A Short History of English Country Dance in Victoria … 

In the beginning, there was a Morris dancer with a bad knee who found herself laid up for 6  months: restless, a bit bored, and itching to do something. 

Portrait of Rosemary Lach smiling
Rosemary Lach

A Morris dancer who’d also learned English Country  dance as a child in school in England, and who had, just  then, got wind of an event on the other side of the border. In those days, early in 2000, CASCADIA the much loved Seattle English Country Dance workshop weekend  was still in its infancy. Scott Higgs was calling that year; it was spring, the perfect time to kick over one’s traces and head across the water to see what it was all about. So off she went, armed with a quilting project and a plan to sit out and watch from the sidelines. As it turned out, she couldn’t help but dance all weekend, bad knee and all—as we do when the music starts and we’re called to form a long line and take “hands four.” 

And so, Rosemary Lach returned home determined to launch a similar event—despite the  reality that English Country Dance was virtually non-existent in Victoria. Nonetheless,  Rosemary promptly enlisted the help of John Carver (the “Squire” of the ISLAND THYME  MORRIS group), and between them “Hands Across the Water” was conceived and  launched in September of 2000. 

At the same time, with support and encouragement from the core Seattle dance  organizers, Rosemary became a member of the COUNTRY DANCE & SONG SOCIETY (an  important resource headquartered in Massachusetts). And soon enough, summer found  her on the other side of the continent attending PINEWOODS. These immersive experiences  allowed her to return armed with resources, ideas, and a good grounding in all things  English Country Dance. That fall—by grapevine, jungle drum, and support from the other  side of the border—dancers gathered from Victoria, Vancouver, and Seattle. The first  weekend of what was to become Hands Across the Water was born.  

Paul and Victoria Bestock—movers and shakers behind the ECD scene in Seattle— encouraged Rosemary to bring Laura Mé Smith to Victoria to lead the dance, and they  rounded up enough Seattle dancers to come north and help fill up the hall. On that  September day, there were enough dancers to cover the expenses, and enough musicians  assembled to lift everyone’s feet off the ground (including, we think, Dave Gartrell, Keith  Malcolm, and Gregory Brown—none of whom were familiar with English Country Dance  music). The wildly successful weekend included a Friday night corn roast social and a full day of dancing on Saturday. Since then, Hands Across the Water has been held annually  every September—the autumn counterpart to Cascadia for those of us who love to follow  dance events in the Pacific Northwest. The concept of “hands across the water” endures  to this day, where all of our out-of-town dancers must sail across the Salish Sea—be it for a  weekend of workshops, or for the “Odd Ball” (held on odd years in Victoria, alternating on  even years with Vancouver). 

Needless to say, that first weekend generated plenty of local interest and excitement,  enough to prompt the formation of an English Country Dance group. By January 2001  there were enough local dancers keen to start a regular dance series. Still new to the  business, Rosemary braced herself to get up the gumption and assemble a repertoire,  enough for at least 6 weeks of dance. At that time, we danced at St. Saviour’s hall in Vic West; Rosemary would call up dancers to see if they’d come to dance and musicians to see if they’d come to play. (She also remembers that her program included Fandango and Barham Down, because she knew the dances well, only to find out later that Barham Down was rated 5/5 for difficulty.) 

Dan Page


Meanwhile, Rosemary and Dan Page, friends through the music and folk dance scene in  Victoria, talked about the possibility of having the English Country Dance group use the hall  that Dan had built in the mid-1990s behind his old farmhouse in Saanich.1 The Morris dancers had been using the hall since it was built. At some point along the way, Dan had joined the weekly gathering of musicians, as did Ann Schau, and once that musical rapport was established, the time was right for Dan to welcome an additional use of his hall for newly minted Dancehall Players and the Victoria English Country Dancers. 

5 members of the Dancehall Players, wearing blue and sitting on a bench outside on a sunny day
The Dancehall Players

1 Dan Page and his first wife, Marion Dent, purchased an 1890s farmhouse on 5 acres in 1957. After  Marion passed away in 1992, the family moved the house down the hill. Dan’s second wife,  Yvonne Thompson, a dancer, inspired Dan to build a dance hall on the back of the house  (completed only after she died in 1994)—skillfully built with wood from an old school house. Dan Page and his partner Syd Varley welcomed dancers and musicians in all the years following. Dan  passed away in October 2017, and Dan’s grand-daughter Meaghan continues to welcome a small  group of Sunday dancers and musicians at Dan’s Hall.

AND ON IT WENT, JUST SO… 

Weekly dances were modeled on the “Tea Dance,” starting in a circle of perhaps 12  people who would introduce themselves before the dancing started. The circle formation  of groups of four, back-to-back allowed the teaching of easy dances—often starting with  Newcastle Bridge (Don Bell). In this way beginning dancers would be identified. People  simply arrived—then as now, by word of mouth. As more people showed up, Rosemary  would have to stand on a chair to call—which prompted Dan to build a small caller’s  podium. In the early days, there was no stage and the concept of a piranha pit was developed to create an imaginary barrier to protect the musicians from dancing feet. 

