Stories are one of the most memorable ways people communicate with one another, and they are used to interpret information, make meaning, and share understanding. First used in the mid-19th century, the term “folklore” encompasses the legends, stories, and traditions of a given culture. Folklore is often a means to explain the unexplainable. Connecticut’s first settlers, for example, experienced a foreign landscape, unfamiliar people, and unpredictable weather, all of which helped shape their many and varied legends. While science has proven most of these stories to be just that—stories, the state’s residents continue to celebrate Connecticut’s folklore traditions. From the Dark Day in 1780 to the 19th-century’s Old Leather Man and the Charter Oak tree, the state’s early tales live on in our writings, artifacts, monuments, and memories.
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The Ghost Ship of New Haven Sets Sail Shrouded in Mystery
Tales of a spectral ship seen sailing in the skies above New Haven have haunted Connecticut's imagination since the late 1640s. …[more]