‘Good, clean fun’: Infacet the resurgence of neighborhood dance halls

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“All join hands and circle to the left,” Courtney Kaplan stated right into a microphone, her pigtail braids bouncing as she known as out sq. dance strikes whereas individuals younger and previous joined arms.

“Now back to the right, if it takes all night,” she stated subsequent.

Bluegrass musicians taking part in nearly each instrument conceivable crammed shoulder-to-shoulder onto a small stage, because the sound of music and laughing echoed off the partitions, a fire crackling within the background.

“Now into the center with a great big shout,” stated Kaplan, because the 60-some individuals hollered in unison.

A woman with brown braids speaks into a microphone with a band playing right behind her.

Hanna Merzbach

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Wyoming Public Radio

Courtney Caplan calls out the strikes on the Feb. 6 household sq. dance night time at Kearney Community Hall. She’s the president of the board that has spent years renovating and reopening the constructing.

This was what it sounded wish to be on the Kearney Community Hall on a cold Friday night time in February. The about seven-decades-old dance corridor is within the ranching neighborhood of Banner in Northeast Wyoming, nestled within the Bighorn Mountains close to Story. It’s off I-90 about 20 minutes in both course from Sheridan and Buffalo.

It’s considered one of many dance halls being revived for neighborhood members residing in remoted locations.

“ I used to drive by this hall and for years it had been sort of abandoned,” Kaplan defined.

That’s till in 2010, when Kaplan and a pal minimize the lock off the doorways with boltcutters. She and different musicians needed a venue to play in and knew there was a giant oak ground right here.

“I knew it was a great floor for dancing and that was the reason, enough to save the building,” she stated.

From there, Kaplan and others fashioned a nonprofit which got here to personal the constructing. They fundraised, one pie public sale or chili feed at a time, to switch the leaky ceiling and damaged home windows, and repair the holey ground.

A brown cowboy boot has a sign on it that says “donations.” There’s miscellaneous clothes and water bottles on a table in the background.

Hanna Merzbach

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Wyoming Public Radio

The Kearney Community Hall collects donations in a cowboy boot at its Feb. 6 occasion in Banner, Wyo.

They formally opened the doorways in 2017. Now, twinkling lights dangle from the wood ceiling beams and colourful quilts cowl the partitions.

“You see these kids, they’re not running around with their phone in their hand,” Scott Gall, who’s on the nonprofit board and is Kaplan’s companion in crime. “The big kids are helping the little kids dance. It’s pretty cool.”

“Okay, so it’s not politics. It’s not religion,” Kaplan jumped in. “The saying is square dancing is the most fun you can have with your clothes on.”

People of all ages hold hands, dancing together in a big room with wooden ceiling beams, as seen through an outside window, where twinkly lights are reflecting off the glass.

Hanna Merzbach

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Wyoming Public Radio

Dancers of all ages be part of arms on the Kearney Community Hall in Banner, Wyo.

“It’s just good, clean community fun,” Kaplan stated.

Good, clear neighborhood enjoyable. Attendees uttered that phrase ceaselessly on the sq. dance night time. But it hasn’t at all times been so clear. Oldtimers stated individuals used to celebration till daylight again within the ’60s and ’70s. Nonprofit board member Joe Foss performed in a band right here then.

“I guess dancing is a physical form of appreciation of the music. And you saw all kinds about midnight,” Foss stated laughing.

The identical was true throughout the west. It was a means for cowboys and different residents to “shake off the dust of the week,” stated American west creator Chip Schweiger, who has what he calls a “cowboy mustache.”

He recently wrote about dance halls on his web site, “Way out West.” He stated close to the flip of the twentieth century, they acted like “social infrastructure,” locations to share the information and meet future spouses.

A man with a thick, black mustache sits atop a horse, with a lasso beside him and a sunset in the background.

Chip Schweiger, a author who has deemed himself the “cowboy accountant,” sits atop a home.

“We talk about the West being beautiful because it’s vast, but that vastness also creates isolation,” stated Schweiger, who lives in Fort Worth, Texas. “And so what the dance halls did was create a sense of community.”

That’s the aim in Cody. The Wyoming city is on the sting of Yellowstone National Park and can also be reinvesting in dance halls. In mid-April, a gaggle of locals re-opened the doorways at Cassie’s to a crowd of individuals wanting to swing dance to stay nation rock music.

Cassie’s Steakhouse and Saloon has lengthy been an establishment for western dancing

“It’s a Frankenstein of a building,” stated one of many co-owners, Mike Jones. “Each room has history for when it was added and why it was added.”

At one level, Cassie’s was a brothel. It’s really named after the lady who owned it within the early 1900s.

“Under the dance floor, actually, is hollow because that’s where they were making booze and moonshine during the prohibition,” Jones stated.

Couples dance around a dance floor as a band plays in the background.

Community members dance on the grand reopening of Cassie’s Steakhouse and Salon in mid-April in Cody, Wyo.

Jones, who spent most of his life in Cody, remembers Cassie’s most for the music and dancing.

“I remember walking in those big front doors because the parking lot’s full, so I had my mom drop me off at the gas station across the street,” Jones recalled. “The band’s off to the right, having a good time on the old stage. This place is packed.”

That’s the sensation Jones stated he’s been chasing since Cassie’s shut down in 2024.

“Where it’s nice and quiet on the outside. You can kind of hear the music, and you open the doors, and it’s just a whole new world in there,” he stated.

The trick for preserving these neighborhood facilities open is discovering individuals to hold on the legacy.

At the Kearney Community Hall in Banner, Wyo., that’s the nonprofit’s subsequent mission.

“Because we’re not kids,” stated longtime board member Rick Pallister, who described the challenge as “a labor of love” — emphasis on the “labor.”

Three men lounge along a deck attached to a building, with trees in the background.

Hanna Merzbach

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Wyoming Public Radio

Kearney Community Hall board members Scott Gall, Rick Pallister and Joe Foss collect on the constructing’s again deck, which overlooks the Bighorn Mountains.

But the nonprofit has some contenders, like 9-year-old Emerson Villegas, who was taking part in the fiddle on stage on that energetic Friday night time in February.

“I really like playing in front of people,” Emerson stated. “Sometimes I’m nervous, but sometimes I’m not ’cause I know that it brings people joy.”

There’s additionally Brooke Holzemer, who’s studying to name the sq. dance strikes.

“Eight move forward, and six move back. Now rotate right,” the 20-year-old instructed the keen crowd.

Holzemer stated this dance corridor is without doubt one of the causes she plans to remain on this neighborhood.

She smiled, “It’s pretty unique.”

This story was produced by the Mountain West News Bureau, a collaboration between Wyoming Public Media, Nevada Public Radio, Boise State Public Radio in Idaho, KUNR in Nevada, KUNC in Northern Colorado, KANW in New Mexico, Colorado Public Radio, KJZZ in Arizona and NPR, with further help from affiliate newsrooms throughout the area. Funding for the Mountain West News Bureau is supplied partially by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and Eric and Wendy Schmidt.


This web page was created programmatically, to learn the article in its unique location you possibly can go to the hyperlink bellow:
https://www.aspenpublicradio.org/2026-04-24/good-clean-fun-inside-the-resurgence-of-community-dance-halls
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