By 2010, Rosemary had moved to Prince George for a time. Weekly dances went on, supported by a growing core of volunteers, Dan’s willingness to provide a home for us, and a growth spurt in the ability of local callers to share responsibility for the dance season. Dan’s quilt came together as a thank-you-tribute to Dan Page, to his music and his hospitality: everyone who used the hall (Newfoundland dancers, Morris dancers, English dancers) contributed a square (and anecdote to go with it).  

Dan’s Tribute Quilt

20 YEARS OF HANDS ACROSS THE WATER 

The 2nd “annual” Hands Across the Water was held in September 2001. Judy Rivken was  brought in to lead the dances, and a number of people from the Jane Austen Society of  North America came to dance (their annual gathering was being held in Seattle that year).  By then, the Friday corn roast was expanded to include a dance that was open to a variety  callers and musicians. And a Sunday brunch was added—hosted until recent years by Pat  Mason, and as of 2015, by Ann Schau. 

The intention behind Hands Across the Water was not only to expand the ability and  repertoire of individual dancers, but also to build musician skills and teach callers. Over the  years, some weekends included callers’ workshops, others included musicians’ workshops. 

In 2005, there was a very well-received musicians’ workshop led by Laurie Anders which  focused on the relationship between the music, the musicians, and the dancers.  

AND THEN THERE WERE BALLS… 

By 2002, there was already an express desire to “have a ball.” By then, the volunteer-run  nature of VECDS was well established, and a reliable core group of volunteers made this  kind of undertaking feasible. Our first ball came about in March 2003—The Grand March  Ball—where Bruce Hamilton led the dances and the Odd Hack Band played. Jane Thom and others put together an elaborate Afternoon Tea (for the first and last time): a lot of  work, and an impressive volunteer effort that allowed Rosemary to stand aside for the  entire day.  

The following year, 2004—The Mad March Ball—saw Lydee Scudder here to call and Odd  Hack played once again. This was the first year a performance dance was prepared, The  Lobster Quadrille (with wildly imaginative costumes).  

At this time, sit-down lunches were initiated (and continue) allowing people to stay on-site  to socialize informally—so that by the time they were dancing later that evening, friendships  were growing. By 2005 it was decided to scale back and hold a ball every other year, with  alternate years hosted by the Vancouver English Country Dance group. A dance leaders’  workshop was part of the 2005 ball program.  

JUST SO EVENTS 

Strawberry Tea 2019

There have been many special events over the years, just because: Strawberry Teas out on the green expanse of Pat Mason’s lawn, dance-outs at Mayne Island, 12th Night Dinner-Dances in the dark of January.2  

2 2023 Postscript: As we know, the pandemic put a stop to dancing face-to-face. It didn’t take long  for Rosemary (and helpers) to organize Zoom dances and Balls-That-Would-Have-Been— allowing participants to tune in from living rooms across the country. This novel undertaking  required that Rosemary adapt any number of standard ECD dances for solo dancing. In so doing,  she also introduced many of us to music from other ensembles (having been spoiled all these  years by having our own house band). The Dancehall Players, in the meanwhile, stayed busy  collaborating remotely, writing new tunes and working towards new albums.

AND WE ALL HAVE A STORY TO TELL… 



Eric and I were invited to ECD at Dan’s in the Fall of 2002 by friends, the Sketchleys. We  were both reluctant but went, thinking it would be a one off. Rosemary was patient, the  group so welcoming, the music and atmosphere so good, that after first evening I knew it  was for me. Not Eric, no way was he going back! Needless to say…here we are all these  years later much enriched by VECDS and grateful for it. – Suzanne Bullen 



My very first Ball in 2002: I didn’t realize the extent to which people “dressed” for this  event. Mike and I turned up — he in jeans, me in a T-shirt and cotton skirt. Bruce  Hamilton—dapper in tux and bow tie, was the caller. He called—among other things— “The Bishop” which, at the time, I thought was an incredibly difficult dance. Everyone was  up on the floor, I was standing alone at the end of the hall without a partner, and Bruce  came bounding down the hall, grabbed my hand and we danced, while he called from the  floor. And by the way, I danced that “difficult” dance perfectly. And I was smitten by Bruce! – Jen Howe 



ECD came to Sooke in 2002 to dance at a party in the home of my friends, Don and  Janette Chrysler. I remember that Sheila led a folk dance and was pulling up party goers  from their seats to join in. I was only too happy to be included and have belonged to ECD  ever since.  – Elaine Ellinger 



New Year’s Eve, 2003, after our arduous quest to learn where and when ECD happened in  Victoria, we arrive a little late at the Page sign on Roy Road, walk up the dark driveway past  the silent sheds and farmhouse while geese called from the flooded field below, ‘round the  corner to that grapevine-canopied walkway festooned with coloured lights, see inside the  bright-windowed door the bobbing heads of the dancers, hear the final lively chords as we  climb the stairs, open the door to the hall’s country warmth of smiling dancers applauding  the musicians, and as Lyn and I grin at one another I say, “We’ve died and gone to heaven!” 

