BRATTLEBORO
DAWN DANCES
HISTORY
The following article originally appeared in the second issue of Contra & Square Dance History,
a short-lived quarterly journal that Michael McKernan published. It is reprinted here with his permission.
A look at late-night dancing in the Brattleboro, VT
area from the 1920s to the 1960s
by Michael McKernan <mmckern@bu.edu>
© Michael McKernan 1995
Appendix
| Notes
Nearly twenty years ago, Peter Stolley1
and I watched in shock and some horror as a woman tripped, and fell flat on her face
on the rough barn floor of the Chelsea House Folklore Center in West Brattleboro,
Vermont. Fortunately, she wasn't badly hurt. But Peter and I looked at
each other and said "We have to do something about this
floor."
I trace the beginnings of the now well-known "Brattleboro Dawn
Dances" to that incident back in 1976. What we ended up doing
involved the efforts of a large number of other people, many of whom had
been thinking about the problem of how to improve the dance floor. The
Chelsea House was the scene of weekly dances that were growing in
popularity. Dancers from Vermont, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New
York, Connecticut and even farther afield were converging on West
Brattleboro each Sunday night, and filling the small red barn with
merriment, along with the inevitable stumbles and tumbles caused by the
wide cracks, splinters, protruding nail-heads and multiple
"levels" of the Chelsea House floor. |
|
Spurred on by the fear of an impending catastrophe (if a serious
injury should occur, as Peter and I had momentarily thought had been the
case), a group of callers, musicians and dancers approached Chelsea
House director Carol Levin about holding a benefit dance to raise money
to replace the floor. We didn't know how much cash would be needed, but
it was clearly more than a normal dance event would bring in.
David Woodsfellow and I, as well as other members of our band
Applejack, had heard from "old-timers" about events known as
"dawn dances" which had been held at a rural dance hall called
Benson's Barn, in Saxtons River, VT, near our homes. We had even tried
our hands at renting Benson's Barn for a few dances (the old dances
there had died out some years before). But we didn't know much more
about those "dawn dances" than that "they danced all
night, until it was time to go home and milk the cows."
2
Armed with that small nugget of historical 'fact,' we hit upon the
idea that we could hold a special "dawn dance" to raise money
for a new floor at the Chelsea House. Well, we asked around, and there
were a number of callers and musicians willing to help out, even with a
wild idea like dancing all night. But we had no idea if any of the
dancers we knew would want to, let alone be able to dance that long, or
long enough to make the event a success. We also had no idea just how to
design or schedule such a production. After a minimum of careful thought
and planning (at least that's how it seems to me in retrospect), we
decided to start at the regular time of 8:00 p.m., and just keep going
until the sun came up or the event died a natural death, whichever came
sooner. Since it was a benefit, and "bigger" than a regular
dance (our Sunday night dances went from 8:00 - 11:00 p.m., I think), we
felt we could ask dancers to contribute $4.00, which was just double the
normal $2.00 admission.
So the first "Brattleboro Dawn Dance" of the current series
was scheduled for Labor Day weekend, where the Monday holiday would give
us a chance to catch up on sleep after dancing all night on Sunday and
into Monday morning. We closed our eyes, held our breath, and took a
chance on that dance.
To our delight and amazement, more than two hundred people attended
that dance. Such a crowd was far more than the Chelsea House, which was
only about forty by thirty feet, could accommodate at any one moment. We
were used to crowding-in three contra lines in that tiny space, but this
was an absolutely overflowing crowd, which had to dance in shifts, with
many patrons cooling off outside at most times. (At subsequent Dawn
Dances still held at the Chelsea House in the early days, we actually
tried scheduling simultaneous dancing to a separate caller and band
outside the barn).
I suppose that we ended that first dance sometime between six and
seven a.m. I don't remember exactly. But we had been dancing for about
ten hours, and we felt that something special had taken place. When the
dust had pretty much settled, we could see the sun rising through the
window behind the little stage, while we counted off more than sixty
dancers still on their feet for the last waltz!
