Red-red-red-red-red-red-redneck! The term “redneck” is a staple of country music lyrics, where it’s typically a light-hearted and loud-and-proud descriptor of life in the rural South.
But what does the word actually mean, and where did it come from?
Most people assume that the term “redneck” came from the sunburn a person got when they were baking in the Southern heat all day.
And that’s the truth — at least, the short version. But the full history has all kinds of surprising twists and turns. Keep reading, and you might learn something you didn’t know about the word “redneck.”
When Was the Term “Redneck” Invented?
Most of our story takes place in America, but it did have an emergence in 17th-century Scotland, when dissenting Protestant Conventers (Presbyterians) rebelled against the Crown. They inked signatures in their own blood on manifestos and wore red scarves around their necks, earning the nickname “redneck.”
Centuries later, in the Southern U.S., the term heated up again.
“Redneck” first appeared in the Oxford English Dictionary in 1893, defined as “a name applied by the better class of people to the poorer [white] inhabitants of the rural districts.” Southern Cultures adds that people probably used the word for several years prior to that.
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It emerged from the lower Mississippi Valley region —i.e. states like Mississippi, Louisiana, Tennessee and more — and seemed to be used pretty much universally as a slur.
Southern Cultures also posits a theory that the term dates back even further, when enslaved Black Americans used the term “peckerwood” — an inversion of “woodpecker” — to describe poor rural white people, as a distinction from the symbol of a blackbird they embraced for themselves. “Redneck” could have emerged as a descriptor from the red head of the woodpecker.
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Some scholars have also theorized that the white sharecroppers and working class refused to wear hats in the latter half of the 1800s, wanting to distinguish themselves from the emancipated Black workers who typically did so. Hence the sunburn, and the “red neck.”
The tensions between the white working class and enslaved (and later, emancipated) Black Americans is a throughline through all these theories. All these centuries later, the meaning of “redneck” still has a strong racist implication. History offers plenty of examples of that stereotype being deserved.
There was a major white nationalist and neo-Nazi clothing shop and hub called The World Famous Redneck Shop in Laurens, S.C., which featured a “Klan Museum” and sold racist clothing items and Klan robes. (That property was later purchased by a Black Baptist church in a pretty incredible turn of events, but that’s a fascinating story for another time.)
Still, it’s usually a good idea to be a little suspicious of narratives that pit the poor against the poor.
The elite stereotyping of “rednecks” as inherently ignorant, low-class and prejudiced overlooks quite a bit of historical fact, including the word’s association with class solidarity during the West Virginia Mine Wars.
How Did “Redneck” Become Slang For “Communist”?
In 1921, the Battle of Blair Mountain — the largest labor uprising in U.S. history — saw the formation of an army 10,000 coal miners strong rising up to fight the coal companies over anti-unionization and unfair labor practices.
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Striking miners wore red bandanas in a show of solidarity. Though the the term “redneck” had been slang for poor, rural white people for the past 50 years already, it gained a new definition as the coal bosses’ derogatory term for these workers.
Shortened to “reds,” the term was also meant to imply to the general public that these miners were “highly organized Communist instigators,” according to the Daily Yonder.
The publication cites West Virginia Mine Wars Museum historian Wilma Steele’s point that coal companies wanted to create the impression that striking workers were “both unmanageable and primitive as well as foreign militants coming to overthrow the U.S. government.”
Read More: 10 of the Most Redneck Songs Ever
The coal companies secured an overwhelming victory in the Battle of Blair Mountain, as the miners ceded defeat after the U.S. Army intervened by presidential order.
But it raised awareness of the deplorable working conditions coal miners faced, and contributed to the the now-widespread knowledge of how predatory coal companies were and are toward their impoverished Southern and Appalachian workers.
The plight of the coal miner got its due in pop culture and country music through the 20th century. For an example, look to “Sixteen Tons” — a classic song written by Merle Travis, and popularized by Tennessee Ernie Ford in 1955. Ford’s version was No. 1 for 10 weeks on the country charts, and eight weeks on the pop charts.
Meanwhile, authorities’ attempts to associate “redneck” with Communism outlasted the Battle of Blair Mountain.
