Citation |
NYM(G.775.007
16 Jan 1775:41 (1214)
Music, Fencing, and Dancing. William Charles Hulett, very
gratefully sensible of the many favours he has received from
his friends in the course of a twenty years residence in
this city, begs leave to inform them and the puclic in
general, that his school in Broad-street is now re-opened
after the holidays, and that he continues to teach at home
and abroad, in music, the violin, guitar, and German flute.
In dancing, (according to the present taste both in London
and Paris) the louvre, minuet, minuette Dauphine, rigadoon,
bretagne, the allemande, double minuet, minuet by eight, and
hornpipes. The cotillions, and English country dances. For
fencing, he has prevailed on a master to attend his school,
the variety and fatigue of his other business, which he
means to go through with justice to his scholars, not
permitting him to engage in that department.
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