====== Tom Pate ====== Source: Traditional, collected by Sibyl Clark from Edith Palmer in Northamptonshire; \\ published in English Dance & Song, October November 1954. Vol XIX. No. 2\\ Formation: Mescolanze (Four Facing Four - #1s are facing down the hall) or\\ Double Sicilian Circle (#1s are facing AC)\\ Tune: The Tempest A1 Lines Go Forward & Back x2 A2 Middle Four: Star Right; Star Left WHILE Ends Swing with Opposite - spring back into your own line B1 Take Ballroom Hold with Partner and face the couple in your own line: Gallop across the Set (Men passing back to back); Gallop Back (Ladies passing back to back) B2 Lines go Forward & Back; #1s Arch - Pass Through to the next line Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dwo_JMq1Eco\\ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V-ktJHqVDWM\\ Music: There are numerous tunes named "The Tempest", but any 32 bar tune will do. Notes: This article was published as part of Keith Uttley's "TEEN-A-PAGE… for younger sets" The original dance was a popular European dance called "La Tempête". When it came to England some people translated it to "The Tempest"; others appear to have thought they heard "Tom Pate" and named the dance so! Hugh Rippon went one step further and, after devising a dance in the same formation in 1972, named his new dance "Fred Pate" after Tom Pate's brother! The earliest reference that I have found is 1802. As was common in those days, if a tune or concept was popular then many sequences of moves were set to it. Here are examples of many different Tempests in the Four Facing Four Formation: 1802