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Autograph letter signed by STOWE Harriet Beecher - 1852

by STOWE Harriet Beecher

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Autograph letter signed by STOWE Harriet Beecher - 1852

Autograph letter signed

by STOWE Harriet Beecher

  • Used
  • Signed
1852. Signed. STOWE, Harriet Beecher. Autograph letter signed. Andover, Massachusetts, October 27, 1852. Single sheet of unlined woven cream paper, measuring 8 by 9-3/4 inches; pp. 2. $22,500.Fascinating autograph letter written and signed by Harriet Beecher Stowe discussing slavery laws, penned at the height of Uncle Tom's Cabin's popularity.The autograph letter, dated ""Andover. Oct 27/52,"" was written the same year as Uncle Tom's Cabin was released. Stowe, a devoted abolitionist, was often credited with helping to spark the Civil War through the depictions of cruelty and heartbreak in Uncle Tom's Cabin. The book's impact was so widespread and powerful that Lincoln reportedly said to her: ""So you are the little woman who wrote the book that started this great war.""The letter, written to an unnamed gentleman who sent Stowe an article, reads in full: ""Dear Sir, I am obliged to you for sending me the 'text to my subject' enclosed in your letter. It will be a very good one. Any one that stirs up this subject of southern law as a defence of slavery emphatically wakes up the wrong passenger—nothing more is needed than to awaken the attention of the public to an exposé of the slave law system. If they desire law on this subject they shall have it—With regard to the benevolent plan which you have presented, I am at present in a situation where my mind is so much pressed with immediately urgent undertakings that I cannot give it my attention—and it has appeared to me that in the selection of benevolent objects, I ought to have first & chief reference to that race with whom my writings have been more immediately connected. It is stated in the printed article which you sent me that advertisements offering a price for the life of runaways never had existed. There are several specimens of them in Weld's book [American Slavery As It Wasin 1839: Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses] extracted from the current papers of the time in which he wrote—I should however like some of a more recent date & if any such occur among your collection you might help the cause by furnishing me with them.If you have any collection of advertisements indicating the low state of public sentiment toward the slave population of the South, I should be glad of them for us—and if you have been at any expense in collecting them, I will cheerfully pay it. Yours very truly, H.B. Stowe. PS I return you the article you were so kind as to send me, thinking it may be of value to you. H.B. Stowe."" Original mailing creases, a couple tiny stains, letter remargined. Near-fine condition.
  • Bookseller Bauman Rare Books US (US)
  • Book Condition Used
  • Quantity Available 1
  • Date Published 1852

We have 2 copies available starting at NZ$2,072.00.

Proof portrait wood engraving of Harriet Beecher Stowe, and artist's Autograph Letter, signed...
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Proof portrait wood engraving of Harriet Beecher Stowe, and artist's Autograph Letter, signed concerning it, with another engraving of unidentified man

by (Stowe, Harriet Beecher) Kruell, Gustav

  • Used
  • Signed
Condition
Used - Stowe engraving with almost imperceptible tear without loss, others fine
Quantity Available
1
Seller
New York, New York, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
NZ$2,072.00

Show Details

Description:
n.p., 1892. 1 vols. Stowe image 9-1/2 x 7-1/4 inches, 14 x 11 inches overall. Stowe engraving with almost imperceptible tear without loss, others fine. Kruell, Gustav. 1 vols. Stowe image 9-1/2 x 7-1/4 inches, 14 x 11 inches overall. Harriet Beecher Stowe Engraving with Artist's Autograph Letter, signed. Gustav Kruell (1843-1907) was born in Germany and established himself as an engraver in Stuttgart. He came to the US in 1873, and quickly obtained commissions from the leading illustrated periodicals. He fell under the artistic influence of the famed engraver W.J. Linton, with the result that his portraits took on a clarity and liveliness uncommon in his day. His most famous work is probably the Lincoln of 1891; the following year he produced the superb Stowe portrait offered here (Stowe died in 1896). His Autograph Letter, signed, written from East Orange, NJ to J.R. Mitchel conveying the proof, reads, "Your favor enclosing check if $15.00 for Portrait of Beecher Stowe came to me today--I send… Read More
Item Price
NZ$2,072.00
Autograph letter signed to Sophia Hawthorne

Autograph letter signed to Sophia Hawthorne

by Stowe, Harriet Beecher

  • Used
  • very good
  • Signed
Condition
Used - Very Good
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Stevenson, Maryland, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
NZ$37,296.00

Show Details

Description:
Three pages. Typed identification at head of first page, mounting remants on verso of second leaf. Very good.
Harriet Beecher Stowe arranges a visit to Hawthorne's Concord home. Stowe wrote this letter the year before Nathaniel Hawthorne's death. She tells Hawthorne's wife Sophia,
"Mr. Stowe & I have long desired to renew our acquaintance with you, but Concord is rather too far off for a card-case call & this leads me to say that on Sunday next we shall pass your house on our way to a friends' with whom we pass Sunday, & we propose to ourselves then the pleasure of calling & seeing you & Mr. Hawthorne & your family once more."
She jokingly adds about the proposed early summer visit, "Only, should there chance to be a driving snow storm we should perhaps not undertake the visit — & of course must lose the call. Your whole region is to me terra incognita known only in your husband's descriptions, so I ardently hope the sun may shine & the skies prove propitious. In such a case we hope to look in upon… Read More
Item Price
NZ$37,296.00