The Man Who Became Uncle Tom
The Atlantic|October 2023
Harriet Beecher Stowe said that Josiah Henson's life had inspired her most famous character. But Henson longed to be recognized by his own name, and for his own achievements.
Clint Smith
The Man Who Became Uncle Tom

"Among all the singular and interesting records to which the institution of American slavery has given rise," Harriet Beecher Stowe once wrote, "we know of none more striking, more characteristic and instructive, than that of JOSIAH HENSON." Stowe first wrote about Henson's 1849 autobiography in her 1853 book A Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin, an annotated bibliography of sorts in which she cited a number of nonfiction accounts she had used as source material for her bestselling novel. Stowe later said that Henson's narrative had served as an inspiration for Uncle Tom.

Proslavery newspaper columnists and southern planters had responded to the huge success of Uncle Tom's Cabin by accusing Stowe of hyperbole and outright falsehood. Benevolent masters, they said, took great care of the enslaved people who worked for them; in some cases, they treated them like family. The violent, inhumane conditions Stowe described, they contended, were fictitious. By naming her sources, and outlining how they had influenced her story, Stowe hoped to prove that her novel was rooted in fact.

A Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin was an immediate success; its publisher reported selling 90,000 copies by the end of 1854. Abraham Lincoln himself may have read the book, at a crucial turning point in the Civil War: Records indicate that the 16th president checked it out from the Library of Congress on June 16, 1862, and returned it on July 29. Those 43 days correspond with the period during which Lincoln drafted the Emancipation Proclamation.

This story is from the October 2023 edition of The Atlantic.

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This story is from the October 2023 edition of The Atlantic.

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