The
Congo Square in New Orleans is now seen by jazz scholars as the originating
locus of American jazz. In Marshall Stearns’
history of jazz the beginnings of jazz are situated in Congo Square. Dancing and socializing was permitted to African
slaves in antebellum New Orleans from economic motives of the New Orleans
establishment. The dances, which records
indicate began as early as 1817, became an important tourist attraction for the
city. –Ron Price with thanks to Marshall
Stearns, The Story of Jazz, Oxford
Univ. Press, NY, 1956, p. 50.
Most recent narrative jazz histories begin their discussions of the music
at a much later date, during the rigid, post-Reconstruction imposition of Jim Crow
in New Orleans. The subsequent enforced musical fraternization between
light-skinned, high-caste Creoles of color, who favored European styles of
music, and the Africanist music making of darker-skinned, working-class blacks
has also played an important part in most histories of jazz. But Stearns’s
work, though in some ways superceded by efforts of contemporary jazz scholars,
remains important. His discussion of Congo Square, while often ignored, has not, to my
knowledge, been disputed. The Congo
Square dances began “at a signal from a police official” that “summoned” the
slaves to the square. –See Herbert Asbury,
The French Quarter, Alfred A. Knopf, NY, 1936, p. 269; quoted in Stearns, The Story of Jazz, p. 51.
In a later
study, Stearns notes that the Congo Square dances were “a tourist attraction
that had the sanction of the city government.” -Marshall and Jean Stearns, Jazz Dance:The Story of American Vernacular Dance, Da Capo Press, NY,
1968, p.19.
1817 was a big year for the Baha’is.
Six million of them now celebrate the birth of Baha’u’llah on 12/11/....1817.
The 1st American school for the deaf opened, and construction began on the Erie Canal. Alexander Lucius Twilight was the 1st black to graduate from a US
college.
John Quincy Adams became
Secretary of State The 1st Mississippi
"Showboat," left Nashville on its maiden voyage. The 1st sword swallower performed in the U.S. Indeed 1817 was a big year.
------------- married for 48 years, a teacher for 32, a student for 18, a writer and editor for 16, and a Baha'i for 56(in 2015)
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