Annotation:Three Coney Walk: Difference between revisions
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''Coney'' refers to a hare or rabbit; thus New York City's Coney Island was an island once known for its abundance of wild rabbits. However Three Coney Walk was a country lane in Lambeth, | ''Coney'' refers to a hare or rabbit; thus New York City's Coney Island was an island once known for its abundance of wild rabbits. However Three Coney Walk was a country lane in Lambeth, on which was situated Lambeth Wells, a place of mineral wells around which public entertainments grew up, with a "Great Room" for music and dancing that opened before 1697. Later Three Coney Walk became known as Lambeth Walk. This description is quoted from Louis Alexis Chamerovzow's '''The Embassy, or the key to a Mystery''' (1846), a novel, although the quotation is from the factual appendices which support the narrative: | ||
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''The lane...was called Three | ''The lane...was called Three Coney Lane, and derived its name from a small wayside Inn or Public Tap at the corner of'' | ||
''Paradise Row, bearing the sign of the Three Conies and Feathers. Its | ''Paradise Row, bearing the sign of the Three Conies and Feathers. Its limits were not much more extended in King Charles's'' | ||
''time than they are a present, its easternmost boundary being the Marsh, and its westernmost an open Archery-ground called'' | ''time than they are a present, its easternmost boundary being the Marsh, and its westernmost an open Archery-ground called'' | ||
''the Butts, on the site of which now stands the Workhouse. All around were green fields and lanes, and Nurseries, reaching'' | ''the Butts, on the site of which now stands the Workhouse. All around were green fields and lanes, and Nurseries, reaching'' | ||
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''cottages and tenements in the midst of gardens, the whole forming the hamlet of Lambythe.'' | ''cottages and tenements in the midst of gardens, the whole forming the hamlet of Lambythe.'' | ||
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'' | ''The Three Conies and Feathers was a small, low house, sunk some two or three feet below the level of the main road, and attained'' | ||
''by two or three steps; having, moreover, a frontage of some three or four yards deep, taken up with tables and benches'' | |||
''for the convenience of the traveller or the visiter. It is now called "The Feathers," and still occupies its ancient site;'' | |||
''notwithstanding that the alterations and improvements have rendered it irrecognizable even as the "Three Conies and Feathers" of 1805.'' | |||
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|f_printed_sources=Knowles & McGrady ('''Northern Frisk: A Treasury of Tunes From North West England'''), 1988; No. 16. John Young ('''Third Volume of the Dancing Master'''), 2nd edition, c. 1726; p. | |f_printed_sources=Knowles & McGrady ('''Northern Frisk: A Treasury of Tunes From North West England'''), 1988; No. 16. John Young ('''Third Volume of the Dancing Master'''), 2nd edition, c. 1726; p. | ||
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Revision as of 04:23, 21 December 2020
THREE CONEY WALK. AKA - "Number Three." English, Jig (6/8 time). D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. "Three Coney Walk; or, Number Three" was printed by London music publisher John Young in the Third Volume of the Dancing Master (2nd edition, c. 1726), along with directions for a country dance. It was also printed by rival London music publisher John Walsh in his Third Book of the Compleat Country Dancing-Master (editions of 1745 and 1754). London musician Thomas Hammersley entered it into his c. 1790 copybook as well.
Coney refers to a hare or rabbit; thus New York City's Coney Island was an island once known for its abundance of wild rabbits. However Three Coney Walk was a country lane in Lambeth, on which was situated Lambeth Wells, a place of mineral wells around which public entertainments grew up, with a "Great Room" for music and dancing that opened before 1697. Later Three Coney Walk became known as Lambeth Walk. This description is quoted from Louis Alexis Chamerovzow's The Embassy, or the key to a Mystery (1846), a novel, although the quotation is from the factual appendices which support the narrative:
The lane...was called Three Coney Lane, and derived its name from a small wayside Inn or Public Tap at the corner of Paradise Row, bearing the sign of the Three Conies and Feathers. Its limits were not much more extended in King Charles's time than they are a present, its easternmost boundary being the Marsh, and its westernmost an open Archery-ground called the Butts, on the site of which now stands the Workhouse. All around were green fields and lanes, and Nurseries, reaching all across the country to Newington and Kennington, both "famouse places;" whilst river-wards arose a multitude of small cottages and tenements in the midst of gardens, the whole forming the hamlet of Lambythe.
The Three Conies and Feathers was a small, low house, sunk some two or three feet below the level of the main road, and attained by two or three steps; having, moreover, a frontage of some three or four yards deep, taken up with tables and benches for the convenience of the traveller or the visiter. It is now called "The Feathers," and still occupies its ancient site; notwithstanding that the alterations and improvements have rendered it irrecognizable even as the "Three Conies and Feathers" of 1805.