flea market, event where vendors sell used and antique goods. Flea markets often take place outside or in large contained spaces. Vendors are generally asked to pay a set fee to display their goods in a designated area or stall. In some states a seller’s permit or license is required to sell goods at a flea market. Some more established flea markets may charge shoppers a fee to enter the market grounds. Flea markets generally happen on a regular basis, occurring weekly, monthly, or annually. According to the National Flea Market Association (NFMA), the more than 1,100 active flea markets in the U.S. produce tens of billions of dollars in sales every year.
The term flea market has a number of disputed origins. The most common explanation is that the term is a translation of the French marché aux puces (literally “market of fleas”), so-named for the pests that were thought to infest the upholstery of second-hand furniture sold at such markets. Legend has it that this etymology reflects an instance in the 1880s when an unknown bargain-hunter proclaimed that the largest of Paris’s legendary outdoor bazaars, the Saint-Ouen market, was infested by fleas. Another theory about the term’s origin also refers to Parisian bazaars, specifically noting Georges-Eugène Haussmann’s renovation of mid-19th century Paris, in which certain Parisian boulevards were widened. Vendors—many of whom lived in the web of alleys in the urban center—were forced to abandon their storefronts. In English, the resultant collection of stalls was referred to as a “flee market,” as the vendors had been displaced. Eventually, “flee” was mistranslated back into French to “flea” and then returned to English.
Many identify antique-dealer Russell Carrell’s 1958 market in Salisbury, Connecticut, as the first official American flea market to build upon the European tradition. His market catered to the tastes of postwar upper- and middle-class collectors, who could afford to spend money on exotic items and antiques. This kind of market proliferated throughout the U.S. in the 1960s and ’70s. Organizers began to charge vendors a seller’s fee to cover the costs of holding the events. As flea markets grew increasingly popular in the countryside, so too did their urban counterparts.
According to the NFMA, flea markets have become an important bastion of small entrepreneurship and communal life in America and around the world, as a contemporary agora. In many places they are fixtures of modern life, regularly attracting thousands of vendors and tens of thousands of shoppers.