On 3/18/2014 2:06 PM, Alan Prince Winston wrote:
  Rich —
 What do you need these for?  Class residency?  Birthday party?  How 
 old are the kids?  Do they want to be there? How long do you have with 
 them?  How important is it that the dances be historically accurate, 
 and now hat dimensions?
 The “Colonial Social Dancing for Children” book is aimed at classroom 
 teachers and is constructed assuming that you have the kids multiple 
 times, and has some emphasis on footwork and etiquette.  (Period 
 footwork resembles modern Scottish footwork.)   The Heritage Dances of 
 Early America book isn’t aimed at children and doesn’t help very much 
 with how things phrase to the tunes.  The Cracking Chestnuts book is 
 really looking at old-favorite contra dances; jn the 1820s and 1830s 
 the contra dances mostly didn’t look like contra dances as we do them 
 today.  (Footwork, ball of the foot vs. flat feet, no ballroom 
 swinging, handshake stars not wrist-grip stars,e tc.)
 Country dances in America and England aren’t very different at this 
 point.  (Kate van Winkle Keller, with various collaborators, has 
 reconstructed and published dance collections from American sources 
 1770s-1790s.  Even the “New Country Dances From Topsham Maine” book is 
 mostly dances published in Englsh sources.).
 Quadrilles have come in.  Cotillions haven’t gone yet.  The Spanish 
 Dance formation seems to come in (in England) in the late 1820s; 
 that's more or less Sicilian Circle, and can be fairly accessible.
 I've had good luck with easy cotillions (Marlbrouk, George 
 Washington's Favorite) for kids over 10.  For this period you might 
 also want reels for three, four, and six.  Lancers Quadrille comes in 
 (published c. 1815). 
-
 
 On Mar 17, 2014, at 8:11 PM, rich sbardella <richsbardella(a)snet.net> 
 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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