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Gone for a Burton

Morturn

Super Moderator
Staff member
Does anyone know or have any suggestions as to the origin of Gone for a Burton?

A couple I had heard are:

Gone for a beer (Burton on Trent being the heart of the brewing industry)

An RAF phrase to say someone had died in a crash

Gone to join the armed forces. There was a suggestion that Burton Taylors had recruiting offices, but I cannot find any evidence of this. I know Burtons did supply army uniforms and De-Mod suites. I also understand that Montey Burton cared very much about worker welfare and built the first workers canteens and also his iconic shops.
 
An often used phrase in our house with a dad who served in the RAF. I was taught that that origin was the "gone for a (Burton) beer" one. Initially to avoid saying that someone had died but later to refer to almost anything that was lost or beyond repair.
Bill Burton
 
Jonathan Green's Dictionary of Slang suggests:
go for a Burton (v.) [the precise ety. remains unknown but there are a number of suggestions. First is the elision of SE burnt ’un, i.e. a burning aircraft (and its pilot). Partridge (DSUE, 1970), and Paul Beale (DSUE, 1984) suggest: (i) a euph., going for a glass of Burton ale; (ii) Burton-on-Trent as rhy. sl. for ‘went’, as in ‘went west’ (i.e. go west under west adj.)...

Plus the previously suggested origins.
Source: https://greensdictofslang.com/entry/donklty

I like the disguised euphemism Burton on Trent rhyming slang for 'went' as in 'went west'

But I suspect we'll never find out for sure.
 
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i remember in the 60s if we tripped up or fell over we would say he/shes gone for a burton and i still say it now

lyn
 
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