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Month: March 2019

Vintage Photos of Key West Florida 1930s-1960s

Vintage Florida Keys Travel Poster

Source: Etsy

On Friday I’m off to the Florida Keys (Florida’s southernmost point and boasts some of the state’s most beautiful beaches) to meetup with some friends to spend a week hanging out, snorkelling and diving. This is my first time to the Keys and I’m excited to see what this tropical part of Florida has to offer.

So in honour of my trip, today’s Vintage Photo Tuesday will be vintage images from the Keys themselves.

Enjoy!

Vintage Postcard: Visit the Florida Keys! Key West Overseas Highway Off To Sea with No Seasickness Old Cars on Bridge

Source: Etsy


Disclosure: Some of the links on my blog from Etsy , eBay are Affiliate Links, meaning, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a commission if you click through and make a purchase. 


Vintage Photos of Key West Florida

1930’s – 1960’s

Groups of people spending the day at the beach – Key West, Florida. -1940s vintage photo.

Further Reading: Vintage Photos of People Having fun at the Beach

1940s vintage photo: Groups of people spending the day at the beach - Key West, Florida.

Source: Florida Memory

Sloppy Joe’s Bar, Key West, Florida -January 1938. There is also a Sloppy Joes in Havana, Cuba which I have been too.

Further Reading: Visit Cuba! 1920s-1950s Vintage Travel Posters

1930s Vintage Photo: January 1938 Sloppy Joe's Bar, Key West, Florida

Photographer- Arthur Rothstein Source: Yale.edu

Loungers in barbershop, Key West, Florida 1938.

1930's Vintage Photo of Loungers / men in a barbershop, Key West, Florida 1938

Photographer- Arthur Rothstein Source: Yale.edu

1950s vintage photo of a group of women in 1950s swimsuits posing with key lime pies for the Key Lime Festival in Key West Florida 1953.

FURTHER READING: Fun & Wacky Vintage Beauty Pageants

1950s vintage photo of a group of women in 1950s swimsuits posing with key lime pies for the Key Lime Festival in Key West Florida 1953

Time to pick the limes! What cute 1950s hats on our key lime ladies.

1950s vintage photo of a group of women in 1950s swimsuits posing with limes while picking them for the Key Lime Festival in Key West Florida 1953

Source: Florida Memory

Key West, the southernmost city in the United States, has many motels to accommodate tourists. Most of the motels are located on the atlantic side of the city. Photo 1960s.

FURTHER READING: Mid-Century Motel/ Hotel Advertising

1960s Photo: Key West, the southernmost city in the United States, has many motels to accommodate tourists. Most of the motels are located on the atlantic side of the city.

Source: Florida Memory

1962 Hotel Poolside.

FURTHER READING: 1950s / 1960s Outdoor Patio Furniture Ideas

1960s Vintage Photo of Florida Keys Hotel Pool -1962

Source: Florida Memory

More fun on the beach. South Beach at the end of Duval Street, 1950.

1950s Vintage Photo of Key West Florida Beach - South Beach at the end of Duval Street

Source: Flickr

The Southern-most home in the United States, Key West Florida, January 1938.

Vintage 1930s Photo of the Southern-most home in the United States. Key West, Florida - January 1938

Photographer- Arthur Rothstein Source: Yale.edu

Stone house built of coral rock.

Stone house built of coral rock - Key West, Florida

Source: Florida Memory

1960 photo: View of the entrance to the Key West Aquarium.

1960's vintage photo: View of the entrance to the Key West Aquarium

Source: Florida Memory

This sign designates mile zero of U.S. 1 in Key West, Florida, the southernmost tip of the United States.

Vintage Photo: This sign designates mile zero of U.S. 1 in Key West, Florida, the southernmost tip of the United States.

Source: Pinterest

Okay friends I’m off for a week! As always follow my adventures on Instagram and have a super week.

Question Time: Have you ever been to the Florida Keys? If so share your favourite parts of your trip in the comments section below. Thanks!

FURTHER READING: Vintage Travel Posts 1920s-1960s (Archived blog posts)

Liz

Vintage Dance Crazes-Part 2

Vintage Dance Craze 1960s- Image of a 1960s couple doing the twist.

Few years ago I did a blog post on Vintage Dance Crazes and I always meant to getting around to doing a part 2. Well after much wait here it is!

