Uncle Tom's Cabin Research Paper

515 Words3 Pages

In the anti-slavery book titled Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe is exactly what it sounds like. It’s about slavery and her open eye on the subject. She goes into detail about real life situations that happened and how masters treated their slaves. Do you think her thoughts were good or bad? Stowe had many outlooks on evil but what she truly thought were the outlooks on evil for slavery were when masters treated their slaves thoughtlessly or even when they would separate families or mother and sons from each other. Selling and trading slaves was often happening around this time, but when a mother like in this book, over hears someone they love being sold, they do crazy things. Tom was the on being taken away the next morning, but his mother decided to run away to Canada instead. Sadly, they were caught and while the mother didn’t stop, Tom knew his owner and obeyed. While they were traveling back from Ohio to the South, Tom saved a little girl from drowning in a creek and her father noticed and decided to purchase him from his master. …show more content…

This was due to the U.S. law not legally recognize them as families. Men and women could not legally marry so they had no rights. No home to live in, no children to claim. Parents couldn’t protect their children from their masters due to them easily to be removed or sold. Wives may only see their husband if their master agreed on it and children would stay with kids till a certain age. This also made childhood unheard of. From the day they are born they are tossed around and shown the hard life they would grow up in. Schooling was not an option for the young slaves. The closest they’d get to an education was reading, and that’s if they were taught in secret. Uncle Tom slowly learned how to read from the little girl he was serving for. She tried to show him and care for him just as much as George