Yee-ha(w) / "Rebel yell"

hpst@earthlink.net hpst at EARTHLINK.NET
Mon Dec 4 19:43:12 UTC 2006


Wilson,

Since you served in the army after it was integrated you probably never
heard some of the overtly racist comments which my father heard in 1943
when he was going through basic training but since you mentioned North
Caroliniians I thought you might appreciate this story.

Apparently one day one of his fellow draftees who was  from North Carolina
received a letter from his father who told him that it had been snowing so
bad that the snow was "asshole deep on a nine foot nigger." which is if
nothing else is descriptive.

Dad, now long deceased, never told me about rebel yells, but he always
remembered that phrase which stuck in his mind.

For better or for worse since I have never heard it before or since I think
it needs to be preserved.

Page


> [Original Message]
> From: Wilson Gray <hwgray at GMAIL.COM>
> To: <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
> Date: 12/4/2006 2:00:02 PM
> Subject: Re: [ADS-L] Yee-ha(w) / "Rebel yell"
>
> In one of his bits, Richard Pryor reproduced the yell as "Yee-haw!"
> explaining that, when he heard it, he knew that it was time to leave.
>
> However, when I was in the Army, Edgar J. Mackey, Jr., from somewhere
> 'nother in North Carolina, had a different version. Unfortunately,
> Eg-guh gave the yell only when he was drunk and, even then, he had to
> be asked. And, if Eg-guh was drunk, so was everyone else. Hence, I
> can't recall what his yell sounded like, except that it was quite loud
> and wasn't "yee-ha(w)." In addition, I had earlier read an article
> somewhere 'nother that debunked the Rebel Yell, claiming that it was
> folklore and there was not and never had been any such thing as a
> Rebel Yell. I believed this article, so, even if I had been sober, I
> wouldn't have paid no 'taynchun to Eg-guh's rendition of the supposed
> yell.
>
> As for "yee-ha(w)," this was heard in a million horse operas, during
> my childhood, with no one defining it as having anything to do with
> the War of Northern Aggression.
>
> -Wilson
> On 12/4/06, Charles Doyle <cdoyle at uga.edu> wrote:
> > ---------------------- Information from the mail header
-----------------------
> > Sender:       American Dialect Society <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
> > Poster:       Charles Doyle <cdoyle at UGA.EDU>
> > Subject:      Re: Yee-ha(w) / "Rebel yell"
> >
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
---
> >
> > I'd never thought about it before, but are we to suppose that Swift's
yahoos are so called because they go around ejaculating "YA-HOO!"?  (Those
creatures WERE, after all, rebels of a sort.)
> >
> > --Charlie
> > _____________________________________
> >
> > ---- Original message ----
> > >Date: Mon, 4 Dec 2006 06:32:01 -0800
> > >From: Jonathan Lighter <wuxxmupp2000 at YAHOO.COM>
> > >Subject: Yee-ha(w) / "Rebel yell"
> > >To: ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU
> > >
> > >
> > >It's the 21st C., so why be surprised, as I was, at the appearance of
exclamatory "Yee-ha!" in Australia:
http://walkabout.com.au/tales/Travellerstales00043.shtml . Also:
> > >
> > >  2001 Matthew Reilly _Area 7_ (Rpt. N.Y.: St. Martin's, 2002) 175:
Beside her, Elvis was yelling, "Yee-ha!" as he rained hell on the 7th
Squadron men with the minigun.
> > >
> > >  "Yee-ha!" / ji:::: ' ha:::: / is frequently known as "the rebel
yell," but 19th C. descriptions of that yell (or those yells), analyzed by
Allen Walker Read in _AS_ long ago show that its dominant effect was not
"Yee-ha!"
> > >
> > >  I grew up in a bluebelly ethos where "whoopee" and "yahoo" and
"wahoo" were familiar from movie westerns and the phrase "rebel yell" was
used only in history books.
> > >
> > >  I first became conscious of "Yee-ha !" in 1974 or ' 75.  Since then
it has been yelled everywhere. But when did this popularity begin.  There's
a "famous 'Yeehaw!' scene," it sez here, in _Red River_ (1948), but I can't
recall whether the yell (prefaced by 'Take 'em to Missouri, Matt!") sounded
like "Yeehaw!" or something else.
> > >
> > >  A West Indian "yee ha" from 1877 is readily findable through Google
Books,  but it seems like nonsense syllables rather than any kind of yell.
> > >
> > >  Phonetically it's related to "hee-haw," but there all similarity
ends.
> > >
> > >  Thoughts?  Early cites ?  Any connection to Yeehaw Junction,
Florida?  (Under "yeehaw," OED's earliest is 1977, despite appearances.)
> > >
> > >  JL
> >
> > ------------------------------------------------------------
> > The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org
> >
>
>
> --
> All say, "How hard it is that we have to die"---a strange complaint to
> come from the mouths of people who have had to live.
> -----
> -Sam Clemens
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org

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