Fiddler with square dancers behind him.

And it’s home little gal and do-si-do

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Estimated reading time: 4 minutes

Traditional dancing in Appalachia includes several types: step dancing, set dancing, and couple dancing. Step dance traditions include clogging, buckdancing, flatfooting, and the Charleston. Set dances, involving two or more couples, include four couple squares, big set (ring) dances, reels, country (contra) dances, and play parties. Couple dancing, often referred to as “round dancing,” includes the two-step and waltz.

Square dancing, one of the oldest forms of American folk dancing, evolved from several different Old World group dances, mainly the English country, or contra, dance and the French quadrille.

In the American version of square dancing, four couples form a square and dance to music from an accordion, banjo, fiddle, and guitar.

An old-fashioned Southern “square”, sometimes called “running set”– English musicologist Cecil Sharp coined the term while describing dancing in eastern Kentucky in 1916–, can accommodate as few as four or as many couples as want to crowd in. The formation is really a big circle with any number of couples. (There are, of course, a body of Southern squares that are done in 4-couple sets.) Most commonly, a Southern “running set” type of square dance is structured in two parts: First the major circle and then the minor circle. With all hands joined in one big circle around the hall, one or more introductory big circle figures are danced.

"Square dances appeal to mountain folk," stated this caption in a Richmond Times-Dispatch article about White Top, VA in 1934.
“Square dances appeal to mountain folk,” stated this caption in a Richmond Times-Dispatch article about White Top, VA in 1934.

The big circle then breaks up and each couple joins with an adjacent couple to dance some little circle figures. The movements are not so much geometrical figures but little pantomimes: “Birdie in the cage and three hands around” (a girl steps into the center, the other three circle around her); “Around that couple and take a peek” (the active couple tries to look at each other behind the backs of of the inactives, who try to hinder them); “Chase a rabbit, chase a squirrel, chase a pretty girl around the world” (the man pursues his partner around the other couple); to name just a few.

The little circles can be spaced in a major circle around the hall, as in a Sicilian circle; or they can be scattered all over the dance floor. The couples move on to join a new couple and repeat the little figures; progression may occur several times. To conclude, all rejoin in a large circle and dance a finishing big circle figure. An American addition to square dancing is the caller.

Ladies do and the gents you know,
It’s right by right by wrong you go,
And you can’t go to heaven while you carry on so,
And it’s home little gal and do-si-do,
And it may be the last time, I don’t know,
And oh by gosh and oh by Joe.
—(Ernest Legg, WV)

Ernest Legg’s calls were featured on a number of 78s recorded by the Kessinger Brothers in 1928.

The caller–someone who calls out the dance steps in time to the music–was a completely American invention. At first dancers memorized all the steps for a particular dance, but eventually the dances became so complicated that it was necessary to have someone yell out cues so that dancers didn’t have to remember so many steps. The caller didn’t just call out “do-se-do your partner”; a good caller also came up with colorful sayings or witty lines that he would say in between the cues such as “Don’t be bashful and don’t be afraid. Swing on the corner in a waltz promenade.” A caller might also come up with new dance steps and routines.

Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia have all seen fit to make the square dance their ‘folk dance’ State Symbol. North Carolinians prefer clog dancing receive that designation, and West Virginians and Kentuckians haven’t included any sort of dance as a state symbol.

sources:  “Pretty Gal!,” Forbes Parkhill, Saturday Evening Post, Aug 02, 1941; Vol. 214, No. 5, p. 18-22
www.oldtimeherald.org/archive/back_issues/volume-7/7-8/dance_beat.html
Marguerite Butler Bidstrup, “Kentucky Set Running – 1914 firsthand account,” Square Dance History Project
www.heinerfischle.de/history/history.htm

More articles on folk dances/dancing:

How Scottish dances got their names(Opens in a new browser tab)

Appalachian clog dancing(Opens in a new browser tab)

But the nights belonged to youth(Opens in a new browser tab)

7 comments

  1. I remember when I was in school, we had square dancing as part of our gym class. Not all year, but for a certain amount of weeks each year. I bet they don’t do that any more.

  2. Gym and square dancing: ditto here. Florida. The 1950s (I’m older than dirt), and, no, no one seems to have “manners classes”, “dance”, or other things that seemed important to pass on to the young.

  3. Actually, in older dances, the “top couple” of a set (like in the quadrille) determined the dance by starting a figure. Everyone else knew what the possibilities were from that start and followed. If you had a bunch of groups, they’d be doing different steps from each other. You picked a top couple suitable to your skill and ambition!

    I’ve done those, and modern square dancing, too. They’re fun.

  4. I love these fables they tell my life long story of living on butcher knife hollow. At a very early age my life began November 29th 1964. Was born and raised on butcherknife hollow. A lot of the events in these stories remind me of my life. Being raised in the coalfields , going to Alice Lloyd college, Morehead State and Liberty University. They represent faith, courage and love. I’m still seeking the pot of gold from friends, family and loved ones.

  5. I went to a small community church that I had been attending for some years. Had missed a couple of services due to multiple health problems. There were lots of questions that I felt I could not bare. I knew the truth and so did the Lord. I listened silently to the sermon and all the awful sinners comments and stares. I knew the truth and so did the Lord. I went to bed that night with a smile on my face as I thought of the blessings that had been given me on this earthly place. I had thoughts of all the beautiful flowers that are planted in my yard by my mother of birth on this earth. I could not singing silently “I have been Blessed.”

  6. Life is a mystery beyond compare. I search daily for my spiritual gifts. The community is full of doubters Which I desire to delete in my memory bank. I just rejoice and sing daily without care. I know my heavenly father has a wonderful home prepared for me in glory land. I sing and shout Amen! Amen! I smile tenderly as I sing to myself, I am blessed, Oh yes I am blessed. Good night Lord I know you will never leave me nor forsake me for it was written millions of years ago for believers like me to share. Good night and Lord I love you so.

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