Dayton, Ohio |
2004 Honor DancersLouis and Nancy Hyll |
M.V.D.C Honor Roll
Dancer(s) Nomination |
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Nominating Club Miami Valley Folk Dancers |
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Name, Address, & Phone of Couple/Person(s) Louis & Nancy Hyll |
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Number of Years Dancing 56 |
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Club Elected Positions and Years Held (Pres., VP, Sec., etc.) None |
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Club Appointed Positions and Years Held (Kitchen Chairperson, etc.)
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Service at Club Level (Kitchen, Greeters, Clean-up, Decorate, etc.) Parlimentarian
– The Hylls have almost never missed an annual business meeting in over 30
years. Lou always keeps us on track
and honest with the proper motions and actions. Syllabus
Project – Nancy currently is helping the club’s project to put 50 years of club
syllabi into a computer format by doing proofreading. Other Clubs – Although MVFD does not know the specifics, the Hylls have been involved with many clubs throughout their 56 years of dancing. We are sure they have served wherever they were needed. These clubs include: |
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1. YMCA
Community Dances 1948-58 2. Miami
Valley Square Dance Club 1958-59 3. Lohrey Square Dance Club 1958-62 4. Dayton Square Dance Club 1958, 1962-63,
1971-72 5. Boots & Ruffles Square Dance Club
1958-62 6. Lewisburg Promenaders 1971 7. Squares A Go Go 1971 8. Dayton 2 x 4's 1971 9. Enon Shooting Stars 1971-76 10. Dayton
Whirlaways 1971-72 11. Date'n
8's 1971 12. Delco
Square Dance Club 1973-76 13. Silver
Squares 1973, 1976-77 14. Rose E.
Miller Squares 1977-80 15. Queen
City Contra Club 1974-75, 1980 |
16. Kettering
Historical Dancers 1975-82 17. Open
Squares 1978-79 18. Dayton
Contra Dance Club 1973-78 19. Springfield
Country Dancers 1983-86 20. Lloyd
Shaw Foundation (American dance forms) 1984-91 21. Zivio
Yugoslav Dancers 1983-90 22. Bagatelle
French Dancers 1990-92 23. Corinth
Friendly Squares 1987-94 24. Urbana
Senior Squares 1987-94 25. Miami
Valley Callers Association pre-1958, 1971-72, 1981-90 26. ContraLab
1986-92 27. CallerLab
1988-95 28. Country
Dance and Song Society of America (Historical American dance & Contra
dance) 1984-Present 29. American
Callers Association 1996-Present |
Number
of Raids and Retrievals Not
Applicable – MVFD does not participate in Raids. |
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Special Activities (Organize or Assist with Demos, Weekend & Week long Workshops, Special Dances, Parades, World A’Fair, State Fair, Festivals, etc.) Promotion
of Dance through Demonstrations – The Hylls have promoted recreational dance
through their participation in and organization of many demonstrations,
including: MVFD demonstrations of
international folk dancing (Sauerkraut Festival and others), Council
sponsored demos (Day in the Park, Holiday at Home), historical and contra
demos with the Kettering Historical Dancers (USA Bicentennial, historical
fairs), etc. MVFD
Workshops – The Hylls have organized two weekend workshops for MVFD and
provided assistance for numerous others by typing syllabi, proofreading
syllabi, doing mailings, setting up sound, and hosting instructors in their
home. In 1980, Nancy wrote MVFD’s
guidelines for workshop chairs to help others organize workshops. Promotion of Dance through Leadership – Perhaps the Hyll's greatest contribution to recreational dance has been the introduction of thousands of NON-dancers to recreational dance. They have presented hundreds of one-time programs and classes in square, folk, contra, historical, and line dancing to community groups, schools, scout groups, universities, church groups, professional and business organizations, handicapped and disabled groups, private parties, block parties, wedding receptions, hospitals and nursing homes, mentally retarded, drug rehabilitation centers, historical societies, re-enactment groups, and folk groups. Additionally, many fledgling dance leaders have been helped by the Hylls with encouragement, advice, support, and materials. Lou Hyll began square dance calling in 1949 as a substitute for the YMCA community dances (before western- style square dancing evolved). As square dancing evolved, Lou continued his calling and taught western-style square dance classes for the City of Dayton in 1957, 58. One of these classes became the Miami Valley Square Dance Club. He was the club caller for the Lohrey Square Dance Club 1960-61, Rose E. Miller Squares 1977- 80, Corinth Friendly Squares 1987-94, and Urbana Senior Squares 1987-94. The Hylls also led the Kettering Historical Dancers 1975-82 and the Springfield Country Dancers 1983-86. |
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M.V.D.C Positions and Years Held (Pres., VP, Treasurer, Trustee, etc.) Nancy
Hyll has served the Council through committee participation – in 1997 she was
