From Parlors to Ballrooms: Origins and Early Flourish
Long before neon nights, courteous afternoons welcomed dancers into sunlit rooms where tea softened the edges of shyness. Emerging from late Victorian sociability and Edwardian optimism, these gatherings offered supervised elegance, respectable fun, and live musicians who favored lilting waltzes. We revisit diaries, newspaper notices, and club programs to understand their charm, decoding how daylight, modest ticket prices, and careful etiquette created spaces where strangers became acquaintances and communities forged lasting cultural habits.