The "first generation" of lindy hoppers is of course huge... however only a few people immediately come to mind as the giants of that age.
Shorty George Snowden, Frankie Manning's idol and sometimes competitor is probably the most well known. Only two film clips I am aware of exist with examples of Shorty's dancing, "After Seben" (1929) a relatively easy clip to come across and the much more rare "Ask Uncle Sol" (1937). Shorty was given his nickname due to his incredibly short stature... barely five feet tall.
If you look at this picture Shorty George Snowden is in the middle. Compare his height to the two male dancers in the background, also bent over.
Shorty's Partner, Big Bea, is one of the only followers from this time period whose fame has spread. She and Shorty were long time partners and performed a comic dance routine. Little is really known about her other than the general consensus that she was the perfect partner for Shorty, able to match his blazing speed, fancy footwork, and the perfect straight woman to his antics, creating a dance team that went years undefeated in weekly competitions.
Leroy "Stretch" Jones was known for his grace and ease at dancing the Lindy Hop. No matter the tempo he seemed to flow from one move to another, improvising on breakaways and tossing off difficult syncopations without any break of form... Frankie considered him the "Fred Astaire" of Lindy Hop. He danced from the begining of the Savoy until the mid thirties when he got a permanent gig dancing at the Paradise Ballroom. This stint ssuppossedly damaged his dancing. Constant repetition of choreography to the "symphonic jazz" of Paul Whiteman. The music itself didn't swing and his dancing suffered because of it.
Little Bea was Stretch's partner, she was five feet tall to his six feet, almost the exact opposite as their friends, Shorty George and Big Bea. Little Bea was known for her quickness and ability to embody the music without letting it interfere with her being lead through the extremely tricky patterns that Stretch liked to lead.
Twistmouth George Ganaway was credited with having created the swivel, the twisting variation that follows use on the one two of the swing out, in the early thirties. He had ataught it to his partner. Whitey was so impressed he told Frankie Manning to "go get that step!" That step became part of the teams basic swingout and through their performances on stage and screen, and exhibitions in the Kats' Korner popularized it making it a common step pretty much replacing the rock-step for the one-two of the twenties style swing out. Twistmouth claimed he was such a good dancer he could win a contest with
any partner. He proved this one evening by leaving the ballroom and grabbing a little girl outside who had been dancing on the street corner, to the music that came out the windows. Back up to the ballroom they went. Sure enough, when the dust settled Twistmouth, and his young partner,
Norma Miller had indeed won. Norma, was quickly depsotited back on the street corner where she had been found (she was underage), launching her dance career at fourteen.