According to Thomas de Voe's description, dancing for eels was a popular practice at Catherine Market, which in the 19th century was a destination place for African-American slaves from Long Island who would bring to the market berries, herbs, fish, clams and oysters in order to make a few shillings. Originally those African-Americans would be hired by the market people to dance for money or for fish (hence dancing for eels).[citation needed]
The Catherine Market in the 19th century was a mixed meeting place for people of various backgrounds, and white working-class people were frequent spectators of the dancing contests. According to W. T. Lhamon, blackface performance was strongly influenced by Catherine Market dancing elements. Modern rap and hip-hop performance also contain traces of gestural continuity from the New York street dancers, which, for example, can be observed in MC Hammer’s using the Market Step in his video U Can't Touch This: a knees open, heel-to-toe rock, often accompanied by one or both hands overhead. This move traces back to Dancing for Eels 1820 Catherine Market, one of the folk drawings depicting the old competition. This drawing is supposedly the source for a later painting, which dates to 1880-1890s. This painting is oil paint on canvas, laid over a tin backing. The subject and composition has a long popularity in American culture.[citation needed]
According to an 1849 fishing manual, black men still would meet at the market at dawn to skin eels and engage in dance competition for bundles of fish. The audience would vote for the winner through making noises and cheering for their most favorited performance. This style of competition carried on throughout African American culture all the way to modern-day freestyle rap competing. These forms of entertainment grew into routines that featured singing, dancing, and humor for more on stage acts performed by professions.[1]
The Market Book: containing a historical account of the public markets of the cities of New York, Boston, Philadelphia and Brooklyn, with a description of every item of human food sold therein, the introduction of cattle in America, and notices of many remarkable specimens, 1862, Thomas F. De Voe, New York, available here [1]
Raising Cain: Blackface performance from Jim Crow to Hip Hop, 1998, W. T. Lhamon Jr., 288 pages, Harvard University Press, ISBN0674747119, ISBN978-0674747111