The
Dance brothers consisted of John Henry, George Perry and David Ethelred, who came
to Texas with the rest of their family from Alabama
in 1853. (Another brother, Isaac, died of measles in 1862.) They settled in Brazoria
County and opened the J.H. Dance and Company Machine Shop, which was put to peaceful
pursuits, near East Columbia. Their first manufacture was a gristmill that could
be operated by steam, horse or water power, according to what was available. They
also manufactured cotton gins.
The
Dance brothers didn’t enter the gun making business until the Civil War broke
out. James fought for the Confederacy with the Brazoria Volunteers while brothers
George, David and Isaac were put to work at the factory in Columbia where they
finished and mounted cannons and ground cornmeal. At some point in 1862, they
began making pistols and in 1863 joined with two Park brothers, A.R. and Sam,
to form Dance and Park. Key to the operation were Otto and Alex Erichson, sons
of famous Houston gunsmith Gustav Erichson.
The first shipment of 12 guns
was sent to San Antonio in 1862.
The presence
of Union troops at Matagorda Island precipitated a move to Anderson
in late 1863, where it was believed for a long time that no pistols were manufactured.
Recent research, which is included in Gary Wiggins’ book, “Dance & Brothers, Texas
Gunmakers of the Confederacy,” reveals that Dance did indeed manufacture pistols
at Anderson in addition
to casting cannonballs and converting flintlock muskets to cap-and-ball weapons.
In April of 1865, a shipment of 25 Dance pistols was sent to Houston.
Somebody broke into the crate and stole five of the guns. That was the last shipment
of Dance pistols on record. The factory quit making pistols in May of that year
and the Dance brothers went home to East Columbia to get on with the rest of their
lives, which included making furniture but not guns. The hurricane of 1900 destroyed
the factory and it was never rebuilt.
The Dance pistols are valuable today,
not because of the history associated with Longley
and the others, but because the Dance brothers didn’t make very many of the guns;
they were rare even in Bloody
Bill’s day. Less than 400 of the guns were manufactured.
Of the 100
or so Dance pistols that survive today, about 85 of them are .44 caliber models.
Only a few of the Dance’s .36 caliber guns survived.
As a note to collectors,
if you have a Dance pistol, serial number 4, you might want to have it appraised.
That was Bloody
Bill Longley’s gun.
© Clay
Coppedge "Letters from
Central Texas"
September 21, 2009 Column
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