
On June 5, 1851, the anti-slavery newspaper The National Era published the first modest chapter of Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin. What began as a serialized story in a Washington, D.C. publication quickly exploded into a gripping cultural phenomenon that exposed the brutal, human reality of southern plantation life to northern readers.
Stowe originally intended the piece to be a brief, four-part sketch to protest the Fugitive Slave Act, but the public response was so immediate and overwhelming that she expanded it into a massive 40-week serial. The collected chapters were later published as a novel, selling millions of copies worldwide. It successfully galvanized abolitionist sentiment and fueled the intense moral outrage that pushed a fractured nation directly toward the Civil War.

