- Era: late 1850s-1860s, America (New England)
Down East Breakdown is an unusual Civil War-era American contra dance: unlike most of them, it is done in “mescolanze,” or four-facing-four, formation. I have directions for it only in two manuals by Boston musician Elias Howe: Howe’s Complete Ballroom Handbook (Boston, 1858), and American Dancing Master and Ball-Room Prompter (Boston, 1862). Unlike many contra dances of the mid-century, it does not seem to have been picked up by later writers.
The name of the dance is rather interesting. “Down east,” in a New England context, refers to eastern Maine. A “breakdown” in this era was a type of solo dance, like clogging, which was particularly associated with slave dancing and minstrelsy, as may be seen in works like Jig, Clog, and Breakdown Dancing Made Easy (New York, 1873). An illustration at the American Antiquarian Society website, taken from the January 31, 1863, edition of Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, shows “contraband children” dancing a breakdown. The dance itself does not incorporate any kind of stepping or anything other than perfectly typical figures, however.