Financially, the benefit was quite successful, even though it did not
raise enough money to completely pay for a new floor. The rest was made
up by the Chelsea House, some volunteer labor, and the work of Rich
Blazej (who had a contracting business then) and his crew. Because of
difficulties with materials and scheduling, the new floor was not
perfect, but it was a vast improvement over the old one, and we were
able to put aside our fears of serious injuries, lawsuits, etc.
Fred Breunig celebrated the new floor with his dance, "The New
Floor's Revenge," which never fails to provoke in me fond memories
of the Chelsea House dances. The Chelsea House Folklore Center closed
its doors in 1981, after providing a generation of dancers with a loving
home for a number of years. The weekly dances, however, continued in a
different Brattleboro location for several more years, and the Dawn
Dances are still held several times a year. My personal involvement with
the Brattleboro Dawn Dances ended some five years ago.
This story of the Brattleboro Dawn Dances since 1976 is only a
prelude (or "afterward," perhaps?) to the story I really want
to tell, which is (some of) the actual history of "dawn
dances" and other late-night dance events in the Brattleboro area.
After the revived Dawn Dances were well underway, I decided to research
these events, and the following is what I found. |
| · · · |
|
There is evidence of late-night social dancing in America, going back
at least as far as the 18th century. John Quincy Adams noted such events
in his diary in 1787: "...At about seven o'clock we met at the
dancing hall, and from that time till between three and four in the
morning we were continually dancing."
3
Numerous other references to
after-midnight dancing can be found over the next two hundred years. In
1855, Rhodolph Hall, a New Hampshire musician (who was then playing in a
quadrille band in Boston) wrote to his sister:
We have been engaged 5 nights per week since some time in Nov. most
of which have been out of town and hard working engagements, or what we
call "all nighters" The past week 5 nights, 4 of which did not
excuse us until 5 o'clock next morning.
4
Hall's phrase "excuse us" is perhaps an indication that
these events were not planned in advance to continue to a particularly
late hour, but may have lasted as long as the dancers wanted to keep
going and could persuade (and pay) the musicians to play. In an earlier
(1844) letter to his brother D.C. Hall (also a musician) Rhodolph noted
that "Our regular price is 1.$ an hour. But we are not any more
regular in it than you and I were last winter in our 50¢ an hour. But
that is our calculating price."
5
During my own career as a
performer, there were a number of occasions when I and/or my band were
asked to continue past a scheduled ending time, usually for additional
compensation.
At a later date, just across the river from the Brattleboro area, a
New Hampshire newspaper included the following discussion of the pros
and cons of late-night dances.
1883/05/10 Walpole [NH]: Another grievance - our town hall is too
old, hallowed, by too many pleasant associations to be disgraced by such
a dance as came off in it one night last week. It was advertised for the
hours between nine o'clock p.m. and two o'clock a.m.; nobody seemed to
know anything about it; but the posters announced that "Huntoon's
Band" would be present, tickets 50 cts. If the attendants had
confined their racket with in the walls of the hall, the disgrace had
not been so deep, but when in the street, night was made hideous by
yelling, howling, and abortive attempts at singing. Some one said they
were not intoxicated, only a little full; if such singing is a specimen
of their capacity for - song - we earnestly recommend them to attend a
cat concert and improve their style. Town officers are custodians of the
town's property, and we hazard an opinion that there is not another town
hall in the state that could be hired for a dance from 9 till 2 in the
morning.
1883/05/23 Hinsdale [NH]: In your last issue your Walpole
correspondent "hazards the opinion that there is not another town
hall in the state that can be hired for a dance from nine o'clock till
two in the morning." Let him come down here and he can see the best
town hall in the state used for dances under church auspices and they
don't even think of closing before four a.m. either. And it's all right,
too! And it pays. And as to howling, yelling and similar recreation we
can beat Walpole all hollow - in fact we do not admit that Hinsdale can
be beaten in anything.
1883/05/30 Chesterfield [NH]: We don't boast of the best town hall in
the state, but G.A.R. or any other responsible party can hire it for
dancing, "till broad daylight," if they so desire; but howling
and yelling would need to be imported, as local talent doesn't furnish
that kind of music.
