|
[Previous Page :: Contents List :: Next
Page]
Mr Boseley’s Dancing Room (1 of 3)
John Boseley (c1660–1739) opens the account of the Norwich dancing
masters in fine style, but remains an enigma. He was a well-to-do property
owner with a coat of arms on the considerable amount of plate detailed in
his will. He styled himself ‘gentleman’, but whether as befits
a property owner or from hereditary entitlement I don’t know. I don’t
know his origins; he had relations and property interest in and around Terrington
St Clement but his birth is not registered there. He was evidently a dancing
master of repute but I don’t know who trained him or where. For all
we know about the man of property there is little to identify his profession.
He grew up with the coranto and would have taught the minuet, but we learn
nothing about his syllabus.
He is first known to be in Norwich in 1693. He and his wife Abigail (b.1667)
lived in St Andrew’s parish where the birth of two of their children
was registered: John on 13 September 1693, Thomas on 9 September 1694. Boseley
was probably working as a dancing master but nothing is known of his practice
at or before this time.
By 1695 he had moved to the adjoining parish of St John at Maddermarket
and lived in the building known today as Strangers’ Hall, which he
owned. Strangers’ Hall, on Charing Cross, is a composite building
with medieval origins, a Tudor hall and later additions. It had been a merchant’s
house and, in 1660, it belonged to Sir Joseph Paine, hosier and Mayor. In
Boseley’s day it was in multiple occupancy: as well as Boseley’s
house, there were tenements, warehouses and a frontage of shops, each section
known by the name of the current or previous occupant. At least, that is
the general rule. As it happens there is no reference to ‘Mr Boseley’s
house’ but Land Tax assessments prove that he owned the property,
and the Churchwardens’ Accounts prove that he lived there from 1695
to 1714. There are maps on which this site is called ‘the Dancing
Master’s estate’.
Tradition asserts that Boseley practised there. As he was in practice at
his next address we have to argue backwards to a previous practice, probably
in the hall which has space but a paved floor, rather than in the smaller
rooms with board floors.
The property, which I shall call ‘Strangers’ Hall’ for
the sake of clarity, lies in two parishes: St John Maddermarket and St Gregory’s.
The parish boundary divides the site unequally. The Boseleys registered
the birth of their next two children at St John’s: William on 10 March
1696 and Abigail on 23 March 1697. Both babies died within weeks of their
birth. It looks as if Boseley lived in the East wing of Strangers’ Hall,
but he may have preferred the vicar of St John’s. A second Abigail
was born in 1699; her birth was not registered at St John’s, but she
died in this parish in 1728 aged 29.
In the early 1700s, we meet Boseley the dancing master – after a
fashion. He figures as ‘Mr Boseley of Norwich’ in the list of
dancing masters who subscribed to John Weaver’s Orchesography; or
the Art of Dancing (1706). This was a translation of Feuillet’s Choreologie
with the author’s new system of dance notation, published in Paris
in 1701. ‘Mr Boseley’ was also among the masters subscribing
to Edward Pemberton’s Essay for the improvement of dancing (1711).
Both works included a short treatise and a collection of dances.
[Previous Page :: Contents List :: Next
Page]
|