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Here there were a number of masters with wide and variable circuits competing
with each other and with ‘raiders’ from Norwich. Two practices
had clear lines of descent, others were short-lived. A straight chronological
study is not practicable.
Edward Eastland first advertised in the Gazette, 1725, holding assemblies
at the Duke’s Head Inn. It isn’t clear whether these were pupil
balls, a social event, or a combination of the two. On 16 March 1723 he
gave notice of the opening of his girls’ school and dancing school,
both of which he moved to the High Street in 1725. His assemblies, advertised
on 4 April 1727, had moved up-market to the Town Hall.
Richard Harris ‘from M. de Stroyd’s in London … teaches
at Eastland’s late school’ by 10 March 1744, and continued to
practise until 1766. On 25 August 1759 he advertised his ‘Scholars’ Ball’ at
St George’s Hall, part of the Town Hall:
‘… at 7pm. Scholars 5/-, non-scholars 2/6. There will be dances
as usual for Ladies and Gentlemen.’
He had established the regular event which combined a pupil demonstration,
a parents’ evening, a party and good advertising.
In 1757, at the Town Hall, a Mrs Eastland ‘held’ Lynn Mart
Assembly – a ball which formed part of an annual Fair. Mrs Eastland
must have been Edward’s widow, acting as hostess, an unusual event
in the male establishment running of Norfolk assemblies.
Mr White succeeded to Harris’s practice in 1766, or subsumed Harris’s
practice into his own, based in Norwich, but with a circuit of Lynn, Wisbech,
Kennet, Bury, Walsham-le-Willows and Wickham Market. He did not advertise
after 1767.
Mr Oswald, ‘sometime of Norwich’, advertised as music and dancing
master at Lynn and at a school in Walsingham on 29 October 1768. Nothing
more of him is known apart from his death reported on 28 August 1784 .
Wall du Val advertised on 30 April 1774 as fencing and dancing master at
Lynn Town Hall, ‘Schools attended within a 20mile radius. Minuet and
Cotillon privately taught.’ On 3 September 1774 he advertised his
pupil ball:
‘Town Hall Lynn … his pupils to have 3 tickets each for themselves
and Friends. The Ball to open at 6 o’clock with Minuets. The Young
Ladies and Gentlemen … to conclude at 9 o’clock and spectators
to begin at that time and continue dancing the remainder of the evening.’
du Val returned to his London practice in Hatton Garden, run by an assistant
in the meantime, in 1777, leaving his Lynn practice in the hands of his
local assistant François Veron or Vernon (he is Veron in the Gazette,
Vernon in the Mercury, evidently not local at all, and progressively anglicised;
or a franglicised Englishman who regretted his pretence).
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