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  1. Jan 8, 2013 · When Garrison died in 1879 at the age of 73, Frederick Douglass was transported to the days of his youth, to the days when, as a newly escaped slave, he had first heard William Lloyd...

  2. Jul 3, 2020 · detail image from HBHS exhibit To Give It All to This Cause. Frederick William Stowe was Harriet Beecher Stowe and Calvin Stowe’s fourth of seven children. Born in 1840, Frederick was twelve years old by the time Harriet published Uncle Tom’s Cabin in 1852.

  3. Sep 23, 1999 · A veteran of some of the Army of the Potomac’s bloodiest engagements, Frederick Stowe became an official war casualty at Gettysburg when he was hit in the head by a shell, fired during the artillery barrage before Pickett’s Charge.

  4. Dec 2, 2019 · Henry died at 19, in a swimming accident near Dartmouth College in Hanover, N.H. Stowe’ grief at his death caused a crisis of faith and spurred her to write The Minister’s Wooing. Frederick William (1840-1870?)

  5. Sep 8, 2023 · The Tom of the novel, while not as fully realized as some of Stowe’s white characters, was kind, thoughtful, and brave—a tragic hero who sacrifices his own life rather than give up information...

  6. American author whose best-known work, Uncle Tom 's Cabin, helped to change the course of American history. Born Harriet Beecher on June 14, 1811, in Litchfield, Connecticut; died on July 1, 1896, in Hartford, Connecticut, of brain congestion complicated by partial paralysis; daughter of Lyman Beecher (d. 1863, a cleric) and Roxana (Foote ...

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  8. Stowe wrote Uncle Tom's Cabin to encourage citizens to disobey what she took to be an unchristian law and to engage white parents, many of whom, she knew, had lost a child, in the deep question of what a slave parent feels.

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