The Evolution of Aesthetic and Expressive Dance in Boston
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The Evolution of Aesthetic and Expressive Dance in Boston By Jod ...

Chapter 1:  The Uncorseted Bostonian: Health, Physical Culture, and Dress Reform for Women in Nineteenth-Century Boston
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and rose as an outspoken voice for women's rights.28 Lewis was a charismatic speaker whose enthusiasm helped him muster strong interest in his system, which he called the new gymnastics, within a few weeks of his arrival in Boston. One of his contemporaries captured Lewis' genuine, if perhaps overzealous, devotion to his work:

So hale and hearty, so profoundly confident in the omnipotence of his own methods and the uselessness of all others, with such ready invention and inundation of animal spirits that he could flood any company, no matter how starched and listless, with an unbounded appetite for ball games and bean bags.29

Lewis was deeply committed to physical culture for women and full participation in society. His practical establishment of a school that trained teachers in his coeducational model of physical culture and his endless advocacy for women made a deep impact on Boston in the second half of the nineteenth century.

Plate 2. Dioclesian Lewis. Photo from the collection of the Lexington, Massachusetts Historical Society.