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The Lincoln Imp
The Lincoln Imp is a tiny thirteenth-century cross-legged grotesque above the Angel Choir and the tomb of St Hugh in Lincoln Cathedral, overlooking the altar. And, perhaps, the most famous bit of stonework in the county by some distance.
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Black Dog (also Black Shuck or Hairy Jack)
In most traditions, phantom dogs are usually sinister or malevolent, or even portents of impending death; in many Lincolnshire stories about them, however, they are harmless or even companionable…
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The Holbeach Gamesters
The tale of three men who were playing cards in the Chequers Inn, Holbeach (which closed a few years ago), and talking about a friend who had recently died, so they decided to dig him up and play cards with him in the church. This really happened…
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Fan o’ the Fens
A beautiful young woman from near Louth, called Fanny and known as Fan o’ the Fens, lives with her widowed mother, who complains that a magpie keeps following her and repeating what she says. She consults the wiseman of Louth, who says the mother has been bewitched…
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Shag Foals: the Lackey Causey Calf
Susanna O’Neill writes about the Lackey Causey Calf, which tried to lure people into a stream between Wrawby and Brigg with the lights of its eyes. In some versions of the narrative, however, it does so while also being headless.
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The Lincolnshire Poacher
In Folklore of Lincolnshire (2013), Susanna O’Neill notes that the song is ‘akin to the National Anthem for Lincolnshire’. It has given its name to several pubs in the county (and another in Nottingham)…


