I have much experience teaching the Colonial Social Dances for Children
program.  I'll try to write something about it tomorrow.
By the way, Rich, are you in the Old Sturbridge Village dancers?  Art
 Martin asked me about 'Barrel of Sugar' the same day you posted your
question about it here.  We danced it that night at the Wayside Inn but I
came down with a very nasty bug the next day and I'm still recovering from
it.
Jacob
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 Today's Topics:
    1. Re: 1820s-1830s Dances (James Saxe)
    2. 1820s-1830s Dances (rich sbardella) (joda_rogers)
 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
 Message: 1
 Date: Tue, 18 Mar 2014 13:15:11 -0700
 From: James Saxe <jim.saxe(a)gmail.com>
 To: rich sbardella <richsbardella(a)snet.net>et>,    Caller's discussion list
         <callers(a)sharedweight.net>
 Subject: Re: [Callers] 1820s-1830s Dances
 Message-ID: <FCD608B4-FC13-4615-823F-D5D05E048DEB(a)gmail.com>
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=WINDOWS-1252; format=flowed;
         delsp=yes
 Rich,
 Two books come to mind that might have material somewhat relevant
 to your request, though not exactly on target: _Heritage Dances of
 Early America_ by Ralph Page (abbreviated HDoEA below) and _Colonial
 Social Dancing for Children: Social Dancing of Washington?s Time
 arranged for Today?s Young People_ by Charles Cyril ("Chip")
 Hendrickson [CSDfC below].  Here's a little more information about
 them, with the caveat that I don't have my copy of either book at
 hand  and my memory may be faulty on some of the details.
       *     *     *     *     *     *     *     *     *     *
 HDoEA was published in or about 1976 by the Lloyd Shaw Foundation.
 It appears to be out of print.  It's indexed in  Michael Dyck's
 contra dance index, and many of the dances in it (or versions of
 them) appear in other sources.  You can find them by going to
       
http://www.ibiblio.org/contradance/index/by_title.html
 and searching for the string "HDoEA".  (The page
       
http://www.ibiblio.org/contradance/index/sources.html
 is a key to the source abbreviations.)
 IIRC, the dances in HDoEA are from sources dating from the 1790s
 through the first decade or two of the 1800's, so a little earlier
 the period you asked about, though some may have remained popular
 for some time after.  All or almost all are longways triple minors,
 though some might be of the sort that are readily adapted to duple
 minor form.  For each dance, Page give both the description as it
 appeared in the original source and an interpretation in modern
 terminology.
 The part about being "easy enough for children" could be
 problematical to say the least, for reasons that will be evident
 to anyone who has tried teaching relatively "easy" contras to
 groups (whether children or adults) where almost all are unfamiliar
 with how progression works, dancing to the phrase, etc.  Even
 experienced contemporary contra dancers could have difficulties
 with things like triple-minor progression, right-and-left four
 from proper position (in communities where older dances like
 "Petronella" and "Hull's Victory" have disappeared from
repertoire),
 crossover heys for three, or choreography that asks you to turn a
 four-person star just halfway around in eight beats.
       *     *     *     *     *     *     *     *     *     *
 CSDfC and a companion CD appear to be currently available from the
 Colonial Music Institute
       
http://www.colonialmusic.org/CSD-bkcd.htm
 As the title implies, the book is specifically oriented to
 presenting the material to children.  But (without having the
 book at hand to refresh my memory) I'm pretty sure it's mainly
 about situations where the material can be presented over multiple
 sessions and not just a single afternoon or evening.
 I have essentially no experience teaching/leading dance for
 children (except for occasions when a small number of children
 show up among a mostly-adult group), and no experience using the
 material in CSDfC with dancers of any age.  And, while I'm a
 dabbler in dance history, I don't know enough about the early
 American era to have a clear idea of the similarities and
 differences in the dancing of the era covered CSDfC vs. that of
 small town New England in 1820-1840.
 I'd be interested in hearing from anyone who does have experience
 using CDSfC, or from anyone who can offer knowledgeable comments
 about how either the choreography or the general teaching methods
 it offers would transfer to 1820-1840 era.
 --Jim
 On Mar 17, 2014, at 8:11 PM, rich sbardella wrote:
  I am looking for some period dances that might
have been danced in
 small New England towns in 1820-1830.  Should be easy enough for
 children.
 Any suggestions?
 Also, does any know the steps to "Barrel of Sugar"?  Recommended
 music?
 Rich Sbardella
 Stafford, CT
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 ------------------------------
 Message: 2
 Date: Tue, 18 Mar 2014 21:17:53 -0700
 From: joda_rogers <joda_rogers(a)altrionet.com>
 To: callers(a)sharedweight.net
 Subject: [Callers] 1820s-1830s Dances (rich sbardella)
 Message-ID: <9A31B033-970F-4F9B-AF96-482689D35B62(a)altrionet.com>
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
 There is also An Elegant Collection of Contras and Squares by Ralph Page.
  
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 End of Callers Digest, Vol 115, Issue 11
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