Telling Connecticut's Stories
/by Tammy Denease
Storytelling is the art of using narratives to convey information, experiences, or ideas – and so much more.
When we share experiences and ideas through stories, the senses come alive. Smell, touch, taste, hearing, and sight – each is ignited. Storytelling can take you where only the imagination can go and connect you to a past that remains present. It reveals what was hidden. Through this lens, you relive the struggle for humanity and the determination and resilience of those who refused to be silenced.
A good story carries you to a distant time and puts you at the center of a long-ago moment that feels like now. It activates the imagination to the point of reality. When done well, storytelling makes you reach out when there is nothing to touch, feel when there is nothing to feel, and go back to a place and time at the hint of a familiar smell.
I thank of a morning from childhood: the crackling of bacon, the soft bubbling of grits, homemade biscuits baking in the oven while Minnie and Barry play on the radio – my cue to roll out of bed. I rub my eyes, scratch my head, and stumble to the bathroom. When I open the bathroom door, I’m ready to meet the busy world of elementary school. Even in memory, that scene returns whole, a long-ago moment that often feels present.
I bring stories to life in performance. I step into the voice of Margu, a child from the Amistad, and stand with her in a Hartford courtroom. Coal Smoke weighs down the winter air – snow slides from boots. The wooden bench presses the backs of her knees while mem argue her future in a language she is only beginning to gasp. The story carries her to a college classroom in Ohio, where Margu – now Sarah – bends over a slate, tracing letters towards a life she can claim. In listening to her story, audiences meet not a case but a person.
Stand with me, and you can almost hear the lessons recited…
The sites of the Connecticut Freedom Trail tell stories, too, such as the schoolhouse in Canterbury, where Prudence Crandall taught Black girls in the 1830s amid lawsuits, boycotts, and shattered glass. Stand with me, and you can almost hear the lessons recited and the low murmur of neighbors deciding whether learning is a right or a privilege. That soundscape – built from documents, testimony, and the building itself – shows what a story can do: it moves us from the abstract to the tangible, from “people in the past” to lives rooted in a real place.
Storytelling is more than just conveying ideas and information. It keeps memories and experiences alive. Those experiences that shaped the past help us navigate the present toward the future. Storytelling is the place to be!
As we look ahead to the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States, Connecticut Humanities affirms the importance of telling stories. This essay, by Tammy Denease, owner of Hidden Women LLC and outreach director of Connecticut Freedom Trail, was commissioned by CT Humanities. Denease is an accomplished historian, artist, and storyteller passionate about amplifying the voices of those who have been hidden by history. It first appeared in the Winter 2025/2026 edition of CT Explored, and is republished here with permission. Learn more at hiddenwomen.org.
