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Bankersmith
Dance Hall interior
Photo
courtesy Michael
Barr, June 2020 |
Buckholts
has one of the rare SPJST octagonal buildings,
used as dance and meeting hall.
Milam County
Photo by John Troesser, 6-03 |
March
2016 photo © Michael Barr |
The stage where
Elvis played
March 2016 photo © Michael Barr |
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Historical Marker
(on Eagle Ferry Road off Hwy 562):
Double Bayou Dance Hall
Nestled in the thick woods and low-lying marshlands
of east Texas lies the
predominantly African American community of Double Bayou, named after
twin waterways in the area. The community was originally settled by
rancher John Jackson around 1847. Later, a local general store became
the center of the community. Sugar cane, cotton
and oil attracted farmers and workers to the commercial link to Galveston.
After a hard day’s work, these workers, African American and Anglo,
flocked to the little one-room dance hall which became known as Double
Bayou Dance Hall.
In the late 1920s and early 1930s during Juneteenth,
many celebrants would travel from Galveston
to Double Bayou. At its inception, the dance hall was little more
than cedar logs laid out as a dance floor. In 1941, a storm destroyed
the structure. Using the original materials, the dance hall was rebuilt
after World War
II not far down the road from the original location by Manuel
Rivers, Jr. (1907-1983). Despite its meager appearance, the music
that poured through the windows and doors filled the woods with the
rich sound of Texas Blues.
One resident of Double Bayou, Floyd “Pete” Mayes (1938-2008), grew
up around the old dance hall and premiered in 1954 with his band,
the Texas Houserockers. Over the next several decades, many blues
legends performed at Double Bayou Dance Hall as it was a popular destination
along the Chitlin’ Circuit, a group of nightclubs safe for African
Americans to perform. Despite cultural and economic differences, once
people entered Double Bayou Dance Hall, they shared their love of
music and love of Texas Blues.
2015 |
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The dance hall
interior
Photo courtesy George Shaffer |
Halsted,
TX - Halsted Dance Hall
photo circa 1915
Fayette County
Wessels
Family Collection
Submitted by Carolyn Heinsohn, Fayette County Historical Commission
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Photo
courtesy Kathern Hogan, Sept. 2012 |
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[The photo is]
from a collection
of old photographs that belonged to my great grandmother, Dora
Kobitz of the Cross K Ranch that resided on the Victoria
County shore of Coleto Creek.
Our family, the Kobitz family, lived on a large ranch that bordered
Coleto Creek on the Victoria
County side. Most of this property was taken when the Coleto Resovoir
was built in the late 1960's. but there is still a small parcel about
midway between Raisin and Coletoville.
My Grandfather, Preston Charles Kobitz, was the last born male in
the Kobitz family, and the last to live in the old ranch house.
In the late 1980's he wrote his remembrances of life in Raisin/Coletoville
during the early 1900's; The following passage is taken from those
writings:
Time Has Passed it By....
"Raisin was quite a little burg. Otto Kolh had the big general store.
Before the Postal Service started the rural mail service, he was also
Post Master. There was also a cotton gin, two dance halls. There is
a picture of the Frederick Hall among the old pictures. There was
a blacksmith shop and two saloons.
Frederichs Hall was quite large, and at Christmas there was a big
live oak decorated with popcorn on string. I do not recall if there
were apples and oranges. I do recall that there were many gifts under
the tree. There were many barbecues, usually on July 4th or other
special days. The charge was usually fifty cents for all you could
eat. It included potato salad, noodle salads, coffee, vegetables,
pickles, bread, and anything you would serve at home for a dinner,
it would be on their table. This was always a gala occasion. It would
start in the afternoon and end up with a dance at night. The saloons,
of course, did a big business! There was always a number of fights
and you could bet that a man named John Marr was in at least one of
them. The cotton gin, the blacksmith shop, the Otto Kolh store are
all gone, have been for years. Also the saloons. Time has passed it
by."
- Frank Richard Brown, June 22, 2007 |
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Weesatche
TX - The Weesatche Dance Hall c.1913
The Weesatche Dance Hall is still open for occasional dances as posted
by the sign out front.