6
Obviously, there is plenty of precedent for late night dancing in
this part of New England, and it seems likely that it was prevalent in
other parts of the country as well, even if some communities found it
unacceptable at times. Many of the references to late-night dances used
a particular phrase (often printed in quotation, as in the following
example): "Bridgewater [VT] About sixty persons of both sexes met
at the house of A. Eaton on the 9th and skipped the light fantastic toe
till the 'wee sma' hours.' "
7
In my research, this wording has
appeared more often than listing of actual ending times. When such
actual times are given, however, they are rarely later than 2:00 a.m.,
with most occurring between midnight and that time.
The "Dawn Dance" phenomenon, however, appears to have been
something different than the late-night dancing described above. Dawn
dance-type events, (which had a number of different names), had several
things in common, which set them off from the late-night dances of the
18th and 19th centuries. After a number of years of looking into just
what was special about dawn dances, I believe I can now make an attempt
at defining this form.
My research into Dawn Dances in the Brattleboro area has produced
data on nearly one hundred such events during the period from 1926-1964.
The Brattleboro Reformer, a small-town Vermont daily newspaper,
chronicled these dances, mostly in paid advertisements. Rather than
footnote every reference to this body of data, I have included a
complete charting of it as an Appendix
to this article.
8
These dances took place in the tri-state area of Vermont, New Hampshire and
Massachusetts within about a twenty-mile radius of Brattleboro. Other
work that I have done outside of this small region has convinced me that
the after-midnight dance phenomenon was not restricted to the
Brattleboro area, although the term "dawn dance" may have been
a somewhat local usage (say, in the northern Connecticut River valley).
I do not have enough data to generally characterize such events outside
the Brattleboro area, so I cannot offer meaningful comparisons with the
body of data I have on the local dances, except in the case of a small
area of coastal Maine. But there is a possibility that conclusions drawn
from my data could be extended to a wider geographical area.
The particular characteristics of late-night dances of the "dawn
dance" type around Brattleboro include: |
- They were holiday events. More specifically, they were clearly
associated with just three, warm-weather holidays: Independence Day,
Labor Day, and to a much lesser extent, Memorial Day.
- They were most often held on the evening before (the "eve"
of, or more precisely, the early morning of), the actual
holiday.
- They began later than normal dances (most often, at or just after
midnight) and typically ended at 4:00 am, resulting most often in a
dance of normal length (about four hours), rather than an unusually long
event.
- They were often held in dance pavilions which may not have been
constructed (or suitable) for winter use.
|
I have not located any evidence of events with this particular set of
characteristics in the Brattleboro area before the 1920s. However, if it
were the case that dawn dance-type events for some reason came into
existence at about that time, I cannot yet say exactly why that
development took place. Even so, there are a number of things I can
relate from the data I've accumulated so far, which may make a start at
answering such a question.
The earliest names for these events included the word
"midnight" in the title. This may be an indication that the
original concept of this genre of dance event was that it began at (or
minutes after) midnight. The 9/4/1926 "Midnight Frolic" was
advertised as the "Biggest midnight attraction for miles
around."
9
The specificity of "12:05 am" or "12:01
am" may be due to an initial need to avoid "blue laws"
restricting Sunday activities. Some of these dances, however, began well
before midnight. It is worth noting that when the starting time was
significantly earlier than midnight, the ending time was most often
earlier as well, preserving the typical length at about four hours.
The term "Dawn Dance" does not appear to have been used in
the Brattleboro area until 1935, when a dance in Turners Falls, MA was
advertised with that title. A few events were "All Night"
dances, but the great majority of post-1935 late-night dances were
called "Dawn Dance." The following is a complete listing of
all the event titles which I located (1926-1964)
|
| # of Events |
Title of Events |
| 1 |
All Night Dawn Dance |
| 1 |
Holiday Dance |
| 1 |
Midnight Dawn Dance |
| 1 |
Midnight Frolic & Dance |
| 1 |
Nite B4 the 4th Dance |
| 2 |
Dance |
| 3 |
Midnight Frolic |
| 4 |
Midnight Dance |
| 6 |
All Night Dance |
| 72 |
Dawn Dance |
|
| 92 |
Total |
Sixty late-night dances were connected with the Fourth of July.
Slightly less than half as many (twenty-nine) were Labor Day events.