In 1932, an article published in the New Republic quotes a coal baron, describing the shooting of a Young Communist League organizer, as saying, “He didn’t give the redneck a chance to talk, he just plugged him in the stomach.” (quote via Patrick Huber’s Red Necks and Red Bandanas.)
The Daily Yonder reports that the miners who promoted Communist sentiments weren’t historically associated with foreign governments, despite the coal baron quoted in the New Republic describing this redneck as a “Bolshevik.” They were just anti-capitalists who were fed up with being forced to work in dangerous conditions for pennies.
For evidence, check out this video of Sarah Ogan Gunning, a singer-songwriter and protest artist from a mining community in eastern Kentucky, singing “I Hate the Capitalist System.”
The Modern History of the Word “Redneck”
Though the harmful stereotypes of the word “redneck” have prevailed, Southerners and rural folks have embraced the term for themselves.
“Redneck chic” emerged as a fashion and pop culture trend across the 1970s and ’80s, according to the Journal of Popular Music Studies. It was buoyed by a boom in entertainment that centered around country music and the redneck lifestyle.
The Osbourne Brothers recorded Felice and Boudleaux Bryant’s “Rocky Top” in 1967, and by the mid-’70s, the song was becoming an integral part of the University of Tennessee’s Volunteers football games. The song would be officially adopted as the fifth state song of Tennessee in 1982.
Read More: The History of NASCAR in 30 Stunning Photos
NASCAR’s popularity was on the rise across the U.S., too. CBS broadcast flag-to-flag coverage of the Daytona 500 for the first time in 1979, including a brawl between two drivers after the race — a thrilling TV moment that put national attention both on NASCAR, and on redneck pastimes more generally.
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Also on fans’ screens, The Dukes of Hazzard ran from 1979 to 1985, further heightening redneck fever across the country.
And who could forget the Swedish group Rednex and their bizarre, popular take on the format with the 1994 novelty super-hit “Cotton Eye Joe”?
During the ’80s, comedian Jeff Foxworthy got the idea to start making his now-iconic “You Might Be a Redneck” jokes.
Playing off his own small-town raising outside of Atlanta, Ga., Foxworthy made his name on one-liners that start with “If you ever mowed your lawn and found a car…” “If your family tree doesn’t fork…” and “If you refer to the fifth grade as ‘my senior year…‘” and ends, “…you might be a redneck.“
Speaking to Extra in 2026, the now-67-year-old Foxworthy said that his “You Might Be a Redneck” jokes started at New York City clubs in the ’80s when fans would come up to him after his shows and suggest he take vocal lessons to get rid of his “stupid accent.”
“And I would say, ‘Well, where I come from, you have a stupid accent,'” he recalls. Once he decided to own his redneck credentials during his sets, he realized that a lot of fans were relating to his redneck jokes — even in the big city.
“And the next night, people weren’t only laughing, they were pointing at each other,” he remembers.
What Country Songs Have the Word “Redneck” In Them?
Plenty of country stars have realized the same truth as Foxworthy: That singing about the redneck lifestyle relates to lots of fans.
George Strait‘s “You Sure Got This Old Redneck Feeling Blue,” Alan Jackson‘s “It’s Alright to be A Redneck,” the Bellamy Brothers‘ “Redneck Girl” and David Allan Coe‘s “Longhaired Redneck” are just a small sample of the large catalog of country songs dedicated to celebrating the term.
Hardy‘s “The Redneck Song,” Blake Shelton‘s “Boys ‘Round Here” and Jason Aldean‘s “Hicktown” are a few more newer ones.
And those are just songs that explicitly mention the word. Country music is chock-full of songs that celebrate a scrappy, Southern, means-by-no-means lifestyle.
Keep scrolling for a list of modern songs with a traditional slant — many of which embrace a redneck sensibility.
50 Great Modern Traditional Country Songs, with Artists
There’s some great traditional country music out there, but you may need to hunt for it. We did the legwork with this list of 50 modern traditional country songs (from 50 different artists!).
Gallery Credit: Billy Dukes

