OMG: Churchillian Origins of the Popular Texters’ Phrase
Q: Whence OMG?
“I work for New York Times Upfront, a magazine run by Scholastic Inc. and The New York Times for high school students. We hope you can verify a recent piece of news. The Daily Mail has published a letter written 9 September 1917, by Britain’s First Sea Lord, Admiral John Fisher, to First Lord of the Admiralty Winston Churchill, where he first used the acronym OMG for “Oh My God.” As you know, OMG is a phrase often used in texting, especially by teenagers! Is Fisher the originator, and is there a handwritten version of his letter to Churchill?” —A.P., New York, N.Y.
A: Yes, credit the Admiral
There’s no doubt that the OMG story is genuine, but we are not sure why the Daily Mail thinks this is a discovery. Lord Fisher reproduced the letter in his book, Memories (American edition, New York: Doran 1919) at page 77. The same letter was reproduced by Admiral Bacon in his biography, Admiral of the Fleet Lord Fisher (London: Hodder & Stoughton,, 2 vols., 1929) II 194.
Fisher had a flamboyant writing style, often signing his letters to Churchill, “Yours till a cinder” or “Yours till Hell freezes over.” Many other other loquacious salutations made his lexicon of salubrious sign-offs. Given his sudden resignation and disappearance from the Admiralty in May 1915, they were rather less than sincere. Unfortunately, the Churchill Archives Centre in Cambridge reports that they do not have a copy of the original.
I cannot track OMG or the spelled-out version to anything Churchill himself said or wrote. As close as I can come is Roosevelt saying “Oh My God” over a silly question at a press conference. And Churchill’s best friend, Lord Birkenhead (1872-1930) once cracked: “When Winston is right he is unique. When he is wrong, Oh My God!”
Bottom line: credit OMG to Jacky Fisher, copyright the Admiralty, 1914.
—Updated from 2012
Further reading
“Train-Spotting: Churchill’s Reputation in the First World War,” 2022.
Barry Gough: “Great Contemporaries: ‘Bring Back Jacky Fisher’,” in three parts, 2018.
Christopher Sterling and Richard Langworth, “Churchill and Fisher (Or Charlie Brown and the Football),” 2018.