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I was visiting an elderly person in hspital and she come from Lincolnshire(UK) and says that she has been called a Lincolnshire Yellow Belly. she didnt know what it was supposed to infer about her or the origins of the saying. so I said I'd try to find out.
Please don't answer with smart alec jokes - thanks. (apologies to anyone called alec!)

2007-03-13 21:43:20 · 5 answers · asked by Star 3 in Education & Reference Words & Wordplay

5 answers

Why are folks from Lincolnshire called Yellow Bellies? Here are a list of possibilities, but no one seems to know for sure...

The name came from the custom of Lincolnshire people hanging "belly" bacon for so long that it turned yellow.
People living in the fens often caught malaria or ague from stagnant water, which turned their skin yellow.
Opium taken to relieve malaria and other disorders also turned people's skin yellow.
Wildfowlers (not flowers!) became covered in yellow clay of the fens as they stalked their prey.
A Lincolnshire farmer with an ugly 28-stone daughter offered would-be husbands a dowry of as many gold coins as it would take to cover her belly.
The fenland administrative Warpentake of Elloe was called in bygone times "Ye Elloe Bellie" as bel was German for low-lying. This was often corrupted into "Yellow Belly".
Drivers of the Lincoln-to-London stage coaches wore yellow waistcoats and were nicknamed Yellow Bellies by London Cockneys.
Legend had it that if shillings were placed on Lincolnshire stomachs at bedtime and they were still there the next morning, they would have turned into gold sovereigns.
Many Lincolnshire country women carried their money or gold under their dresses when going to market and were called yellow bellies.
The 10th Lincs Regiment of Foot had as its colours from 1851 to 1881 the red cross of St George on a yellow background.
Soldiers of the 10th Foot once wore green tunics with yellow facings.
An unpopular explanation is that the 10th Foot had retreated from the enemy in battle, and had been dubbed cowardly or "yellow".
Officers of the Royal North Lincolnshire Militia would wear bright yellow waistcoats on the battlefield. This made it easier for their men to spot them.
There was a species of frog peculiar to the fens region which had yellow bellies.
Labourers working to reclaim the fens became covered in the yellow clay.
The Lincolnshire Mail Coaches which ran between 1785 and 1871 were painted dark blue with a bright yellow belly to conceal splash marks from the yellow county clay roads.
A Lincolnshire lady whose canary died replaced it with a frog with a yellow belly, in the belief that the frog would sing like the canary and said to it, "Now sing yellow belly."
On a bottle of Bateman's "Yellow Belly Ale" the explanation given is that farm workers collecting mustard seed got covered in yellow dust.
Stewart Dowse reports that his uncle Wilford FOX told him it was customary to paint the belly of male sheep (rams) yellow, and the farmer could determine how many ewes had been serviced.
Aren't you glad you asked?

Hope this helps

2007-03-17 08:58:38 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

You ask the people in Lincolnshire, and nearly everyone will come up with a different answer, ranging from the yellow breasted uniforms of the Lincolnshire Regiment to the pollen that gathers on the farm labourer's belly.
The BBC has good information for you, here:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/lincolnshire/asop/people/what_is_a_yellowbelly.shtml

Very informative I think.

McGonagall

2007-03-14 05:06:55 · answer #2 · answered by McGonagall 3 · 0 0

I think it as something to do with the Lincolnshire Regiment. There uniforms consisted of yellow jackets.

2007-03-14 04:51:16 · answer #3 · answered by Ding Dong 3 · 0 0

Smart Alec?

2007-03-17 19:25:35 · answer #4 · answered by RAGGYPANTS 4 · 0 0

I believe it has something to do with the colours the football team wears. I'm at Uni in Lincoln and thats what I have picked up so far. Sorry I couldn't be of more help

2007-03-14 04:51:55 · answer #5 · answered by Fred 3 · 0 0

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