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Teacher Resources

The following documents are the property of:

The Harriet Beecher Stowe Center
77 Forest Street
Hartford, CT 06105
860-522-9258

These documents were used in conjunction with a Teacher Institute, held at the Stowe Center from July 16 - 21, 2001 entitled, "This Question of Slavery": Perspectives From Primary Sources.

Teachers may use any of the documents for educational purposes only. Any other use of the documents, including reprint, requires written permission from The Harriet Beecher Stowe Center.

The 12 documents have been divided into three categories, related to (1) The Fugitive Slave Law and the Issue of Individual Morality; (2) The Gag Rule Controversy in Congress; and (3) Slavery in General.

These documents are in .PDF format and were created with Adobe Acrobat. In order to view the documents, you must have Adobe Acrobat Reader installed on your computer. If you do not have Acrobat Reader, you can download it for free from http://www.adobe.com/prodindex/acrobat/readstep.html. Acrobat reader is available for Mac OS, Mac OS X, Windows 3.1, 95, 98, ME, NT, and 2000 as well as for various flavors of UNIX.

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  • Topic: The Fugitive Slave Law and The Issue of Individual Morality

  • Topic: The Gag Rule Controversy in Congress

  • Additional Documents on Slavery

    • PDFBroadside: Anti-Slavery Convention (3,571K - Note: This is a rather large file and it may take a while to download depending on your connection speed.) 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.

    • PDFBroadside: $2,500 REWARD (422K). 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.

    • PDFLetter: (163K) 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."

    • PDFTravel Journal: South-Side View of Slavery: Three Months at the South in 1854 (42,881K - Note: This is a rather large file and it may take a while to download depending on your connection speed.) 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..."

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