Native American Dances will be performed by several dance troups on Thursday, July 28, beginning at 11 a.m. in the East Aurora Middle School across from the Roycroft Campus on Main Street in East Aurora. Tickets are $5 for adults and $3 for those 18 and younger. Call the Copper Shop for reservations (716-655-0261).
The groups performing are the Koshare Dancers of La Junta, Colorado, the Kossa Dancers of Sulphur, Louisianna and the Kwahadi Dancers of Amarillo, Texas. The Kwahadi Dancers' history is intertwined with the Roycroft: Elbert Hubbard’s son, Ralph, was a fan of Buffalo Bill Cody’s Wild West Show. He was so enamored of the wild west, cowboys and Indians, that he went west and in the 1920's purchased a ranch in Colorado. He learned the lore and wrangling skills from cowboys and Native Americans and shared all he knew of camping, archery, horsemanship, native crafts and native dancing by hosting Scout Troops at the ranch in the summers.
One of the camp counselors was Dr. Charles E. Colgate of St. Louis Missouri. Dr. Colgate was fascinated with the native dancing and formed a troop of dancing Scouts in St. Louis and later in Amarillo, Texas. The Texas group, Troop 9, put together a performance of their native dancing for the Scout skills annual show and that was the beginning of the Kwahadi Dancers. Word of mouth brought many requests for their performances to the point that since 1944 over 1600 boys have been in the Kwahadi show performing throughout the U.S. and overseas wearing costumes they make themselves.
You can read more about the Kwahadi dancers at www.kwahadi.com.
- Sue