Memorial Day ran a distant third in popularity, with only three such
dances showing up in the newspaper.
Only a few of these events took place in Brattleboro itself, even though
two of the earliest were held in that community.
10
One reason for this is
probably that Brattleboro's Island Park Dance Pavilion, advertised as the
"Best Dancing Pavilion in Central New England. Best Music Within 60
Miles" with "300 Balcony Seats for Spectators" and "Free
Parking for 1000 Cars,"
11
was damaged and put out of business by the
floods of 1927 and 1928.
12
More than half of the dawn dance events I found
were held in just two locations or communities: Ware's Grove, a bathing
beach and dance pavilion on Lake Spofford, (Chesterfield), New Hampshire;
and Dover (mostly Dover Common), Vermont.
| # of Events |
Location |
| 1 |
Dummerston VT |
| 1 |
Keene NH |
| 1 |
Turners Falls MA |
| 1 |
Wardsboro VT |
| 1 |
Westminster VT |
| 1 |
Wilmington VT |
| 1 |
Winchester NH |
| 2 |
Brattleboro VT |
| 2 |
Guilford Ctr VT |
| 3 |
Putney VT |
| 4 |
West Brattleboro VT |
| 5 |
Saxtons River VT |
| 6 |
Newfane VT |
| 8 |
Townshend VT |
| 9 |
Bernardston MA |
| 18 |
Dover VT |
| 23 |
Lake Spofford (Chesterfield) NH |
|
| 92 |
Total, 17 different communities |
Lake Spofford has been used as a recreation area for many years, and
is situated about mid-way between Brattleboro, VT and Keene, NH,
convenient to both communities.
13
With swimming facilities right outside
the dance pavilion, Ware's Grove, the site of the Lake Spofford dances,
would be an obvious choice for summertime dancing. It also featured
other forms of recreation, including roller skating, which was
advertised there on a regular basis.
14
It seems likely that Ware's Grove
and perhaps many other locations for dawn dances, were not winterized,
and could only be used in warm weather. Some of these dance pavilions
may have even lacked walls. A few locations may have even been
"open air" or under a tent, I suppose. The evidence I have
seen indicates a clear, (perhaps even exclusive) connection between the
dawn dance phenomenon and warm weather.
There are some data available on late-night dances in Maine which
appear to have been contemporary and similar to those held in the
Brattleboro area. In a privately-published book memorializing his
father, a fiddler and dance band leader, E. Burnell Overlock wrote: |
At a Night Before the Fourth dance in 1936 Overlock's music played at
Light's Pavilion in Washington from nine to midnight, packed up their
musical instruments, and traveled to Liberty Inn to play from 12:30 to 4
A.M. An equally large and enthusiastic crowd was waiting and loudly
cheered when the orchestra drove into the parking area.
15
Mr. Overlock describes the Liberty Inn as "a popular summer
dance pavilion...located near the shore of lake St. George in Liberty...
strictly a summer dance pavilion and consequently usually closed for the
season in September."
16
I wrote to Mr. Overlock for more information on late-night dancing in
Maine, and here is what he had to say:
I never heard of dawn dances called as such but I can remember
reading in dance ads that it would say that there would be dancing until
dawn. However, not too much emphasis would be put on dawn. More
an All-Night Dance. Our all-night dances were always the Night before
the Fourth. We would take two jobs and at 12 stop abruptly put up my
drums - and start for the next job. Sometimes the distance would be
about 10-15 miles but we perhaps hurried a little and the crowd would be
waiting for us. We didn't lose anytime setting up and beginning the
dance with a good lively fox-trot.
17
My research has not produced any evidence that the practice of
playing for two different dances, in different locations, before and
after midnight, was common with other bands, or in other areas. Mr.
Overlock wrote to me that "we never played all night at one dance
hall but would move to another hall an midnight. Never played for two
dances except on the night before the 4th."
18
Later in the same
letter, however, he remembered that "I think it was at the Umbrella
where we did play for an all-night dance. This is a hall outside of
Belfast and at twelve o'clock everyone would leave the hall like at
intermission and pay again to come in for the second part of the
evening's entertainment."
19
This leave-then-pay-again format has not
appeared elsewhere in the data I have seen.
