"Midget" may also refer to a smaller version of play or participation, such as midget golf; or to anything designed for very young (i.e., small) participants—in many cases children—such as Disneyland's Midget Autopia, midget hockey, and midget football.[11] Some sports organizations, like Hockey Canada, have committed to removing the word, recognizing that it might be considered offensive.
Merriam-Webster states that the first use of the term "midget" was in 1816.[8] Midgets have always been popular entertainers but were often regarded with disgust and revulsion in society. In the early 19th century, midgets were romanticized by the middle class and regarded with the same affectionate condescension extended to children, as creatures of innocence.[12] The term "midget" came into prominence in the mid-19th century after Harriet Beecher Stowe used it in her novels Sunny Memories of Foreign Lands and Old Town Folks where she described children and an extremely short man, respectively.[13]P. T. Barnum helped popularize the term "midget" when he began featuring General Tom Thumb, Lavinia Warren and Commodore Nutt in his circus.[14] "Midget" became linked to referring to short people put on public display for curiosity and sport.[13] Barnum's midgets reached position of high society, given fantasy military titles, introduced to dignitaries and royalty, and showered with gifts.[15][16]
When interviewed for a 1999 piece, performers engaged in midget wrestling stated that they did not view the term as derogatory but merely descriptive of their small size. Others disagreed, with one stating that the performances themselves perpetuated an outdated and demeaning image.[1]
Towards the end of the 20th century, the word became considered by some as a pejorative term when referring
to people with dwarfism.[7][13][20][21] Some, such as actor Hervé Villechaize, continued to self-identify as "midgets".[22]
There have been movements to remove the use of the word "midget" from age classification categories in youth sports, with Hockey Canada announcing that it would refer to the division as "U18" in 2020 as part of a wider renaming scheme.[23][24]
In the United Kingdom, Liverpool Hope University academic Dr. Erin Pritchard who complained the word midget, considering its etymology and its use as a slur (often referred by people with dwarfism as "the M-word"), was offensive to people with dwarfism and campaigned to have it removed from the name of the confection midget gems. Marks & Spencer became the first retailer to rename their product, adopting the name Mini Gems.[25] Other brands started to follow suit over the following months and years.[26][27] Dr. Pritchard then petitioned to have a pub in Abingdon-on-Thames called The Midget, named after a vehicle produced by MG Cars which was formerly based locally, renamed. The pub's owners, Greene King followed suit in 2024 renaming it The Roaring Raindrop after another MG Cars model.[28] However, this decision was controversial with a counter-petition to keep the old name.[29][30]
In 2019, Hurley High School in Wisconsin changed its Mascot from midgets to the Northstars.[37] In 2025, a Iowa State Senator Molly Donohue introduced a bill to prohibit schools receiving state aid , including Estherville Lincoln, from using "discriminary mascots" including midgets.[38] Also in 2025, an advocacy filed a federal discrimination complaint with the U.S. Department of Education against the St. Clair County school district over the mascot at Freeburg High School.[39] State Rep. Maurice West submitted a bill to the Illinois House of Representatives that would ban the mascot by 2028.[40][41] The House passed the bill on April 8, 2025.[42] A similar bill was introduced in the Missouri House of Representatives.[43]
^"midget". Webster's II New Collegiate Dictionary (2nd expanded ed.). Boston & New York: Houghton Mifflin Company. 1999. p. 693. ISBN0395962145. 1. An extremely small person who is otherwise normally proportioned.