![]() ![]() Southern men reproving Northern men.-Mr. ![]() Clare representatives of two classes of men. OPHELIA: Prejudice of color -Instance in a benevolent lady. Instance of the Southern lady on a plantation. History of a slave-girl and her escape. Nelson's story.- Frederick Douglas.-Josiah Henson's account of the sale of his mother and her children. SHELBY: Account of a well-regulated plantation.-Extract from Ingraham. Trader's letter.- Kephart's examination. The site is in process of providing both sets of numbering, for your use, depending on which version you have. The book is available with two different page numbering systems, one 259 page version with double-columns and one 508-page version with single columns. Note her citing official Southern court precedents on slaver crimes including torture-murders, some still available at law libraries, e.g., the Mann case, the Souther case, the Castleman case, etc. Part IV's Chapters 5 - 6 (New Testament teaching)Īnd Appendix (1840 Census data), are available in full here.) She cites the accusations, then gives her responses, chapter by chapter. She responded to critiocisms of Uncle Tom's Cabin by putting together the documentation, the documentation that composes this scholarly researched treatise on the subject, being reprinted here. Some Southerners accused her of misrepresenting slavery, exaggerating its savagery. Her 44 separate writings, short stories, were published on different occasions, each one time only, in a newspaper, over 44 different issues, as per the publishing style of that era.īut public demand for reprints, led to them being later consolidated, collected together from being 44 separate out-of-print newspaper columns, into one more-convenient and accessible volume, collectively gathered under one title, as Uncle Tom's Cabin. She wrote in short story form, a number of narratives, to describe some of those abuses. ![]() Stowe had seen slaves' desperate efforts to escape the savagery of American slavery. This site presents a book by one of the activists, Harriet Beecher Stowe, from the period before the War (1861-1865). It is necessary to understand it.”- Paul Claudel (1868-1955).įor more, see The Key to Uncle Tom's CabinĬleveland, Ohio: Jewett, Proctor & Worthington, Whether or not you agree with their position, it is at least a good idea to know what their views were! and not be relying on merely what century-later revisionists claim those views were. This series of websites educates by making the text of some of those writings accessible. Nowadays, their Bible-based reasons for doing so are generally unknown. This site reprints the 1853 book, The Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin, by Harriet Beecher Stowe (1811-1896).īefore the 1861-1865 War, a number of Christian abolitionists (Rev.Įtc.) opposed slavery. Key (1853): Scholarly Evidence for Truth of Uncle Tom's Cabin, by Stowe, Harriet Beecher (1811-1896) ![]()
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