Connecticut
Small Histories and Small Towns
History is made of great events and larger-than-life characters. That’s how the past is presented in high school and college, anyway. But there are smaller histories and more down-to-earth players who may warrant more local attention than they receive.
Case in point, when I was doing research for a historical novel, I came across Carolyn Wakeman’s book about Old Lyme, The Charm of the Place. In it, I discovered the town’s early 20th-century pharmacy on Lyme Street. Fritz Morris James managed it, likely the only African American in town then. Mr. James led me back across the river to his sister in Old Saybrook, Anna Louise James, who was the first African American woman to be licensed as a pharmacist in Connecticut. Her pharmacy still stands on Pennywise Lane.
From “Miss James,” I discovered her niece Ann Lane (later, Ann Petry). She graduated from Old Saybrook High School (OSHS) in 1929, and following family tradition, got a pharmacy degree. But her real fame was as a fiction writer. Her debut novel, The Street, was published in 1946 and went on to sell 1.5 million copies. She published other novels and short stories and lectured at several universities. Ann Petry died in Old Saybrook in 1997 at the age of eighty-eight.
I must have passed her house on Old Boston Post Road hundreds of times without a clue of her existence. I graduated from OSHS in 1974, when Petry was only sixty-six. I took a creative writing class in high school, but no one mentioned the famous writer half a mile from the school. As far as I know, no one invited her to the school to give a lecture or to talk about the craft of writing. She reportedly disliked fame and perhaps memories of small-town racism fed her seclusion. Whatever the reasons, I remained ignorant of her, her books, and her family’s history in Saybrook and Old Lyme until I was sixty-six.
There has been some recent effort to correct this omission. Last Fall, the Old Saybrook Historical Society featured an exhibit about Anna James the pharmacist, and Ann Petry the author. The Acton Library now has a permanent Ann Petry Reading Room and a display of her books and books about her. Still, it seems too little, too late. Maybe the town or the high school should have an annual Petry Writing Prize for local writers or students. Maybe the high school should devote a week or so to local history, to the people and places in town that warrant remembrance. Maybe every town high school should devote a week to looking back at the people and events that made their town.
Old Lyme and Old Saybrook are admittedly target-rich in history and famous people. Yet, many of Connecticut’s towns have hosted enough history and residents to write their own local Atlas Obscura of the forgotten. Maybe one of them will find another Ann Petry.
Edward McSweegan is the author of the forthcoming historical novel about Old Lyme, The Cottage Industry.
Connecticut
Woman killed in Friday head-on crash in Burlington
BURLINGTON, Conn. (WTNH) — A woman is dead after police said she was involved in a head-on collision with a tractor-trailer on Friday in Burlington.
According to Connecticut State Police, a Toyota RAV4 and Peterbuilt 386 tractor-trailer collided head-on on Route 4 near Punch Brook Road at around 4:49 p.m. on Friday.
The driver of the Toyota, identified as 64-year-old Mary Christine Ferland of Burlington, was pronounced dead at the scene. The driver of the tractor-trailer was not injured, according to state police. No one else was in either vehicle at the time of the crash.
The crash is still under investigation by state police, anyone with information is asked to call Trooper Brew at 860-626-7900.
Connecticut
Griner happy to be in Connecticut with the Sun
Connecticut
At Yale, McMahon says she’ll shut down ‘bureaucracy of education’
U.S. Education Secretary Linda McMahon said Thursday she is working to “shut down the bureaucracy of education,” telling an audience in New Haven that she wants to diminish federal involvement in schools and give more discretion to states.
Speaking at an event on the campus of Yale University, McMahon defended moves by President Donald Trump’s administration to radically reshape the Department of Education since his return to office.
McMahon said the federal government will continue providing education funding in the future, but direct more of it through block grant programs that empower states to spend the money where it’s most needed.
The approach will help school leaders identify promising programs that can be replicated across the country, McMahon said.
“I want to leave behind, if you will, a toolkit of best practices that you can deliver to states to say, ‘Look, this is what’s working. You might want to give this a try,’” McMahon said.
Her remarks come amid controversial policy shifts in higher education by the Trump administration, including moves to freeze billions in research funding and grants to universities and pressure schools to address antisemitism, crack down on campus protest and eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion programs, among other changes.
McMahon, a Greenwich resident and former CEO of Stamford-based World Wrestling Entertainment, stood by the administration’s tactics, saying the threat of withholding funds is a tool it can use to ensure universities spend money wisely and for the intended purpose.
“The goal is really to make sure that universities are giving equal opportunity across their campuses,” she said.
McMahon’s visit was part of a speaker series organized by the Buckley Institute, which describes itself as an independent nonprofit working to promote intellectual diversity and freedom of speech at Yale.
McMahon served as administrator of the U.S. Small Business Administration during Trump’s first term. She later helped establish Trump’s second administration as co-chair of his transition team, and was confirmed as education secretary last year.
During an appearance that lasted about 45 minutes, McMahon did not address many of the divisive policy changes enacted under her leadership. She said promoting literacy is her top priority, and touted the importance of school choice programs and career and technical education.
McMahon said she visited a community college in Connecticut earlier in the day, and met with the president of Yale during her stop at the school’s campus, which included a visit to Science Hill, the site of a major redevelopment project to support cutting-edge research into physical sciences and engineering.
Responding to a question from the moderator, McMahon also said she discussed so-called grade inflation with Yale’s president.
“One of the things that the university is looking at is to make sure that professors are grading accordingly in their classes, and that there’s not this grade inflation,” she said.
McMahon also briefly addressed recent controversy around a planned visit to an elementary school in Fairfield. Just hours after the event was announced, Fairfield Public Schools told families it was canceled due to community backlash.
McMahon said the event was planned as part of her nationwide “History Rocks!” tour, which celebrates the country’s 250th anniversary. Events typically include trivia games focused on history and civics that don’t have a partisan slant, she said.
“These are really feel-good programs of assembly,” she said, “and when you get that pushback from parents who are saying no this is going to be partisan … it’s really a minority of a few loud voices that are just calling … to maybe just make a statement of their own.”
McMahon has run unsuccessfully as a Republican for U.S. Senate in Connecticut. In 2009, she served for one year on the Connecticut Board of Education, appointed by then-Gov. Jodi Rell, a Republican. She has also served on the board of trustees of Sacred Heart University in Fairfield.
Responding to another question, McMahon reflected on how her time as a wrestling industry executive prepared her for her current role. She joked that she can “give you a mean body slam,” then said on a more serious note she benefitted throughout her life by always being open to new opportunities.
She stressed the importance of having university programs that teach older workers new skills.
“How great is it that we have these opportunities to go in a different direction?” McMahon said. “Just be wide open. Don’t think that you’re limited in your opportunity to do things. Be willing to take it on.”
This story was first published April 16, 2026 by Connecticut Public.
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