I've been spending some quality time in Harvard's library lately, which reminded me of this little waltz variation by Melvin Ballou Gilbert, author of Round Dancing. The original instructions may be seen at left; click the image to enlarge.
The Harvard Dip was published in Gilbert's magazine of dance, etiquette, and exercise, The Director, in September, 1898. I have never seen it published elsewhere, and suspect it was purely a dancing-school variation. The name appears to be a commercial gimmick; there is no obvious connection to Harvard other than perhaps Gilbert's desire to attract that university's students to his summer dance classes in Boston.
Gilbert earns no credit for originality with the Harvard Dip. The first half of the eight-bar sequence exactly mimics his Brooklyn colleague H. Fletcher Rivers' "Le Metropole", with four bars of alternating slides sideways along the line of dance and half-turns of waltz. The second part consists of the second, third, and fourth bars of Indianapolis dancing master D. R. Brenneke's "Fascination" plus a bar of waltz at the end to round out the musical phrase and set up the opposite-foot repeat. Both "Le Metropole" and "Fascination" were included in Round Dancing.
This reshuffling of the same basic elements of late nineteenth-century American waltz variations makes the Harvard Dip a shining example of the desperate flailing of dancing masters attempting to generate new material in the face of the decline in interest in most of the old nineteenth century dance repertoire. That does not make it any worse (or better) than many other variations of this era, so should you wish to dance it, here's how to do it:
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