Harriet Beecher Stowe in Ain't I a Woman?

Basic Information

Name: Harriet Beecher Stowe

Nickname: Harriet "The Truth is Relative" Beecher Stowe

Born: June 14th, 1811

Died: July 1st, 1896

Nationality: American

Hometown: Litchfield, CT

WORK & EDUCATION

Occupation: Teacher, Author, Abolitionist

Education: Litchfield Female Academy, Hartford Female Seminary

FAMILY & FRIENDS

Parents: Rev. Lyman Beecher and Roxanna Foote Beecher

Siblings: Catherine Beecher, William Beecher, Edward Beecher, Mary Foote Beecher Perkins, George Beecher, Henry Beecher, Charles Beecher, Isabella Beecher Hooker, Thomas Beecher, James Beecher

Spouse: Calvin Stowe

Children: Harriet Stowe, Eliza Stowe, Henry Stowe, Frederick Stowe, Georgiana Allen, Samuel Stowe, Charles Stowe

Friends: Mark Twain, Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase, The Underground Railroad

Foes: People who hated Uncle Tom's Cabin (not counting generations of English students), pretty much the entirety of the South


Analysis

Who hasn't heard the name Harriet Beecher Stowe in relation to the abolition movement? Stowe, married to a preacher, is the infamous rabble-rousing author of Uncle Tom's Cabin, published in 1852. This was the newspaper serial that set off the powder keg of anti-slavery sentiment in the North, essentially ensuring the Civil War.

Who says literature can't be world-changing?

The Plot Thickens

There's a reference to Uncle Tom's Cabin in the Key Player Analysis for Frances Gage. Well, that wasn't a throw-away allusion. Uncle Tom's author, Harriet Beecher Stowe, is equally responsible for the portrait we have of Sojourner Truth as a native-born African who was held captive in the South. Definitely showing that journalistic integrity is variable, Stowe wrote an article for Atlantic Monthly in 1863 called "Sojourner Truth, the Libyan Sibyl." That article sparked Gage's competitive spirit, resulting in "Ain't I a Woman?"

According to Stowe, she interviewed Truth once and was told that she was taken from Africa with her parents. Some things were correct, like she was once called Isabella and that her son was sold away to Alabama. The rest: not so much.

But maybe, Stowe was reacting to public sentiment, who thought the Southern slave from Africa a romantic figure.

No one wanted to read about a Northern slave who grew up speaking Dutch. That was too close to European for comfort when discussing the enslavement of an entire race. No, a tall, uneducated African who used quaint terms like "Mammy" was a stronger selling point…and Stowe knew it. Being a passionate and dedicated abolitionist, who was quite frankly fearless given the reaction to Uncle Tom's Cabin, she used the tools at hand to drum up support for her cause.

The infamous "Frederick, is God dead?" (see the Key Player Analysis for Frederick Douglass) moment actually came from "The Libyan Sibyl," so its truth might be a tad shaky.

The (Sojourner) Truth is Out There

Stowe also attempted to dissuade anyone from a minor thing like fact-checking by stating that Truth was dead by the time of the article. Yeah, about that: Truth actually lived another twenty years, still advocating for her causes.

Let Stowe be a lesson to any budding journalist—get your facts straight and don't stretch the truth, because it will come out eventually. It may take a good few decades, but someone will undoubtedly divide the propaganda from the truth.

And if you're craving more details on Harriet Beecher Stowe, check this out.