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Tuesday, 26 August 2025

OFF TO THE SEASIDE EVERYBODY! DANCE FROLIC AND SPORTS

London’s underground and crossrail developments unearthed significant archeological finds dating back to prehistoric times. As they dug, layer after layer of London’s intriguing past was revealed. Have you ever looked at a landscape or a building and wondered what was there before? 
Did you know that where the Forrest Beach Surf Life Saving Club House now stands, was also the site of the Dance Hall or Dance Pavilion? The site is a gathering place as it must have been for thousands of years, for Forrest Beach is located in the traditional lands of the Nywaigi people. 
Barbara Horsely wrote in Sea, Sand and Swamp. A history of the township of Allingham and Forrest Beach, of the Dance Hall or Dance Pavilion. When she wrote the book she provided a sketch of the Hall, as, as far as she knew, there was no existing photograph. However, in the way things go, of course somebody must have had a photograph in their family photograph collections. And they did! 
People had been finding their way to the beach and enjoying the sea and sand since the early 1900s, but it was not until 1925 that the area was surveyed and gazette as a township: Allingham with the beach area still called Forrest Beach. It was originally written Forrest’s Beach for G.B. Forrest, manager of Victoria Mill, who cut a track through to the beach to encourage his mill workers to visit the beach for recreation. 
Vince Corbett, builder and entrepreneur, saw the potential of Forrest Beach and applied for the lease of an acre of Council Reserve in 1925. By April 1925 he had built and opened a refreshment room. By May 1926 he had constructed two dressing sheds, two toilets and a dance hall/pavilion. The first dance held there was a fundraiser for the Valley’s Football Club on 9 April 1926. Over 20 couples attended. The Hall/Pavilion became known as the Forrest Beach Dance Hall. It was extensively renovated in 1938. 
Dane Pavilion (Source: Leila Muller)


The photograph shows the Hall before or during its renovation. Barbara’s sketch shows the renovated building with its baton walls. You can see in the photograph that the dance floor was one metre above the ground and was reputedly a very good dance floor. Once renovated there was a two foot (61 centimetres) gap between the floor and the baton walls. That gap is clear in the photograph (the baton walls were yet to come). Because of this construction the hall stayed quite cool even in summer. The hall and its extensions became part of the Surf Life Savers complex. Electric light was provided by a 5.6 Ruston Hornsby engine dynamo that required refueling several times during the evening.
Barbara Horsley's sketch of renovated Dance Pavilion (Source Sea, Sand and Swamp, p.48)

 
The dances held there were very informal because those attending had usually been at the beach for the day. But not only dances, but engagement and birthday parties were held there and the hall was used by the Surf Life Savers Club for socials and as a dining hall when visiting clubs came for carnivals. Other clubs that used the hall included the Cardinal Basketball Club, Pony and Tennis Clubs, Ranges Soccer Club and Nurses Welfare Committee.
By the late 1960s the hall was becoming worse for wear, with the floor being very uneven. Parts of the floor even gave away once during a very vigorous and enthusiastic crowd danced ‘the stomp’, a dance that was popular at the time. In 1973 the hall was destroyed by fire. The remnants were bulldozed into a large hole. 
Barbara Horsley lists some of the musicians who played at the dances. I am sure some of these names will bring back great memories: Bands: The Varsity Boys Orchestra The Chook King Orchestra The New Breed The Thunderbirds The Psychedelics The Silhouettes The Melody Makers The Evans Orchestra 
The Evans Orchestra (Source: D. Harvey in Sea, Sand and Swamp, p.50)


Musicians: Eileen Bird (nee Corbett) – piano George Stagg-piano Lou Castorina Syd Stannard Romano Olivero ‘Snooky’ Angus-trumpet/saxophone Lurlie Wickens-piano, Arthur Wickens-drums Jim Smithwick-drums Gordon Peebles-saxophone Lance Andrews-trumpet/saxophone Thelma Woodman-violin Marion Evans-piano Robert Evans-drums Daphne Evans (Harvey) piano and violin Syd Stannard.

I have quoted from Sea, Sand and Swamp pages 12-15 and 48-51 for this blog and I recommend you read the book for a detailed history of Forrest Beach and the Dance Pavilion. It’s a great read.

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