on the committee that created the Michael Solomon Pavilion guidelines and in
2000 she was on the committee that updated the Honor Roll Dancer award
program. |
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State & National Positions and Years Held (State Corp, State & National Convention Positions, etc.) Ohio Mini-Legacy 1980, 1981, 1983 |
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State & National Conventions Attended National: 1982, 1985, 1989, 1992, 1999 Ohio:
1962, 1975, 1976, 1978, 1982, 1984, 1985, 1987, 1988, 1995, 2001 Indiana:
1996 In
addition to State and National Square Dance Conventions the Hylls have
attended many folk, contra, and dance leadership workshops, festivals, camps,
and holidays including: 1. Lloyd
Shaw Foundation Workshops 1962, 75-78, 84 2. Bannerman
Family Folk Dance Camp 1974-75 3. Kentucky
Dance Institute 1975, 77, 79-80, 87, 90 4. Bluegrass
Dance Holiday 1992-94 5. Various
MVFD Ethnic Folk Dance Workshops 1972-2003 (too numerous to list individual
workshops) 6. Oglebay
Folk Dance Camps 7. Berea
Christmas Country Dance School 8. Yorktown
Contra Dance Holiday 9. Flying
Cloud Academy of Vintage Dance |
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Write Up Louis and Nancy Hyll are truly
pioneers of recreational dance in Dayton, Ohio. They began dancing
traditional squares in the late 40's/early 50's. As square dancing evolved into early western-style and on to
club western-style the Hylls grew with it.
Through the years the Hylls also explored related dance forms - folk,
round, contra, historical, clogging, and line dancing. Lou Hyll began square dancing in
1948 as a very young adult. He was active in many YMCA Y-Singles activities,
including community square dances.
Here he began his avocation as a square dance caller, learning to call
as a substitute for the regular caller.
In 1954 he met his future bride, Nancy, in the YMCA Chorus, and they
began dancing together at YMCA community dances. In 1957, Lou and Nancy
married. Lou continued to call,
teaching square dance classes for the City of Dayton in 1957-58. Lou has been the club caller for several
clubs over the years. In the late
60's the Hylls began specializing in programs for non-dancers. In the 70's, the Hylls expanded their
dancing and leadership into the related forms of folk, contra, line, and
historical dance. Lou and Nancy have been active in
many clubs over the years. So many
that it is hard to count them. They
include early square dance clubs (Miami Valley Square Dance Club, Lohrey
Square Dance Club, Boots & Ruffles Square Dance Club, Dayton Square Dance
Club), clubs that still exist or have merged (Shooting Stars, Whirlaways,
Date'n 8's), contra clubs (Dayton Contra Dance Club, Queen City Contra Club),
historical clubs (Kettering Historical Dancers, Springfield Country Dancers)
and folk clubs (Miami Valley Folk Dancers, Zivio Yugoslav Dancers, Bagatelle
French Dancers). Perhaps the Hyll's greatest
contribution to recreational dance has been the introduction of thousands of
non-dancers to recreational dance.
They have presented hundreds of one-time programs and classes in
square, folk, contra, historical, and line dancing to community groups,
schools, scout groups, universities, church groups, professional and business
organizations, handicapped and disabled groups, private parties, block
parties, wedding receptions, hospitals and nursing homes, mentally retarded,
drug rehabilitation centers, historical societies, re-enactment groups, and
folk groups. Additionally, many fledgling
dance leaders have been helped by the Hylls with encouragement, advice,
support, and materials. Lou first became involved with the
Miami Valley Folk Dancers (MVFD) in 1953 and participated in related events
for about a year. Then in 1971, the
entire Hyll family (Lou, Nancy, and two daughters) began dancing with MVFD on
a regular basis. It wasn't long
before the Hylls became active, valued members of the club. Through the years the Hylls have been Program Committee members, Equipment
Committee Chair, Workshop Chair, Publicity Chair, Representative to the Miami
Valley Dance Council, and Representative to the Pavilion Support
Committee. They have provided
refreshments, planned and led Ethnic Sunday programs, and planned and led
Thursday evening programs. Nancy has
typed many syllabi for weekend workshops and written articles for the MVDC
Dance News. They have introduced and
reviewed many dances for the club (especially squares, rounds, and
contras). They have helped MVFD
promote folk dance through their participation in numerous demonstrations and
festivals including the Ohio Sauerkraut Festival, MVDC Day in the Park, and
Tri-City Folk Dance Festival. For 33 years as active members of the Miami Valley Folk Dancers, and for 56 years as pioneers of recreational dance in Dayton, the Miami Valley Folk Dancers are proud to name Louis and Nancy Hyll as its 2004 Honor Roll Dancers and nominee for the Miami Valley Dance Council Honor Roll Dancers. |
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Copyright © Miami Valley Folk Dancers 2004