Goliad County
TE photos, July 2001 |
Dance Halls
in Texas
by Lois Zook Wauson
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I loved going
to dances in South Texas,
during the 1940s. Every one went, from mothers and fathers to the
children. It was our social life. I lived in Wilson
County, 20 miles southwest of Floresville.
Every week there was a dance at Three Oaks Hall. The week before there
would be one at Hobson.
If there was a dance at Three Oaks or Hermann Sons Hall in Poth,
my brother Lawrence and I were going to go, no matter what. I loved
going to Hermann Sons Hall best. |
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Country-dances
were popular in South Texas.
When I was small, in the late 30s and early 40s, I remember going
to dances at Kasper School. The band would consist of a guitar player,
a fiddle player and maybe a harmonica player. They cleared out the
desks and put everything in one room, opened up the big folding doors
between the two big classrooms. They threw cornmeal all over the floor
to make the floor slick and easy to slide on. As every one danced
and danced, small children played outside and watched through the
windows or went in and danced with each other. As a child, I remember
standing outside on the porch and watching through the open windows
as they dancers did the Cotton-eyed Joe, the waltz, two-step or polka.
Before electricity came in the early forties, when the REA came through,
they put up kerosene lanterns to light the place up. I loved the sound
of the music and the beat of the men's boots or heavy shoes on the
wooden floors.
There have been dances over at Three Oaks since before I was born.
My mother and father had their first date going to that New Years
Eve dance at Three Oaks in 1931.
When I left home in 1950, I moved to San
Antonio and spent quite a few Saturday nights at Fest Hall, at
the Circle B, and later on at The Farmers Daughter. Just before I
got married and even afterward, when my husband and I would go dancing
with my aunts and uncle and friends, we went to Helotes to the John
T. Floores big dance hall. The outside patio, with it large spacious
concrete floor was wonderful on warm spring, summer and autumn nights.
We went to see Charlie Walker, a local singer, and even got to hear
a newcomer everyone was talking about. His name was Willie Nelson.
A few times I had dates to the Silver Dollar Saloon in Bandera,
where we danced the night away, then drove back to San
Antonio, at 2:00 in the morning. |
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After moving
to North Texas
near Ft. Worth, in
1968, we even went to a few dance halls with our grown kids, who loved
the old time country western dances. Our favorite was Nine Acres Club
out in Colleyville. I only went to Billy Bobs in Ft.
Worth one night. By then my dancing days were going by. But I
still yearned for the good old days of going to country-dances. |
Hermann Son's
Hall as church in February 2006
TE photo |
My memory has
taken me back to one night long ago. It is Saturday night! It is the
summer of 1948. The sun is going down in the west. It is still hot
after a sweltering hot day! The temperature was still near 99 degrees.
The dance halls were calling. I was 16. And I was going to the dance
at Hermann Sons Hall in Poth.
I hurried, along with my brother and sister, to milk the cows. The
sweat was rolling down my face and back. I had to take a bath. Well,
taking a bath at our house meant filling up the big wash tub with
water which was set up in the bedroom, and then scrunch myself down
in it and bathe. We had no running water. Finally I felt clean and
the breeze blew in through the window to cool me off. I put on my
white cotton peasant blouse and my big full pink printed skirt that
would swirl around when I spun around the dance floor. I had rolled
my hair in pin curls earlier in the day and now I combed it out and
my hair was soft and curly. I just hoped the humidity and heat wouldn't
make the curls droop too soon.
I applied my red lipstick and slipped on my sandals. My brother Lawrence,
only 14, drove the old gray pickup truck, and we took off in a cloud
of dust for Poth.
I wondered who would be there? To dance with, I meant. The boys! I
knew my friends, Crystal, Jennie Lee, Dorothy Ann and other friends
would be there. But, I was thinking of the boys.
