Fairmount resident and Once Upon A Nation storyteller Katie Stickney’s permanent bench is at the Arch Street Meeting House at 4th and Arch streets.
Standing next to the semicircular bench positioned under a tree just outside the entry to the Friends Meeting House at Fourth and Arch streets, Fairmount’s Katie Stickney rang her bell and welcomed a family of five as they took their seats on the bench.
“Ready for a story?” she asked, and then launched into one which took place in Philadelphia during the centennial celebration of the Declaration of Independence.
“It’s July 4, 1876, and all eyes are on Independence Hall, “ she began, purposely using present tense to add immediacy. “A huge crowd has gathered, and the vice president of the United States reads aloud from the Declaration of Independence.”
Stickney started intoning the famous words: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.”
Then she paused for dramatic emphasis. “But suddenly, there’s an interruption!” she said, conveying excitement in her voice. “Susan B. Anthony and four other women run up to the speaker’s platform and present the vice president with a Declaration of Rights for Women.”
Stickney’s voice gained momentum, and she used gestures for emphasis. Her listeners were captivated by now.
“There was chaos!” Stickney continued. “ ‘Order! Order!’ shouted the vice president. But Susan B. Anthony ignored him and passed out copies of their declaration.”
Then, as Stickney related, Susan B. Anthony and four other women led interested people to the other side of Independence Hall.
“She gets on a bandstand and starts giving a speech for women’s rights,” said Stickney. She then recited a few excerpts from her speech, giving it the same passion that the famed suffragette presumably did.
For instance: “We cannot forget even in this glad hour that while all men … have been invested with the full rights of citizenship … all women still suffer the degradation of disenfranchisement.”
Then Stickney returned to her normal voice as she brought her story to conclusion. “People weren’t ready for these bold ideas,” she said. “It took 44 more years — until Aug. 18, 1920 — for the 19th amendment to the Constitution to be passed, giving women the right to vote.”
Afterward, her visitors — a family from Colorado — applauded with enthusiasm. “That was a compelling story, and you told it so well! ” said the mother.
This is one of four stories Stickney relates to the visitors who sit down at her bench. All of them are true and all involve Philadelphia history.
Stickney is one of a group of specially trained storytellers who are part of the popular Once Upon a Nation program. It’s a unique summer program administered by Historic Philadelphia, Inc. that brings Philadelphia history to life with free storytelling plus a variety of tours for all ages.
The storytelling benches are a favorite as visitors roam the historic area. At total of 13 benches, each seating about eight, are located throughout the area. They are identified by an oval sign next to the bench that reads, “Once Upon a Nation.” The storytellers are not in costume. Instead, they wear light green polo shirts with the same logo.
At each bench, storytellers entertain visitors with little known but historically accurate stories involving Philadelphia. Often the stories have particular relevance to the location of the bench. For instance, Stickney’s bench is outside the Quaker Meeting House and all four of her stories involve Quakers.
This is her first summer with Once Upon a Nation. Stickney, 24, moved to Philadelphia from Gettsyburg last September. Coming from a city with history, “I fell in love with the historic area,” she said. She was delighted to take a position with the operations team of Liberty 360, a new multi- media program of Historic Philadelphia, Inc. presented at 6th and Chestnut streets, headquarters for Historic Philadelphia.
While working there — and she still does — Stickney learned about Once Upon a Nation. With her lively and outgoing personality, her supervisors at Liberty 360 encouraged her to try out as a storyteller.
An audition is required of all applicants. “I was terrified of that,” Stickney confessed. But the audition was a success and she was accepted into the program.
In May, Stickney attended the “Benstitute,” a three-week intensive orientation and training required of all storytellers.
They get a cram course in Philadelphia history as well as preparation for their own roles.
“We’re given the stories and we also get suggestions about how to present them,” said Stickney. As she practiced, she got tips on gestures and even staging, since each story is a mini drama.
This summer’s storytelling began on Memorial Day. “By then, I had shaken off my jitters,” said Stickney, “And I was eager to tell my stories.”
And she still is. Stickney is at bench 11 on Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays. She’s met visitors from all over the United States and from France, Germany, Australia, and even China.
As for the age range of her listeners, it extends from kids of 3 or 4 to seniors in their 70s and older.
When kids are on the bench, Stickney often chooses the stories with the most drama. “The story is real and it gets them involved in history in a way they weren’t before,” she said. “It’s as if a light bulb goes off in their head.”
She especially recalls one boy, about four, who became increasingly excited as the story unfolded. “He was enthralled,” she said. “At the end, he just kept clapping.”
And adults are just as responsive. “Often, they’re surprised to learn new facts about history,” said Stickney. “They didn’t expect to learn something new; they expected the same old history stories.”
Sometimes, a story has special resonance for visitors, as happened with two women from Wyoming who heard Stickney tell the Susan B. Anthony story.
Wyoming was where the very first women’s votes were cast. “And both women got tearful as I told the story,” related Stickney. “It really hit home.”
Visitors of all ages seem delighted with the dramatic and energetic way Stickney presents a story. Although she makes it look like fun, it’s actually quite challenging.
Working outdoors, she competes with traffic on Arch Street. A major distraction often comes from the fire station directly across the street. “Sirens go off, the fire trucks start up and it can get pretty loud,” she said.
Then, too, there’s the stamina required to be “onstage” from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. with just one half hour for a lunch break. On a typically busy day, Stickney estimates that she’ll have 100 visitors and will tell 15 or more stories. This is quite a workout for her voice, and she drinks two to three quart-sized bottles of water each day.
But she’s accustomed to challenges with her voice — although until now, it has involved singing, not storytelling.
Stickney is a lyric soprano who is classically trained in opera, having attended the Sunderman Conservatory of Gettysburg College. For the past three seasons, she’s participated in the Varna International Opera Tour, a cultural exchange between the U.S. and Bulgaria. In June, she took a break from storytelling and was on a two and half-week tour of Bulgaria, performing in four concerts. In two of them, she had a leading role.
But then the versatile singer returned and eagerly resumed her storytelling role. No matter how often Stickney tells these stories, each time is a new chance to engage her listeners. “I get to interact with so many different people of all ages, and I can do this multiple times during a day,” she said. “It’s a fantastic opportunity.”••