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Okla-homey
3/20/2006, 07:13 AM
March 20, 1852 Uncle Tom's Cabin is published

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On this day 154 years ago Harriet Beecher Stowe's anti-slavery novel, Uncle Tom's Cabin, is published. The novel sold an unprecedented 300,000 copies within three months and was so widely read that when President Abraham Lincoln met Stowe in 1862, he reportedly said, "So this is the little lady who made this big war."

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Harriet Beecher Stowe photographed at the time of her novel's highest popularity

Stowe was born in 1811, the seventh child of the famous Congregationalist minister Lyman Beecher. She studied at private schools in Connecticut, then taught school in Hartford from 1827 until her father moved to Cincinnati in 1832.

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Young Harriet and her father Lyman Beecher

She accompanied him and continued to teach while writing stories and essays. In 1836, she married Calvin Ellis Stowe, with whom she had seven children. She published her first book, Mayflower, in 1843.

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Mr and Mrs Calvin Ellis Stowe

While living in Cincinnati, Stowe encountered fugitive slaves who had escaped from Kentucky. Later, she wrote Uncle Tom's Cabin in reaction to the recently tightened federal fugitive slave laws and the horrors of chattel slavery. The book had a major influence on the way the American public viewed slavery.

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The Stowe home in Cincinnati where the novel was written

It also added a new popular term to the American lexicon for a black person who acquiesced to the superiority of the white master based on "Uncle Tom" himself. Uncle Tom was a character in the novel who was a loyal old enslaved man who loved his master and discouraged his fellow slaves from revolt or disloyalty.

Uncle Tom's Cabin established Stowe's reputation as a woman of letters. She traveled to England in 1853, where she was welcomed as a literary hero. Along with Ralph Waldo Emerson, she became one of the original contributors to The Atlantic, which launched in November 1857. That magazine still exists as The Atlantic Monthly.

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Stowe's novel was also published in Britain where it was wildly popular

In 1863, when Lincoln announced his executive order known to history as the Emancipation Proclamation -- which freed slaves who resided in states then in rebellion but did not eliminate slavery in the "slave states" which had not seceded (Missouri, Maryland, Kentucky, Delaware) and therefore effectively "freed" no one, the normally stuffy Mrs. Stowe danced in the streets.

Nevertheless, the Proclamation put the world on notice the Civil War was now about ending slavery and therefore ensured no European government would recognize and ally with the Confederacy which effectively sealed its doom.

Slavery was not finally ended in the U.S. until the ratification of the XIII amendment after the Civil War had ended in the spring of 1865. The amendment which formally changed the Constitution and ended slavery in the US was proposed for ratification to the legislatures of the states by the 38th Congress on January 31, 1865.

It was declared ratified at the end of that year on December 18, 1865, after three-fourths of the state legislatures (27 of 36 states) had approved it. No word on how Stowe reacted, but she probably caught the train to Drunkytown.;)

Harriet Beecher Stowe continued to write throughout her life and died 31 years after the end of slavery in the US in 1896 at age 85.

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Stowe photographed near the end of her life ca. 1895.

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TUSooner
3/20/2006, 08:51 AM
[B][SIZE="6"]
***
Stowe was born in 1811, the seventh child of the famous Congregationalist minister Lyman Beecher. She studied at private schools in Connecticut, then taught school in Hartford from 1827 until her father moved to Cincinnati in 1832....


Yankee LIBZ!!!

OklahomaTuba
3/20/2006, 09:35 AM
And TU's obsession with me continues...;)

TUSooner
3/20/2006, 09:57 AM
And TU's obsession with me continues...

So you don't deny that you are PRO SLAVERY !?!?!

I knew it.

;)

OklahomaTuba
3/20/2006, 10:02 AM
Well, I believe that great things can happen with vision, determination, and an endless supply of expendable slave labor. Just look at the Pyramids in Egypt!

JohnnyMack
3/20/2006, 10:11 AM
Well, I believe that great things can happen with vision, determination, and an endless supply of expendable slave labor. Just look at the Pyramids in Egypt!

Those were built by aliens, dumba*s.

TUSooner
3/20/2006, 10:18 AM
Alien SLAVES, maybe.

OklahomaTuba
3/20/2006, 10:32 AM
Those were built by aliens, dumba*s.
No wonder the damn things are falling apart then.

yermom
3/20/2006, 10:42 AM
Just for the record let's get the story straight.
Me and Uncle Tom were fishing it was getting pretty late.
Out on a cypress limb above the "Wishin' Well."
Where they say it got no bottom, say it take you down to hell!


Over in the bushes and off to the right.
Come two men talkin' in the pale moon light.
Sheriff John Brady and Deputy Hedge,
haulin' two limp bodies down to the water's edge.

I know a secret down at Uncle Tom's Cabin, oh yeah.
I know a secret that I just can't tell.

They didn't see me and Tom in the trees.
Neither one believing what the other could see.
Tossed in the bodies, let 'em sink on down.
To the bottom of the well where they'd never be found.