We drove up in the big dirt parking lot, already full with cars and
pick-ups. As we walked in the door of the big white frame building
sprawled out under the trees, I could hear the oompah-pah of the polka
the band was playing. I smelled the strong smell of beer, coming from
the bar area, and walked into the big hall. The dancers were swirling
and dancing round and round the room, and I could see the walls lined
with benches, people sitting there, talking and watching the dancers.
My brother took off to find his friends, and I began to walk around
looking for Crystal or Jennie Lee. There was Jennie Lee dancing and
laughing with Paul, her boyfriend and I saw Crystal, dancing with
some boy. He was happily stepping on her feet, and she was trying
to get out of the way, and acting like she was having a lot of fun.
But, I knew better. I sat down on the bench and waited for the set
to finish, and she saw me and walked over, smiling and thanking the
tall gangly boy for the dance. When she sat down, whispered that she
just couldn't hurt his feelings and refuse to dance with him.
I shook my head and smiled, knowing what she meant. We always seemed
to be dancing with the wrong boys. The ones we wanted to dance with
had other girlfriends. Finally came the time we were waiting for,
the Paul Jones. That was where the girls and boys got in a big circle
in the center of the hall, with the girls in the center and the boy
to the outside. We all walked around in opposite directions in the
huge circle as the music played, boys and girls, and then the whistle
blew loudly, then the boy next to you grabbed you and started dancing.
You never knew whom you would get, but sometimes I was lucky. The
boy would be tall and handsome and a great dancer. I was disappointed
when it was over, and we sat back down and waited for the music to
start up with Cotton Eyed Joe. Now that was something we could all
dance to, without a partner. It was just dancers sometimes in a line
of two to six people. We danced and swayed and back stepped and front
stepped for sometimes two sets, if the musicians were agreeable to
doing it again. Everyone loved the Cotton Eyed Joe.
The night wore on, and the heat in the hall was getting unbearable.
Only big fans stirred the air, with the human bodies all hot and sweating,
and dancing and moving. There was not much coolness in the place.
The men and boys kept going to the bar area and going outside. They
got rowdier and rowdier and every once in awhile I could hear yelling
and hollering outside. Someone broke up a fight. But I didn't ever
go outside. I stayed inside, even during intermission.
Toward the end of the night, as I was sitting there, laughing and
talking to Dorothy Ann, I could see one boy coming toward me, smiling.
My heart jumped in my chest. Was he coming to ask me to dance? He
didn't say a word, he just reached out his hand and I lifted up mine
and I stood up. The boy I had been wishing I could dance with all
night was right there before me! We "two-stepped" and waltzed around
and around the dance floor, and when he put his cheek next to mine,
I wanted to faint. All too soon the dance was over and he walked me
back to the bench and smiled and walked off.
I left the dance that night, my head in the clouds. It was the best
dance of my life. The clouds were beginning to build up some in the
west. I could see the darkness on the horizon and then a streak of
lightening. A breeze was kicking up the dust in the parking lot. It
was cooler as I got into the pickup, and my brother started it up
and we drove out to the farm.
We talked. I had seen him dancing one time, but he had mostly been
hanging round with his friends. After all he was only 14 years old.
He liked the girls, but just didn't have the nerve yet to dance with
them.
My brother asked me if I had a good time and I had fun and did I dance
with anyone. I told him I had danced a lot and it was fun. He glanced
over at me, as he shifted the gears in the pickup, and started past
Schneiders Cafe on the road and headed west across the River, to home,
smiling knowingly.
He asked, Oh Yeah? Who did you dance with?
None of your business! I said, smiling, tossing my hair, my curls
gone and my hair stringy and damp and drooping down on my neck. But
I didn't care. It was all worth it. I had had a good time at the dance.
I wondered who was going to play at Herman Sons Hall next week. I
was sure Daddy would let us go. For tonight I was happy! It looked
like it might rain, and maybe it would be cooler next week!
© Lois Zook Wauson
"They
shoe horses, don't they?" March 11, 2010 Guest
Column |
Texas
Escapes, in its purpose to preserve historic, endangered and vanishing
Texas, asks that anyone wishing to share history/stories and vintage
or recent photos of Texas dance halls, please contact
us. |
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