Ethel Smyth? William Booth? C. S. Lewis? W. H. Auden? Benjamin Harrison? Anonymous?
Question for Quote Investigator: Newspapers have produced hilarious statements due to misprints. According to an entertaining anecdote, a prominent religious figure once visited a town, and the local periodical reported:
After his train had left the station a large crow remained on the platform for half an hour singing ‘Rock of Ages.’
I do not know if this tale is accurate. Would you please explore instances of the crow/crowd misprint?
Reply from Quote Investigator: Newspapers do occasionally substitute the word “crow” for “crowd”. Here is an overview listing examples. The word “verified” appears adjacent to genuine mistakes that occurred in newspapers. The word “unverified” labels instances that were described in newspapers and books. These instances might have been jokes instead of genuine mistakes.
1891: Verified: An enthusiastic crow at the station gave three rousing cheers as the train drew out
1899: Verified: A lively scrap and large, enthusiastic crows at each game made them very gingerful
1913: Verified: A large crow attended singing here Sunday afternoon
1916: Verified: A large crow remained, evidently with the expectation that an early verdict would be returned.
1919: Unverified: A large crow remained on the platform for half an hour singing ‘Rock of Ages’
1933: Verified: Small but Enthusiastic Crow Sees Football Battle Here
1950: Unverified: At the conclusion of the exercises, a large crow remained in the hall, singing ‘Abide with Me’
1986: Unverified: A large crow remained on the platform singing lustily “God be with you till we meet again”
1997: Unverified: Welcomed by ‘a small but enthusiastic crow’
Below are details for selected citations in chronological order.
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