, irresponsible and undisciplined, to whom a dance, a new hat, or a man with a car, were of more importance than the fate of nations."
The Times, Thursday, Feb 05, 1920; pg. 9; Issue 42326; col A