Second annual Teenage Jamboree, 1957, 1958, & 1959, Photos from the Johnnie Allan Collection at the Center for Louisiana Studies, University of Louisiana at Lafayette. Caption: ...
Dancehalls in St. Landry Parish
Pony Room Lounge
Bar at the Oleander Motel and Restaurant Hwy 190 West ...
Powell Cocktail Lounge
851 Laurel Avenue, old phone book ...
Reed’s Hall
Newspaper mention of a dance given to Woodmen of the World there, 1906: http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn88064250/1906-05-26/ed-1/seq-3/ ...
Rougeau’s Beer Garden
No known information ...
Ruby’s
was Nicks (2nd Street) Dwayne Vidrine & Kirk Fontenot ...
Abe Boudreaux’s Dance Hall
Possibly same as Abe’s Palace? Mentioned in “Louisiana Fiddlers” by Ron Yule and Bill Burge: Tonice LeFleur played there in J.B. and the Merrymakers in the 1930s ...
Abe’s Palace
100 S. 2nd Street: Included in Emily Ardoin’s 2014 thesis “Fais do-do to ‘Hippy Ti-Yo’: Dance Halls of South Louisiana”: “Abe’s Palace was a two story brick commercial building that originally was a department store on the first floor & dance hall on the 2nd. It featured primarily Cajun music and was opened in 1901. It closed in lJuly 1940 by fire marshal for lack of egress; city council denied a permit to open a new dance hall in its place in Aug 1940. It now serves as four apartments. The building is of brick construction, has a flat/pent roof, a straight parapet, and has a concrete foundation. The dance floor is constructed of wood strips.” ...
Blue Goose
Listed in “Readers recall clubs where they danced to Louisiana Music” from The Daily Advertiser, December 29, 1998: “Readers of The Daily Advertiser were asked to submit names of’ the clubs where they danced to Louisiana music in the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s, with a brief recollection of what the club was like and who played there.” ...
Charles Matte’s Dance Hall
Listed in “Readers recall clubs where they danced to Louisiana Music” from The Daily Advertiser, December 29, 1998: “Readers of The Daily Advertiser were asked to submit names of’ the clubs where they danced to Louisiana music in the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s, with a brief recollection of what the club was like and who played there.” ...