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Cover of See you at the hall

a novel ·

See you at the hall

by

"From the 1940s to the mid-1960s, several evenings a week, thousands of Irish and Irish Americans flocked from miles around to the huge, bustling dance halls - the Intercolonial, the Hibernian, Winslow Hall, the Dudley Street Opera House, the Rose …

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  • ● history, music

the long version

"From the 1940s to the mid-1960s, several evenings a week, thousands of Irish and Irish Americans flocked from miles around to the huge, bustling dance halls - the Intercolonial, the Hibernian, Winslow Hall, the Dudley Street Opera House, the Rose Croix - that dotted Boston's Dudley Square. For the city's Irish population, the Roxbury neighborhood, with its ballrooms and thriving shopping district, was a vital center of social and cultural life, as well as a bridge from the old world to the new." "See You at the Hall brings to life the history of the "American capital of Galway" through the eyes of those who gathered and performed there. In this look back at Boston's golden era of Irish traditional music, Susan Gedutis weaves together engaging narrative with spirited personal reminiscences to trace the colorful dance hall period from its beginnings in 1940s Roxbury, when masses of young Irish flooded Boston following World War II, through its peak years in the 1950s, to its decline in the 1960s, when reduced immigration, urban social upheaval, and a shift in neighborhood demographics brought an end to the heyday of Irish dance hall music in Boston. After the last dance hall closed, Dudley Square musicians moved from the big ballrooms to pubs, social clubs, and private parties, preserving the music and passing it on to younger generations of Irish performers."--BOOK JACKET.

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Margaret's verdict

""From the 1940s to the mid-1960s, several evenings a week, thousands of Irish and Irish Americans flocked from miles around to the huge, bustling dance halls - the Intercolonial, the …"

— Margaret

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