The "night before the Fourth" format, however, was common
to both Brattleboro and the part of Maine where Overlock's Orchestra
played. Overlock's book lists describes several of these as large-scale
events. At the Umbrella Dance Hall, (another water-side pavilion), in
1944 "on July 3 an all-night dance was held with the orchestra of
five pieces paid $50.00 for the evening's work." The following
year, "709 tickets were sold at the Night Before the Fourth
Dance."
20
Overlock also characterized the typical ending time of a regular
dance event:
I can not recall that any other holiday where we played later than 12
but years back we played until one o'clock and years before my day
dances might have lasted until about two. It was not unusual if the
crowd was lively and enjoying themselves that the manager or someone
else would ask father if they would play another hour. He was always
accommodating and if the orchestra was four pieces father would say we
will do it for $4.00, a dollar per person. After an hour's playing the
crowd would thin and were ready to all go home after the extra hour.
21
The similarities between these Maine all-night dances and those held
in the Brattleboro area seem greater than the differences. Further
research in Maine might provide evidence of Labor Day all-night events,
even though Overlock did not remember them being held on that holiday.
It would also be interesting to see if any of the Maine events shared
the 12:01 or 12:05 a.m., just-after-midnight starting time which seems
to indicate that there was some specific reason not to dance before
midnight. In the case of the Brattleboro area dances, these just-after
times appear to be associated with Sunday night, before Monday holiday
dances, which may indicate a legal or customary prohibition on Sunday
dances. There would not be such a problem on the eve of July Fourth
(unless the 7/3 should happen to fall on a Sunday). In fact, when Sunday
fell on either 7/3 or 7/4, the Brattleboro-area dances were sometimes
switched to a Friday or Monday, before, after, or on July 4th itself,
thus avoiding dancing on Sunday.
(See Appendix).
There were, as can be seen in the Appendix,
a number of dawn dance events in the Brattleboro area which started before
midnight, with some as early as 9:00 p.m. These before-midnight dances were
almost all non-Sunday, "night before the Fourth" dances. There were,
however, at least a few events which might have been Sunday,
before-midnight dances, with starting times listed as 11:30 or even
11:00 p.m. In the case of one of the 11:00 p.m. starts (in 1960), the
facility was advertised as "open 11 p.m.," which may indicate
that patrons were welcome to arrive early, while the dancing might not
begin until later.
It may be that some (but probably not many) dawn dance-type events
did not include square or contra dances. Some of the advertisements
listed bands which might have performed only "modern" dance
music. Andy Canedy's band was advertised in at least four different ways
in 1937:
- "Round and Square Dances" 7/5/1937 Dawn Dance, Dover, VT
- "The only Ballroom in Windham County where you will find Andy
Canedy playing all modern dance music" 7/3/1937 [not a dawn dance]
W. Dummerston, VT
- "Andy Canedy and His Orchestra" 9/6/1937 Dawn Dance, Dover, VT
- "With Andy Canedy's Swing Band" 9/4/1937 [not a dawn dance] W. Dummerston, VT
Note that in these listings, the dances clearly identified as
"modern" or "swing" were not dawn dances, and that
one of the Dover dawn dances was "round and square." In all
the dawn dance-type listings I have seen (see
Appendix), there was no
dance which was clearly identified as "modern" or
"swing." Many, however, were identified as "round and
square." This was the typical phrase used to publicize what was
generally referred to as a "square dance" when I started
attending local Town- or Grange-Hall dances in southeastern Vermont in
1972. It was also the way that the Benson's Barn dawn dances (which, as
mentioned above, were the first ones I ever heard about) were described.
I located a notice of the "Grand Opening Dawn Dance" at
Benson's Barn, 7/3/1949, which featured "George Capron and his
Orch. Ted Glabach, Prompter." Clearly, this was what we would think
of as a square dance.
The 9/4/1926 Midnight Frolic at Island Park, however, presented
"Mason-Dixon Americas Wonder Orchestra, Twelve Youthful
Artists." It is hard to say whether they would have included
squares or contras. And on 7/3/1936, the "All Night Dance" in
Keene, NH "With a Battle of Music Between Johnny Semonian's
Orchestra and Frank Nardini's Society Orchestra" seems to have been
outside of the typical square dance billing. On Memorial Day in 1938,
the Dummerston Center, VT "Big Dawn Dance" featured
"Harry Hart, Jr., and His Virginians, That Popular Colored Band.
