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Harriet Beecher Stowe in the Classroom: Pre-Visit Material
and Teaching Resources
Teacher Resources from Summer 2001 Teacher Institute: "This
Question of Slavery" Perspectives From Primary Sources
During the Summer of 2001 the Harriet Beecher Stowe
Center conducted a Teacher Institute to introduce and
assist Connecticut middle and high school teachers in
using primary source documents on the subject of
slavery. The following documents and resources were
prepared as a part of the Teacher Institute. Note: To view
the actual documents which accompany each activity, see "Primary Source Documents
From the Harriet Beecher Stowe Library, Hartford, Connecticut."
Source Material on the Pearl for Activity One:
Storytelling Using Primary Sources.
Source Material for Activity Two:
Debating Using Primary Source Documents.
Source Material for Activity Three:
Sleuthing Using Primary Source Documents.
Bibliography
Online Archives for Primary and Secondary Sources on Slavery
Primary Source Documents From The Harriet Beecher Stowe Center Library, Hartford, Connecticut
- Topic: The Fugitive Slave Law and The Issue of Individual Morality
Web-Optimized Version (5.06 MB) - Print Version (15.1 MB) The Religious Duty of Disobedience to Law: A Sermon Preached in the Second Presbyterian Church in Brooklyn,November 24, 1850 by Ichabod S. Spencer, D.D. New York: M.W. Dodd, 1850. Spencer argues not whether slavery is right or the Fugitive Slave Law is right but whether law will be resisted or obeyed. He pleads for obedience to the law and for peace rather than violence, bloodshed and confusion.
Web-Optimized Version (5.0 MB) - Print Version (28.3 MB) The Duty of Disobedience To The Fugitive Slave Act: An Appeal to the Legislators of Massachusetts by L. Maria Child. From Anti-Slavery Tracts. No. 9. Boston: The American Anti-Slavery Society, 1860. With emotional and fiery language, Lydia Maria Child begs the legislature of MA to "reform this great wickedness...for the honor of the State, for the political welfare of our own people, for the moral character of our posterity."
Web-Optimized Version (10.0 MB) - Print Version (42.8 MB) The Fugitive Slave Law and Its Victims. From Anti-Slavery Tracts. No. 18. The document lists scores of names of fugitive slaves as well as dates and places of incidents in which they are chased, seized, kidnapped and re-enslaved.
Web-Optimized Version (2.35 MB) - Print Version (6.49 MB) Speech of John Hossack, Convicted of a Violation of the Fugitive Slave Law, Before Judge Drummond of the United States District Court, Chicago, Ill. New York: American Anti-Slavery Society, 1860. Hossack, a Scottish immigrant, grain dealer and upright citizen, proclaims that he should not be sentenced for violation of this law, because "it is the inhuman and infamous law that is wrong, not me."
- Topic: The Gag Rule Controversy in Congress
Web-Optimized Version (7.38 MB) - Print Version (22.1 MB) On the Abolition Petitions, Delivered in the Senate, March 9th, 1836 by John C. Calhoun. From Speeches of John C. Calhoun, edited by Richard K. Cralle, 1853, pp. 465 - 490. Calhoun is addressing the question of receiving petitions from Pennsylvania for the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia. He states the view that the petitions "contain nothing requiring the action of the Senate, but that the petitions are highly mischievous, as tending to agitate and distract the country, and to endanger the Union itself."
Web-Optimized Version (2.22 MB) - Print Version (19.9 MB) Speech of Mr. Cushing, of Massachusetts on the Right to Petition, as Connected With Petitions For the Abolition of Slavery and The Slave Trade in the District of Columbia; In the House of Representatives, January 25, 1836. Washington: Gales and Seaton, 1836. Cushing addresses the House not on the issue of slavery but on the fundamental right to petition that has been curtailed. He states, "I can no longer consent that these my constituents shall be held waiting as it were, at the doors of the Capitol for admission, when, as I read the Constitution, they have a right to immediate entrance, and to be respectfully received by their assembled representatives."
Web-Optimized Version (589 KB) - Print Version (2.71 MB) Petition of Citizens of Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, For an Annual Appropriation to Remove to Africa All Free Negroes and Manumitted Slaves, Etc., February 9, 1836. Laid on the Table and Ordered To Be Printed. In accordance with the rules established by the House of Representatives that prohibited members from printing, discussing or even mentioning the contents of anti-slavery petitions, but allowed the petitions to be "laid on the table" only, this petition was laid on the table. It proposes "the removal of the free Negroes in this country from among the white population... as a matter in which the safety, harmony, and good order of society, materially depend."
- Additional Documents on Slavery
Web-Optimized Version (298 KB) - Print Version (3.48 MB) Broadside: Anti-Slavery Convention. Notice for Connecticut citizens to attend a Convention to be held in Hartford on the last Wednesday of April, 1837, in order to form a State Anti-Slavery Society.
Print Version (421 KB) Broadside: $2,500 REWARD. Notice from a slaveholder in Mississippi county, Mo. For a reward to be given for the capture of a Negro Man Named George, A Negro Man Slave Named Noah, A Negro Man Named Hamp and a Negro Slave Named Bob.
Print Version (162 KB) Letter:from Frederick Douglass to S. W. Cowles, Esq. On August 21, 1882, in response to Mr. Cowles' request for a pair of slave shackles, Douglass writes, "I would send you a pair of handcuffs or slave shackles if I had them. I think you would be more likely to find such articles among former slaveholders than among former slaves. I have been better known for getting rid, than getting possession of such emblems of our Civilization and Christianity."
Web-Optimized Version (5.90 MB) - Print Version (41.8 MB) Travel Journal: South-Side View of Slavery: Three Months at the South in 1854. By Nehemiah Adams, D.D. Boston: T.R. Marvin and B.B. Mussey & Co. 1854. Chapters 1 - 4. Adams undertakes a trip South for his health and relates, "the impressions and expectations with which I went south; the manner in which things appeared to me in connection with slavery in Georgia, South Carolina and Virginia; the correction or confirmation of my northern opinions and feelings; the conclusions to which I was led..."
Web-Optimized Version (?.?? MB) - Print Version (?.?? MB) written by Harriet Beecher Stowe to Frederick Douglass on July 9, 1851. Stowe responds to Douglass's accusation that the Church, in not taking an active role against slavery, is in effect, pro-slavery.
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