Harriet Beecher Stoowe Research Paper

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Harriet Beecher Stowe: The Life of a Writer
Harriet Beecher Stowe knew exactly what she believed in, from a growing love of literature to a strong hatred of slavery. Her writing had a powerful impact on the public. Because of Harriet’s persuasive gift with words, she is known as today as a woman who brilliantly changed the world.
Harriet Stowe was born on June 14, 1811 in a town called Litchfield Connecticut. She was a part of a growing family of ten until her mother Roxanna Foote Beecher passed away from tuberculosis when Harriet was at the age of four. One year later her father Lyman Beecher remarried producing three more children into the family. With her mother gone Harriet looked up to her older sister Catherine who took over the responsibilities …show more content…

When Harriet was twenty-one her father Lyman Beecher was offered head chair of Lane Theological Seminary, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Where they easily left their old lives there to start a new one. In 1836, Harriet Beecher married Calvin Stowe, one of the professors at Lane Theological Seminary. Later that same year, she gave birth to twin girls named Eliza and Harriet. After her to twins came in to the world she decided that she wanted to bare five more. Harriet Beecher Stowe lost her eighteen-month old son Charley in 1849, showing her a new way to look at life from a slave's point in view. She saw life as a mother watching their child being sold away taken from them …show more content…

The second scandal never involved her, but more of her brother Henry Ward Beecher, who had become famous clergyman in America. In 1870, a woman named Elizabeth Tilton confessed to her husband that she had had an affair with Beecher. As Ted Haggard Heard what his wife said which made him livid. So livid that he told one person after the other, which lead him to a tail of adultery, soon after divided the entire Beecher family.
Harriet Beecher Stowe lived to be an old lady. Most people she loved died before she did like her sister Catharine, her husband, her brother Henry Ward Beecher, and her daughter Georgiana May. Harriet's daughter’s death affected her most because Georgiana May died from her morphine addiction. Her children’s struggles with substances helped her understand that addiction is a diseases, that lead to her writing about addiction as more of a physical disease by helping anyone understand

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