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Charles E. Stowe, Harriet Beecher Stowe compiled from her letters and journals by her son Charles Edward Stowe 8 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in Charles E. Stowe, Harriet Beecher Stowe compiled from her letters and journals by her son Charles Edward Stowe. You can also browse the collection for J. P. Lovejoy or search for J. P. Lovejoy in all documents.

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Charles E. Stowe, Harriet Beecher Stowe compiled from her letters and journals by her son Charles Edward Stowe, Chapter 6: removal to Brunswick, 1850-1852. (search)
hildren and her modest hopes for the future, arrived at the house of her brother, Dr. Edward Beecher. Dr. Beecher had been the intimate friend and supporter of Lovejoy, who had been murdered by the slaveholders at Alton for publishing an anti-slavery paper. His soul was stirred to its very depths by the iniquitous law which wa to be amputated. Mrs. Edward Beecher, in a letter to Mrs. Stowe's son, writing of this period, says:-- I had been nourishing an anti-slavery spirit since Lovejoy was murdered for publishing in his paper articles against slavery and intemperance, when our home was in Illinois. These terrible things which were going on in B, the enemy of all slavery. Every brother I have has been in his sphere a leading anti-slavery man. One of them was to the last the bosom friend and counselor of Lovejoy. As for myself and husband, we have for the last seventeen years lived on the border of a slave State, and we have never shrunk from the fugitives, and we have h
ngelist, 146; A scholar's adventures in the country for Era, 146. Literature, opinion of, 44. Little pussy Willow, date of, 491. Liverpool, warm reception of H. B. S. at, 207. London poor and Southern slaves, 175. London, first visit to, 225; second visit to, 281. Longfellow, H. W., congratulations of, on Uncle Tom's Cabin, 161; letter on, 187; Lord Granville's likeness to, 233; letters to H. B. S. from, onUncle Tom's Cabin, 161. Love, the impulse of life, 51, 52. Lovejoy, J. P., murdered, 143, 145; aided by Beechers, 152. Low, Sampson, on success of Uncle Tom's Cabin abroad, 189. Low, Sampson & Co. publish Dred, 269; their sales, 279. Lowell, J. R., Duchess of Sutherland's interesti n, 277; less known in England than he should be, 285; on Uncle Tom, 327; on Dickens and Thackeray, 327, 334; on The minister's Wooing, 330, 333; on idealism, 334; letter to H. B. S. from, on The minister's Wooing, 333. M. Macaulay, 233, 234. McClellan, Gen., his di