See Harry Hart on the Floor in His Dance Specialty." On that same
night (or morning, to be precise), dancers could choose to go instead to
Dover, VT, where our old friend "Andy Canedy and his
Orchestra" were holding forth with "Round and Square
Dances."
From the newspaper data, it is not possible to draw a more definitive
conclusion concerning the style of dancing at dawn dance-type events
other than to say that many of them certainly included square dances. It
may be possible to collect more information on this question through
oral history interviews with dancers. The few such interviews which I
have conducted informally (such as talking to the Bensons back in the
1970s) consistently characterized the dawn dances as "square
dances." The time frame of this study of dawn dance-type events
covers a period when the local square dance events appear to have been
in competition with other social dance forms. The evident demise of dawn
dances in the 1960s came just a few years before the disappearance of
other square dance events in the Brattleboro area in the 1970s.
22
This
phenomenon may be similar to what has happened in other areas, perhaps
at different times, although local public square dances (outside of the
"contra dance" and "modern square dance" events)
certainly still persist here and there. There are still occasional
"round and square" type events in the Brattleboro area,
sometimes with callers such as Ted Glabach, who called at dawn dances in
the 1940s.
It may well be that "dawn dances" or after-midnight events
like them were held in many parts of the country. This study only
describes the Brattleboro area in detail. As the small amount of data
from Maine indicate, there may be much information waiting to be
uncovered elsewhere. I hope to collect such data myself at some point,
and I encourage readers to take a look as well. You may find some very
interesting things by looking in local newspapers, for a start. It
certainly would be worthwhile to have an idea of the overall area in
which such events, and the term "dawn dance," were prevalent,
and over what time period. Such a survey could be compared with state
and local "blue laws" to see if there was a correlation
between legal restrictions on Sunday activities and the Labor Day eve
dances.
There is also much to be learned about the fate of square (and
contra) dancing during the 1920s, 30s and 40s. Successive
"modern" dances or dance forms like the Charleston,
"swing," etc., offered a more "with-it" type of
dancing to the public, while contras & squares were several
generations out of fashion. Yet for various reasons, some rural
communities maintained enough interest in "round and square"
dances to continue programming them, with or without the aid of the
various "revivals."
As a closing, let me mention the "Big Mid-Night DANCE at the
Esquimo, Dublin, N.H. Sunday Nite 12:01 to 4 A.M." on September 1,
1940. This "Round and Square" dance featured Richardson's
Orchestra, with "Uncle Eb, Prompter," and "Guest-Prompter
'Hooker' Ralph Page." (Ralph never mentioned to me that he had
called at any events like this!) "Richardson - Page -Uncle Eb - and
The Esquimo - The best Square Dance Combination possible."
"DANCE - EAT - DRINK - BE MERRY at The Esquimo Lodge."
23
Dublin
is about twenty miles east of Keene, NH, far enough outside of the
Brattleboro, VT area to not have its dances listed in the Brattleboro
papers. Other than the lack of the term "dawn dance," this
event appears to have been very similar to the Brattleboro area
after-midnight dances. Since Ralph Page's name never appeared in
connection with these events, even though he did call at other events in
the Brattleboro area,
24
I suspect that dawn dance-type events may have
been somewhat different from his idea of a good calling job.
There are now (or have been in recent years) dawn dance-type events in many
parts of the country. Some of these appear to have been patterened on the
dawn dances we "revived" in Brattleboro. Some even use the name
"dawn dance". For a time, people from as far away as the West Coast
called me to ask advice about how to organize all-night dances. As you have
seen, our efforts in Brattleboro resulted in something rather different from
the concept we were trying to duplicate. But the result does seem to have
been appealing to a number of dancers. Our experiemtns has little claim to
originality of concept, but it has clearly been given the compliment of imitation.
I am sure that there are a number of other late-night dancing stories waiting to be
told.
© Michael McKernan 1995
<mmckern@bu.edu>
Appendix
| Notes
|
|