![Bon pour une danse - Au vieux bal des familles - Paris [75] ND front](/storage/images/Bon-pour-une-danse-Au-vieux-bal-des-familles-Paris-75_333360_1.webp)
![Bon pour une danse - Au vieux bal des familles - Paris [75] ND back](/storage/images/Bon-pour-une-danse-Au-vieux-bal-des-familles-Paris-75_333360_2.webp)
![Bon pour une danse - Au vieux bal des familles - Paris [75] ND photo](/storage/images/Bon-pour-une-danse-Au-vieux-bal-des-familles-Paris-75_333360_1.webp)
© Maurice RICOU
Bon pour une danse - Au vieux bal des familles - Paris [75] ND
Aluminium | - | 36 mm |
Location | France |
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Type | Amusement tokens › Dance tokens |
Composition | Aluminium |
Diameter | 36 mm |
Shape | Rhombus |
Technique | Milled |
Updated | 2024-11-13 |
Numista | N#333360 |
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Rarity index | 94% |
Reverse
Script: Latin
Lettering: BON POUR 1 DANSE
Edge
Plain
Comment
The origins of this 11th arrondissement ball probably date back to 1850, when it was run by an Auvergnat. In 1923, Léon Pouyet took over the reins of the establishment, which he christened the Vieux bal des familles. An accordionist and cabretta player himself, he was no stranger to the world of bals musette. All the more so as his father Pierre Alphonse Pouyet ran the ball at the Petit Balcon until 1909. The Boule Rouge sign was used in 1926. On the eve of the Second World War, Pouyet gave up paying for dancing. He handed the ball over to his son Raoul Pouyet in 1968, before it closed its doors in 1980.This token is a variant of the one referenced 656, with a grenetis.