PREFACECONTENTSCHRONOLOGICAL OUTLINE OF MRS. STOWE’S LIFE
- 1811, June 14. Harriet Elizabeth Beecher was born in
Litchfield, Connecticut, daughter of Rev. Dr. Lyman Beecher.
- 1816. Death of her mother, Roxana Foote Beecher.
- 1816-1818. Harriet attends Dame School.
- 1817. Arrival of Harriet’s stepmother, Harriet Porter Beecher.
- 1823. Harriet’s essay on Immortality read at school exhibition.
- 1816, 1822, 1825, 1826, 1827. Visits to Foote homestead at Nut
Plains, near Guilford, Connecticut.
- 1824-1832. Harriet as pupil and afterwards as teacher at her
sister Catherine’s school in Hartford.
- 1825. Harriet writes a drama in blank verse called “Cleon.”
- 1825. Harriet becomes a member of the First Church in Hartford.
- 1826-1832. Pastorate of Dr. Beecher at Hanover Street Church in
Boston. Harriet’s vacations at Boston and Guilford.
- 1832-1852. Dr. Beecher head of Lane Theological Seminary at
Cincinnati, Ohio. Residence of family at Walnut Hills, suburb
of Cincinnati.
- 1832-1834. Catherine and Harriet found a school at Cincinnati.
- 1833. Harriet a member of the Semi-colon Club.
- 1834. Harriet receives a prize for her first short story.
- 1833. Harriet visits a plantation in Kentucky and sees slave
life.
- 1836, January. Marriage of Professor C. E. Stowe and Harriet
Beecher.
- 1836, September. Birth of Mrs. Stowe’s twin daughters, Harriet
Beecher and Eliza Tyler.
- 1838, January. Birth of her third child, Henry Ellis.
- 1840, May. Birth of her fourth child, Frederick William.
- 1843. Death of her brother, George, by accidental shooting.
- 1836-1850. Years of sickness, poverty and struggle.
- 1843, July. Birth of her fifth child, Georgiana May.
- 1843. Publication of her first book of stories.
- 1846-1847. Resort to a sanatorium in Vermont for her health.
- 1848, January. Birth of her sixth child, Samuel Charles.
- 1849. Cholera epidemic in Cincinnati; death of her youngest
child.
- 1850-1852. Residence of the Stowe family in Brunswick, Maine.
Professor Stowe at Bowdoin College.
- 1850, July. Birth of her seventh child, Charles Edward.
- 1850. The Fugitive Slave Law and slavery agitation.
- 1850, Mrs. Stowe’s vision of Uncle Tom’s death; writes
first chapter.
- 1851, June-1852, April. “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” appears as a serial
in “National Era.”
- 1852, March 10. Publication of “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” in book form.
- 1852-1853. 300,000 copies sold in United States.
- 1852, August. “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” selling in England at rate of
1,000 a week.
- 1852. Mrs. Stowe in New York aiding escaped slaves.
- 1852-1863. Residence of Stowe family in Andover, Mass.
Professor Stowe in Andover Theological Seminary.
- 1853, April-August. Professor and Mrs. Stowe traveling in
England and Scotland.
- 1853, May. Meeting at Stafford House, London. “Address” of
500,000 English women, and the “shackle-bracelet” presented to
Harriet Beecher Stowe.
- 1855-1856. Harriet Beecher Stowe aiding in the anti-slavery
campaign in United States.
- 1856, July-1857, June. Traveling in England, France and Italy.
- 1856, August. Professor and Mrs. Stowe meet Queen Victoria.
- 1857, June. Death by drowning of their son, Henry Ellis.
- 1859, August-1860, July. Traveling in Switzerland and Italy.
- 1861, June. Visits her son’s regiment at Jersey City.
- 1862, November. Visit to Washington. The Contraband Dinner.
Visit to Abraham Lincoln.
- 1863, July 11. Battle of Gettysburg. Her son, Fred, struck by a
fragment of a shell.
- 1863-1870. Residence of the Stowe family in Hartford,
Connecticut.
- 1864. Mrs. Stowe becomes an attendant of the Episcopal Church.
- 1869-1870. The Lady Byron Defence.
- 1867-1886. Spends the winters in Mandarin, Florida.
- 1872-1874. Giving public readings from her own works in New
England and the west.
- 1882, June 14. Garden party given by her publishers at the
residence of ex-Governor and Mrs. Claflin at Newtonville,
Mass., in honor of her birthday.
- 1886. Death of Professor Stowe, of her brother, Henry Ward
Beecher, and of her daughter, Georgiana May.
- 1896, July 1. Death of Harriet Beecher Stowe, aged eighty-five,
at Hartford, Connecticut.