I know a secret down at Uncle Tom's Cabin, oh yeah.
I know a secret that I just can't tell.
I know a secret down at Uncle Tom's Cabin.
I know a secret that I just can't tell.
I know a secret down at Uncle Tom's Cabin.
Know who put the bodies in the "Wishing Well!"

Soon as they were gone me and Tom got down.
Prayin' real hard that we wouldn't make a sound.
Running through the woods back to Uncle Tom's shack.
Where the full moon shines through the roof tile cracks.

Oh my God, Tom, who are we gonna tell?
The Sheriff he belongs in a prison cell.
Keep your mouth shut that's what we're gonna do.
Unless you wanna wind up in the "Wishin' Well" too?

I know a secret down at Uncle Tom's Cabin.
I know a secret that I just can't tell.
I know a secret down at Uncle Tom's Cabin, oh yeah!
I know a secret that I just can't tell.
I know a secret down at Uncle Tom's Cabin.
Know who put the bodies.
Know who put the bodies ... in the "Wishing Well!"

OU Adonis
3/20/2006, 10:44 AM
FYI- You don't have to be pro slavery to be anti civil war ;)

RedstickSooner
3/20/2006, 12:16 PM
Well, I believe that great things can happen with vision, determination, and an endless supply of expendable slave labor. Just look at the Pyramids in Egypt!

Most historians now say it was conscript labor that built the pyramids -- not slave labor.

Okla-homey
3/20/2006, 12:22 PM
Most historians now say it was conscript labor that built the pyramids -- not slave labor.

I've read that. The theory implies it was a sort of a massive WPA project. The theory is that folks worked on these Necropolis's for the paycheck. That however, does not account for the Hebrew's bondage. I've also read that there is no archeological evidence of the biblical Hebrew bondage. Therefore, I don't know what can be proved either way.

King Crimson
3/20/2006, 12:38 PM
Western history didn't begin in 1852. nor did it begin in the US. ;)

Okla-homey
3/20/2006, 12:48 PM
Western history didn't begin in 1852. nor did it begin in the US. ;)

I agree, but name a more influential work of fiction written in the west.

TUSooner
3/20/2006, 01:47 PM
I agree, but name a more influential work of fiction written in the west.
Just for the sake of discussion - and I am skating on some real thin ice by talkin' 'bout fine littacher - I'll grant that Uncle Tom's Cabin certainly had a powerful short term impact, arguably more thah The Jungle or The Grapes of Wrath. But what about, say Don Quixote which has had almost 500 years of staying power and deals with themes that resonate (what a great word) even today.

(Please read my signature before replying. :D )

King Crimson
3/20/2006, 02:02 PM
we would need some kind of working definition of "influence"--many of Dickens' novels (say, David Copperfield) arguably had similar social impact as far as making working class life visible to a (then) limited reading audience--and extending to a popular reading audience and thereby expanding literacy in general. Flaubert's Madame Bovary similarly a social critique of the "new" bourgeois life in France. Stendahl's Red and Black a critique of the hypocrisy of the church and political careerism within it.

as far as American novels....and social influence Grapes of Wrath for sure. Moby Dick would probably have to be included as giving birth in the US of the "travel/escape from society" genre typical to anxieties about industralization, over-crowded cities, and themes of the de-naturing of humanity (not unlike Don Quixote, as a episodic travel story)....that extends through Huck Finn to Jack Kerouac's On the Road....as tales about a search of authenticity in life. also, probably Faulkner in here somewhere.

but, it depends on audience....and whether by influence one means social or literary....or both. not many people have read Stendahl (here), but we've all had the Jungle in a high school curriculum, probably at some point.

Dio
3/20/2006, 03:00 PM
Why are you guys screwing up a perfectly good Warrant thread talking about literature?

Beef
3/20/2006, 03:20 PM
http://img64.imageshack.us/img64/4803/zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzstowe.jpg (http://imageshack.us)

I wouldn't have hit it. Evar.

TUSooner
3/20/2006, 04:22 PM
we would need some kind of working definition of "influence"--many of Dickens' novels (say, David Copperfield) arguably had similar social impact as far as making working class life visible to a (then) limited reading audience--and extending to a popular reading audience and thereby expanding literacy in general. Flaubert's Madame Bovary similarly a social critique of the "new" bourgeois life in France. Stendahl's Red and Black a critique of the hypocrisy of the church and political careerism within it.

as far as American novels....and social influence Grapes of Wrath for sure. Moby Dick would probably have to be included as giving birth in the US of the "travel/escape from society" genre typical to anxieties about industralization, over-crowded cities, and themes of the de-naturing of humanity (not unlike Don Quixote, as a episodic travel story)....that extends through Huck Finn to Jack Kerouac's On the Road....as tales about a search of authenticity in life. also, probably Faulkner in here somewhere.

but, it depends on audience....and whether by influence one means social or literary....or both. not many people have read Stendahl (here), but we've all had the Jungle in a high school curriculum, probably at some point.
I just fell through the ice. :eek: