
Illustration from original edition of Uncle Tom's Cabin

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Harriet Beecher Stowe (1811-1896)
Born in Litchfield, Connecticut, far from the plantations of the South, Harriet Beecher
Stowe nevertheless found the cause of the emancipation of the slaves an important one.
When her father assumed the presidency of Lane Theological Seminary in Cincinnati, Ohio,
she followed her family. There she met her husband and remained an active member of her
community. In Cincinnati, she came into contact with fugitive slaves. Like Frederick Douglas, she used her gift of storytelling and writing
as a way of bringing about change to American society. She wrote Uncle Tom's Cabin with
the encouragement of her sister-in-law who was deeply affected by the passage of the Fugitive Slave Law.
The following excerpt is taken from the last chapter of Uncle Tom's Cabin, which very
much resembles a sermon. She urges white Northerners to welcome escaped slaves and treat
them with respect:
- On the shores of our free states are emerging the poor, shattered, broken remnants of
families,--men and women, escaped, by miraculous providences, from the surges of
slavery,--feeble in knowledge, and, in many cases, infirm in moral constitution, from a
system which confounds and confuses every principle of Christianity and morality. They
come to seek a refuge among you; they come to seek education, knowledge, Christianity.
- What do you owe to these poor, unfortunates, O Christians? Does not every American
Christian owe to the African race some effort at reparation for the wrongs that the
American nation has brought upon them? Shall the doors of churches and school-houses be
shut down upon them? Shall states arise and shake them out? Shall the Church of Christ
hear in silence the taunt that is thrown at them, and shrink away from the helpless hand
that they stretch out, and shrink away from the courage the cruelty that would chase them
from our borders? If it must be so, it will be a mournful spectacle. If it must be so, the
country will have reason to tremble, when it remembers that fate of nations is in the hand
of the One who is very pitiful, and of tender compassion.
The entire text of Uncle Tom's Cabin is available online at the following links:
ZIP format: ftp://uiarchive.cso.uiuc.edu/pub/etext/gutenberg/etext95/utomc10.zip
HTML format: http://www.teachersoft.com/Library/lit/stowe/contents.htm
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