Among too many other memories to recount:  

The Dancehall Players performing… 

… by lamplight in the corner of the Fireside on Twelfth Night…

… crowded onto the bed of Dan’s Model A truck playing for the crowd on Carnsew  Street… 

… in the summertime shade for longways sets on the lawn at Pat’s, Trish’s, Gower’s, and  Wisnia’s.  – Jim Wisnia 

The Dancehall Players performing


I will never forget my very first taste of English Country Dance. It was 2006. Brian  Crumblehume was teaching a weekly dance class on Mayne Island that spring, focussing  mainly on Ballroom and Swing. We tangoed one week and jitterbugged the next. Then in  one of the very last sessions of the season, he asked us if we would like to learn an English  dance. Always game for something new, I said “sure!” The dance was the three couple set,  Braes of Dornoch—the slow and stately version. Brian walked us through the steps, turned  on the music (recorded by the amazing band, Bare Necessities) and off we went. Despite  the inevitable confusions and collisions, I felt absolutely transported. The music, the flowing  figures, the intimacy of dancing with six other people, all put me in an altered state. I was  hooked! Just a couple of months later Richard and I signed up for our first Hands Across  the Water in Victoria. The rest, as they say, is history. – Lael Whitehead 



I first heard about the group from Ann and Jim Gower, probably in the summer of 2008. I  initially met the Gowers through astronomy connections—Ann was just retiring as I started  at UVic as a grad student. That was in the fall of 2003 (though I met Ann also as a  prospective grad in about February 2003 when I came out to visit UVic before deciding to  come out west). Over the next few years, Ann and Jim welcomed me into their lives in a  number of ways, also including the Bent Mast music jam. As I was starting the final year of  my PhD, they thought that I might really enjoy trying ECD—at the time, Ann was still  fiddling with the musicians, and Jim was dancing. And they were right! I loved everything  about it— the dancing, the music, and of course the people! There were so many fun  adventures in that first year—I remember going over to Mayne Island for their ball and  sharing a room with Sherry at Richard and Lael’s, the Victoria Ball (with a Gilbert & Sullivan  themed performance, plus earlier theatre expedition courtesy of David Gallop, and an  amazing ball gown, first lent then given to me by Jen Howe), and a summer dance party at  Pat Mason’s just as my dad had arrived to help me move. I’m not sure how I managed to  fit all of that in while I was working on defending my PhD and applying for jobs, but  obviously it was too much fun to miss out on. I was sad to be moving from Victoria at the  end of that summer, but I kept up ECD when I moved, and tried to time my visits back to  Victoria to overlap with Thursday dance. I first went to Cambridge/Boston for 3 years  (with thanks to Rosemary for putting me in touch with Helene Cornelius when I arrived there), and then one year in Hamilton, before coming back to Victoria in the fall of  2013. And I’m ever so thankful to be back in Victoria again with some of my favourite  people. – Helen Kirk 



In summer 2009 my friend Kate took Seymour and me to contra in Vancouver. My first  dance partner was Nelson. He spun me around and around and around and it was really  fun. But…I got so dizzy I couldn’t dance the rest of the evening. While I was sitting out,  somebody recommended ECD as a more sedate alternative, and told me how lucky we  were to have ECD available every week in Victoria. Seymour found the VECDS website  and got directions to Dan’s Hall. The first time was a bit intimidating because it was so  obviously a private home; we weren’t sure quite what would happen once we reached the  end of the walkway. Oddly enough, while I remember walking towards the door, I don’t  actually remember anything that happened after we reached the door, so it must have  been all right. Anyway, we kept coming back — and we kept on coming back because we  had finally found a kind of dancing that Seymour liked. My other vivid early memory is panic  the first time I realized that being a one was different from being a two!  – Jenny Fraser 



We were first invited to dance at the Mayne Island Ball in 2011 by my oldest friend Joanne  Williamson, a Vancouver dancer who, unbeknownst to me, had been dancing both English  and Contra for many years. At that time we had a family cottage on Mayne and Joanne  thought it would be “fun”—as a way of thanking us for hosting her—for us to come along  for the day of workshops and the evening of dance. I flatly refused, reminding her that I was  hopeless when it came to remembering more than three steps to any sequence. Joanne, in  her inimitable way, simply said: “Claudia, if you can walk you can do English Country  Dance.” This, of course, was not true but it got us out one door and into another. Inevitably, I couldn’t keep more than two or three steps in my head at a time (Jen will  remember the terror of trying to help me through “Mary K” before we bailed at the end of  the line: no good deed goes unpunished). Nonetheless, by the end of the evening I was  smitten. On our way home that evening, Jennifer (who we knew as a friend on Mayne)  encouraged us to come to Dan’s Hall—and off we went (first ending in field on the wrong  side of Roy Road, before finding the long driveway in the dark, and the steps up to the hall  and through another door. David was a good sport from beginning to end, and here we  are.  – Claudia Haagen  



Prepared for the 20th Anniversary of Hands across the Water, 2019 (with a footnote here and there).