Showing posts with label dancing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dancing. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 29, 2025

Communist Party nights out in London, 1930s

From the pages of the Daily Worker, newspaper of the Communist Party of Great Britain, some dances and other social events in the 1930s.

Daily Worker Carnival Dance at Hoxton Baths with 'Real Red Band', December 1931:


Also from 1931, 'Great Boxing Night Revels' at New Greenwich Baths with 'South East London's Finest Dance Floor' and 'the Varsity Revels Band'. Plus Hackney National Unemployed Workers Movement social and dance at Holcroft Road school; Woodcraft Dance at Savoy Ballrooms in Dalston (presumably liked to radical scouting alternative the Woodcraft Folk) [source Daily Worker, 12 December 1931)


From 1934 - Young Communist League Flannel Dance at Bermondsey Library, Spa Road; Relief Committee for the Victims of German Fascism dance at Conway Hall; League Against Imperialism and Negro Welfare Association Social and Dance at the Pindar of Wakefield in Grays Inn Road. Plus some Eisenstein film nights. Also an advert for Nanking Chinese Restaurant at 4 Denmark Street, off Charing Cross Road 'the place for internationalists'



 

Wednesday, June 15, 2022

'Low Class foreigners' and men dancing with men: Police raid Italian club in Soho (1900)

A police raid on an Italian-run club in Soho in 1900 led to fighting with police outside and the proprietors being jailed.

The Co-operative Club was at 2 Little Dean Street and was raided at one o'clock in the morning where around 100 people were drinking and 'dancing to piano music'. Previously 'dancing had been seen going on, men sometimes dancing with men, and very bad language had been heard in the place. All the men found there were low-class foreigners'. During the raid a 'disturbance took place' outside and 10 people were arrested - one for assaulting a constable (Evening Standard 31 July 1900)

Francesco Covini, the alleged club proprietor, and  Sebastian Cordori, a waiter, were charged with 'keeping a common, ill-governed and disorderly house'. They were jailed for 12 months and 6 months respectively (London Evening Standard, 10 August 1900)