Dance Craze or also called Fad“, is characterized by a short burst of popularity and sometimes gliding smoothly into tradition after their “newness” has faded (like the twist which is still done today and the Lindy Hop which was originally a “Dance Craze/Fad”), and sometimes simply fading away into oblivion (source).

Vintage Dance Crazes Part 2

Black Bottom Dance

Black Bottom Sheet Music and dance

Source: Wikipedia

Black Bottom, Jazz dance combining shoulder and hip movements, danced by African Americans in the U.S. South as early as 1907. In a modified version it became a national craze after its appearance in a 1926 Broadway musical.

The black bottom exhibited a number of features derived from the aesthetics of African dance, most notably syncopated rhythms, bent knees, crouched torsos, and hip and pelvic movements. Along with the Charleston, another dance that was popular in the 1920s, the black bottom helped shatter the dominance of couple dancing. Although people may have continued to dance opposite each other in pairs, they no longer held each other or danced in unison, and it was perfectly permissible for the dancer to dance singly (Source).

Some original pattern names for this dance are “The Flick, The Side Shuffle, The Walk.”

Other notes about the dance:

Originally starting in New Orleans the Black Bottom later worked its way to New York. Some say blues singer Alberta Hunter introduced the dance. Others say Perry Bradford in Nashville, Tennessee introduced it to white America in 1919 when he wrote the Song “The Black Bottom.” Bradford’s sheet music had the music as well as the dance instructions printed on them.

The stage Play “Dinah” in 1924 Harlem showcased the Black Bottom to the Public and almost overnight became as popular as the Charleston.

Jelly Roll Morton wrote a song called Black Bottom Stomp, there was a town called Black Bottom in Detroit, Michigan from 1900 to 1960. The dance was performed at the Apollo Theater in 1927 with the George White Scandals and the Roseland Ballroom (New York) even hosted a Black Bottom endurance (marathon) contest in 1927 (seen below). It was popular! ( Source)

1920s Vintage Photo: Black Bottom endurance contest, Roseland Ballroom, New York City, New York State, USA. 1927

The Hully Gully

Hully-Gully Vintage Dance Craze

The Hully Gully is a type of unstructured line dance often considered to have originated in the sixties, but is also mentioned some forty years earlier as a dance common in the black juke joints in the first part of the twentieth century.

The Hully Gully dance craze was started by Frank Rocco at the Cadillac Hotel in Miami and was based off the song of the same name, made popular by the Olympics in 1959.

While researching this dance, I came upon so many different descriptions of how this dance was actually done. From being a more “structured line dance” (Sadly the video is no longer avail), to a freestyle version that you see in the Olympics video below. I’m totally confused, but I do know that whatever version you do end up dancing it sure looks fun!

The Stroll

The Stroll was both a slow rock ‘n’ roll dance and a song that was popular in the late 1950s.

Billboard first reported that “The Stroll” might herald a new dance craze similar to the “Big Apple” in December 1957.

In the dance two lines of dancers, men on one side and women on the other, face each other, moving in place to the music. Each paired couple then steps out and does a more elaborate dance up and down between the rows of dancers. It was first performed to “C. C. Rider” by Chuck Willis on American Bandstand. Link Wray’s “Rumble” was also a popular tune for doing the stroll.

The Diamonds would go on to have a hit song entitled The Stroll in 1957.

When 1950s nostalgia came to the forefront in the 1970s, The Stroll saw renewed public awareness. It was used in the film American Graffiti (1973) during the scene at the high school dance and is mentioned in some of the lyrics in the musical Grease.

The Stroll was an integral part of most episodes of the dance TV series Soul Train, where host and creator Don Cornelius dubbed it the “Soul Train Line.”(Source).

Lastly the stroll is also very popular in the Rockabilly world and is almost always seen being danced at some Weekender (Like VLV) or Rockabilly Party (as seen below). It should be noted though, that the Rockabilly stroll is danced differently then the Dick Clark version shown above.

Well friends, we have come to the end of Vintage Dance Crazes Part 2. I feel that a part 3 is in order because I still have not touched on so many others. So stay tuned for that!

Question Time: Do you have a favorite dance craze either mentioned above (or in Part 1) or not featured? Share in the comments section below.

FURTHER READING:

Now to end this fun post here is a short video on the “Latest in Dancing” circa 1962.

Liz