Hi Rachel,

              Some of the moves that have been mentioned are actually English 
country dance moves that have been used in squares.

 

Grand Square:

1648: http://sca.uwaterloo.ca/~praetzel/sca/lansdowne.html

And a few years later in Playford’s Hunsdon House.  This is, of course, a 
Square Dance, and, yes, they were called Square Dances back then!

 

Right Hand High, Left Hand Low:

This is the third figure of Pepper’s Black (1650): 
http://www.izaak.unh.edu/nhltmd/indexes/dancingmaster/Dance/Play0944.htm

 

Square Through N:

This is “N Changes”, a very common figure from the 17th century onwards.  
MWSD’s contribution was to give it a new name and specify that when that name 
is used the dancers must NOT turn after the last change, finishing back to back 
with the last person you passed (as happens in many country dances).  The term 
”Square Through” is often misused in contra dancing, as there are many contra 
dances with “Square Through” where you turn after the last change.  The term “N 
Changes” would be better used in those circumstances.  But people use words to 
mean what they want them to mean, so I doubt we will ever get any 
standardisation on that! :-)

 

Some other “square dance” figures come from Appalachian Big Set.  Cecil Sharp 
published these dances as Running Set (a name he made up) and he says, “The 
Running Set is most effective when the number of couples is limited to four 
couples, although, if certain Figures by omitted, that number may be exceeded.” 
 Because of this decision by Sharp to publish Running Set as dances for four 
couples in a circle, i.e. a square dance, it has come to be believed that these 
are square dances and therefore the figures are square dance figures.  Sharp 
also believed that these dances were ”the sole survival of a type of 
Country-dance which, in order of development, preceded the Playford dance”.  
So, many of the figures did not really originate in square dancing.

 

Anyway, enough about history.  Here are some dances that probably meet your 
criteria:

 

Box Circulate:

Chris Page’s Chinese New Year

My Irish New Year – with a different ending: 
http://contrafusion.co.uk/Dances/IrishNewYear.html

 

Pass the Ocean, Extend, Swing Through:

Balancing Act: http://contrafusion.co.uk/Dances/BalancingAct.html

 

Figures from the traditional English Square Dance Cumberland Square Eight:

Cumberland Contra: http://contrafusion.co.uk/Dances/CumberlandContra.html

 

Mountain Dosido and Georgia Rang Tang:

DosiWhat? http://contrafusion.co.uk/Dances/DosiWhat.html

 

Flutterwheel:

FlutterRing: http://contrafusion.co.uk/Dances/FlutterRing.html

 

Flutterwheel and Sweep a Quarter:

Hothfield Hey: http://contrafusion.co.uk/Dances/HothfieldHey.html

 

Note: many of my dances are designed for beginners or for dancers in England 
who don’t demand multiple swings in every dance, so there may not be enough 
swings for you in some of the dances above.

 

              I hope that helps.

 

            Happy dancing,                          

                   John                                   

                                    

John Sweeney, Dancer, England   j...@modernjive.com 01233 625 362 & 07802 940 
574                          

http://www.modernjive.com for Modern Jive Events & DVDs                         
       

http://www.contrafusion.co.uk for Dancing in Kent                               
           

 

From: Callers <callers-boun...@lists.sharedweight.net> On Behalf Of Rachel 
Shapiro via Callers
Sent: 04 August 2018 20:51
To: callers@lists.sharedweight.net
Subject: [Callers] Contras with square dance figures

 

Hi all,

I'm in search of contras that have borrowed interesting figures from 
traditional and modern western square dances. Do you have any favorites you're 
willing to share? I've got Rang Tang Contra and some dances with Dixie Twirls. 
Lots with Box the Gnat and Swat the Flea. Any others you love?

Thank you!

Rachel Shapiro Wallace


 

 

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