Harriet Beecher Stowe Biography
Author of Uncle Tom's Cabin
by Patricia Chadwick
When President Abraham Lincoln met Harriet Beecher Stowe in 1862, he
exclaimed "So you are the little woman who wrote the book that started
this great war!" He was referring to her book, Uncle Tom’s Cabin, in
which Harriet expressed her moral outrage at the institution of slavery
in the United States and exposed its harmful effects on both whites and
blacks.
Harriet Beecher Stowe was born in Litchfield, Connecticut on June 14,
1811 in into one of America's most notable religious families. The
Beecher family was at the forefront of numerous reform movements of the
19th century. Born the seventh child of the well known Congregational
minister Lyman Beecher and Roxana Foote Beecher, she was their fourth
daughter. Her father was a persuasive preacher, theologian, and founder
of the American Bible Society, who also was active in the anti-slavery
movement. Her mother was a woman of prayer, who asked the Lord to put
the call of service on her children's hearts. This prayer was eventually
answered in a mighty way. All the Beecher children spent their lives
living out their Christian faith.
While Harriet's life was not without trials, she appears to have had a
relatively good family life. When she was only four years old, her
mother died, leaving her father to become the dominant adult influence
upon the home. While it must have been difficult to both support the
family financially as well emotionally, it appears he did a fine job
raising his family. According to Harriet, he made the home a kind of
"moral heaven", discussing theology over family apple peelings and
always keeping before them the haloed memory of their dear mother. Her
father did remarry a few years after her mothers death, but Roxana
children never quite took to their stepmother and continued to cling to
their father for love and spiritual guidance. While Lyman struggled with
mood swings and often felt like he couldn't go on, the sincere way he
lived his life inspired in all his children a quiet ambition for some
large service. And Harriet was no exception.
Harriet was given a good education. At eight she began to attend the
famed school of Miss Sarah Peirce in Litchfield, where she studied until
she was thirteen when she left home to attend the female seminary
recently opened by her sister Catharine in Hartford. Harriet was quite
shy and kept to herself, but she loved to read and write. Among her
favorite books were Scott's "Ballads" and "Arabian Nights", which no
doubt had much to do with cultivating her imagination.
While home during the summer leave when she was thirteen years old,
Harriet gave her life to Christ during one of her father's sermons and
felt the assurance of Christ's saving love. Within the Beecher family,
private conversion was intertwined with a public calling, and this
decision to follow Christ would shape the rest of Harriet's life.
At the age of fifteen she became an assistant to her sister Catharine in
the female seminary and continued teaching there until 1832 when the
family moved to Cincinnati, Ohio where Lyman felt called to "win the
West for God". Lyman became President of Lane Theological Seminary and
Pastor of the Second Presbyterian Church and Catharine founded the
Western Female Institute. Harriet taught in Catherine's school and wrote
a children's geography text, which was her first publication, though the
first edition was issued under her sisters name.
It was here that, Harriet met Calvin Stowe, a professor and clergyman
fervently opposed to slavery. In 1836, at the age of 25, Harriet married
Professor Stowe, a widower, who was nine years her senior. They were to
have seven children together and Harriet proved to be a fine homemaker
as she lovingly cared for her children, which was her main priority. She
saw motherhood as sacredly sacrificial and set out to follow her calling
of raising children that loved and served God. But Calvin's teaching
position did not provide a sufficient wage, so in order to supplement
Calvin's meager teaching salary, Harriet wrote short stories dealing
with domestic life for local and religious magazines and papers. Her
royalties helped her hire household staff to assist with running the
household and raising her children.
Calvin and Harriet were blessed with a loving marriage. Both encouraged
and comforted each other during the trials and tribulations that came
their way. During their lifetime they lost four of their seven children
and had many financial setbacks. While they did not have a perfect
marriage, their loving commitment grew solidly over the years. At one
point Harriet wrote to her husband of many years, "If you were not
already my dearly beloved husband, I should certainly fall in love with
you." Calvin encouraged Harriet to establish a writing career, and he
served as her literary agent in both America and England. She in turn
encouraged him to write himself and he, too, met with some success.
While they lived in Ohio, the work of the Underground Railroad deeply
touched both Calvin and Harriet. Their house was one of the many
"stations" for the fugitive slaves on their way to freedom in Canada.
They sheltered runaway slaves in their home until they move to Maine
when Calvin accepted a position at Bowdoin College in 1850.
Throughout Americas history, the slavery issue has been hotly debated.
By the late 1840’s the abolitionist movement had expanded, roused by
newspaper editors, lecturers, authors, and clergymen. For abolitionists,
nothing justified slavery. It was in this environment that Mrs. Stowe
wrote her famous novel "Uncle Tom’s Cabin". In this book, Harriet
dispelled the myth that benevolent masters treated their slaves
adequately. She showed that even kind-hearted slave owners would
separate slave families and sell them "down the river" when they were
desperate for cash. Harriet drew on her own personal experience with
slavery in writing her book. She was familiar slavery, the anti-slavery
movement, and the underground railroad because she spent many years
living in Ohio, and Kentucky, a neighboring state across the Ohio River
from Cincinnati, Ohio, was a slave state.
It was soon after the passage of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 that
Harriet wrote "Uncle Tom’s Cabin". The Fugitive Slave Act granted
Southerners the right to pursue fugitive slaves into free states and
bring them back. This law aroused may abolitionists to action. When the
South threatened to secede, Harriet determined that she would write a
serial condemning the evils of slavery. First printed as a serial in an
abolitionist paper, The National Era, it focused public interest on the
issue of slavery, and was deeply controversial. In 1852 "Uncle Tom’s
Cabin" was printed in book form. It sold 3,000 copies on its first day,
300,000 its first year, and eventually sold more than 3,000,000 copies
world wide.
"Uncle Tom’s Cabin" was the first major American novel to feature a
Black hero. Harriet created memorable characters who portrayed the
inhumanity of slavery making her readers understand that slaves were
people who were being mistreated and made to suffer at the hands of
their masters. Through her novel, Harriet insisted that slavery eroded
the moral sensibility of whites who tolerated or profited from it. She
wrote passionately to prick the consciences of fellow Americans to end
their blind allegiance to slavery.
Many people of her day argued that her novel was merely fiction and not
at all based on fact. To disprove these accusations and prove that her
depiction of slavery was factual, in 1853, Harriet wrote "A Key to Uncle
Tom’s Cabin", which presented the original facts and documents upon
which she based her novel.
The historical significance of Harriet's abolitionists writing has
veiled from view her other work and literary significance. Her writings
were varied and in many different genre. She wrote both fiction and
biography along with children's books. Some feel that her best works are
about New England life such as "The Ministers Wooing" and "Old Town
Folks", where her settings were accurately described in detail. Her
portraits of local social life, particularly of minor characters,
reflect and ability to communicate to others the culture in which she
lived.
About the Author:
Patti Chadwick is a freelance writer and creator of History's Women - an
online magazine highlighting the extraordinary achievements of women
throughout history. Visit her site at
www.historyswomen.com. While
you are there, sign up for her free weekly newsletter.
Patti is also author of the book "History's Women-the Unsung Heroines",
which is available for $8.95 at:
http://www.booklocker.com/bookpages/partriciachadwick01.html




