Harriet Beecher Stowe
Harriet was born on June 14, 1811 in Litchfield Connecticut. There were eight children in the Beecher family and Harriet was the youngest of them all. Her mother died in 1816 when Harriet was four, and so the oldest daughter Catherine, raised Harriet for most her life. When Harriet was 21, she moved to Cincinnati, Ohio, where her father was a president at a ministry. That is where Harriet met her husband, Calvin Stowe. They had 7 children together. Harriet was one of very few women writers of the time, who could get published in a magazine. Some of her early story's were put in her first book "The Mayflower". "The Mayflower" was about the descendants of Puritans, which had many characters that related to real people she knew in her life. After her children were born, she was thinking of writing bigger and better books. Her husband supported her because they had little money. She, then, moved her family to Maine, after 18 years in Ohio. She thought a lot about the stories she heard about slavery and about how her own life was in some ways similar to the slave situation and she
They wonder what could have possibly inspired her. She continued at this pace for a several years. People would attack her with insults and call her a liar. ------------------------------------------------------------------------**Bibliography**. Harriet Beecher Stowe died in 1896. That book was called "The Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin". Stowe had no intention of the book being a fictional book, however, people thought differently. " During the Civil War, Stowe contributed a small part of her day as a part time assistant nurse. To prove that there was truth in her stories, Stowe decided to write a reference book and show people where she got her information from and prove that it was true. Both papers said that a man being lashed to death and a girl being sold from her mother could never have happened openly in the real world. Stowe became famous because of her writings and dramas and met many important people because of this, including the president. After Harriet's career was over as a book writer, she kept on as a contributing editor to the magazines and newspapers, making money by writing short stories and articles.
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