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Elsewhere in the City (2 of 5)
Peter Oliver, once with the Norwich Company of Comedians, became a dancing
master in Yarmouth in 1742 and held a ball in N. Walsham on 5 November 1743.
In 1749 he added Norwich to his scalps, teaching at Mr Vipond’s on
Tuesday and Thursday. This was a location much used by dancing masters in
St Stephen’s parish, not otherwise identified. Mr Vipond does not
appear in Chase’s 1783 Directory but was evidently well known at an
earlier date. In 1750 Oliver moved to a room in Sir Benjamin Wrench’s
Court – also serially used by dancing masters. It was in fact a large
room in the Lobster Inn, but advertised to advantage. Jarrolds Department
store stands on the site today and in 1750 it was within a fiddle-string
of Little Cockey Lane. A month later Oliver advertised classes in ‘Burney’s
old room’. In 1752 he held a ball in the ‘Great Room’ at
Little Cockey Lane – now Little London Street; it appears on an 1810
map as a cul-de-sac. Oliver hired a succession of rooms without ever settling.
After his Yarmouth ball on 6 January 1753 nothing is known of him until
the Gazette announced his suicide at Deal in Kent on 24 July 1762.
Charles Gosnold may have been born locally. The parish register of St Michael
at Plea has a Gosnold birth in 1728 but the child’s Christian name
and sex are illegible. Perhaps he was a pupil of Francis Christian who returned
several times as encroaching competition.
As a dancing master Gosnold advertised evening classes ‘near Charing
Cross’ on 9 April 1756. On 18 December 1756 he published a Collection
of Country Dances, price 1/-, printed in Norwich, and gave a ball at his
Rooms. In 1757 he danced at the White Swan theatre, apparently as a PR exercise – later
repeated by Christian’s child pupils. In February 1757 he advertised
that he would teach within a 20-mile radius of ‘his new-built house
in St Andrew’s’.
In common with many of his profession he went to London to take lessons
from a superior master and returned to advertise: ‘he has received
instruction from Miles’ in London’. The refurbishment of his
practice and himself was to no avail; he closed his evening class on 13
March 1758 and disappeared from the local competition, or was frozen out,
until 1 January 1780 when he advertised in the Mercury:
‘DANCING: Mr Gosnold, late of Hampshire, Dancing Master, having taken
a genteel and convenient house in Willow Lane, intends opening a School … for
Young Ladies and Gentlemen. His Days for teaching will be Tuesdays and Thursdays.
[He] is determined that nothing shall be wanting on his Part to expedite
the Improvement of those who shall be entrusted to his Care. He flatters
himself that having taught dancing for more than 20 years in Principal Schools
and Genteel Families will sufficiently recommend him. … dances comprehended
viz: the French Dances, Cotillon, Allemande, Minuet, Louvre, Country Dances,
15/- per quarter, ½ guinea entrance. Schools and families within
14 miles attended. He teaches the Young Gentlemen at Palgrave School.’
Does he mean Mrs Barbauld’s nursery of radicals at Palgrave? He also
taught at Wymondham schools by 1782.
Louvre and ‘the French Dances’ suggest an old-fashioned syllabus,
and he may have had to revise it, re-advertising on 9 September 1780 ‘the
most fashionable dances taught’. In July 1781 a similar notice appeared,
in which he advertised a room to let: the genteel address may have been
over-ambitious. In 1782 he taught at Sir Benjamin Wrench’s Court;
he hired a teaching room and lived or lodged elsewhere, after which he disappeared
from the local newspapers and was not listed in Chase’s 1783 Directory.
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