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1650
Tap Dancing: An Afro-Irish Fusion

Tap dance is a uniquely American dance form established through the fusion of West African and Irish traditional dances. It is the product of cultural exchange between enslaved Africans and Irish indentured servants dating back to the 1600s.

At this time, thousands of Irish were exiled to the colonial English islands in the Caribbean during the Thirteen Year War, along with Africans who were brought over as part of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade (see also: Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade: Largest forced migration in history, 1790-1808). Enslaved Africans and indentured Irish found themselves working side-by-side on English-owned tobacco plantations. The Irish and Africans brought traditions of music, dance, and storytelling to the Americas, paving the way for cultural exchange and transformation. Enslaved Africans adapted religious dance rituals to life on the plantation. In the 1740s, when new slave laws banned the use of drums (for fear they would lead to an uprising), Africans transferred rhythms to their hands and feet. The Irish combined their step and clogging styles with African dances, and the two collided in a form called “jigging.” These dances also developed a competitive element, contributing to both rivalries and camaraderie. The evolution of tap continued throughout the 1800s and 1900s and migrated to the Northeast. Following the 1845 potato famine in Ireland and the subsequent wave of Irish migration (see also: The Second Wave: Irish and German immigration, 1848-1870), Irish and African-Americans found themselves working side-by-side once again on railroads and canals. The influence of Latin American rhythms and hip-hop in the twentieth century further contributed to the development, complexity, and transcultural-nature of the popular American dance form.
Nicholas Brothers in Stormy Weather
Fayard and Harold Nicholas were a fantastic set of flash-dancers who performed as the Nicholas Brothers. Born seven years apart, the brothers performed for decades on stage and screen, later teaching dance to Michael and Janet Jackson, among many others. In the performance below from Stormy Weather, many of their trademark moves are on display — jumping down stairs into splits, sliding up from splits without using hands, and gleefully jumping through orchestra stands, while tap-dancing in unison.
The Irish and Africans brought traditions of music, dance, and storytelling to the Americas, paving the way for cultural exchange and transformation.
United States
Sources
  1. Valis Constance Hill. Tap Dancing America: A Cultural History. New York: Oxford University Press, 2009. Pages 458.
  2. Valis Constance Hill. Tap Dance in America: A Very Short History. New York Public Library.
  3. Origin: A History of Social Dance in America — AAS Online Exhibition. American Antiquarian Society. Date accessed: November 30, 2014.
Additional Resources
  1. Mark Knowles. Tap Roots. North Carolina: McFarland and Company, 2002. Pages 283. 978-0786412679.
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