Summary
Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe was one of the most influential books of the 19th century. Though controversial today for its racial stereotypes, the 1852 novel was groundbreaking in humanizing enslaved people and exposing the moral injustice of slavery to a wide audience. The novel follows the story of Uncle Tom, an enslaved man in Kentucky who is sold and experiences brutality in the Deep South. Other key characters include Eliza, who escapes slavery with her young son, and the cruelly manipulative slave owner Simon Legree.
Uncle Tom's Cabin sold over 300,000 copies in its first year and helped galvanize the abolitionist movement in the United States. The novel's vivid depiction of the cruelties of slavery struck a chord with readers and intensified anti-slavery sentiment in the North in the years leading up to the Civil War. The immense popularity of Uncle Tom's Cabin led to numerous adaptations, including stage plays known as “Tom Shows” that were performed for decades. The first film version was made in 1903, while the 1927 silent film adaptation was one of the most expensive movies of its era.
Plot
Uncle Tom's Cabin opens on the Shelby plantation in Kentucky, where the kind slave Tom lives with his wife and children. Facing financial troubles, Mr. Shelby reluctantly decides to sell Tom and a young boy named Harry to a cruel slave trader. Harry's mother Eliza overhears this and flees with her son, dramatically crossing the frozen Ohio River to reach freedom. Meanwhile, Tom is sold and sent south on a riverboat, where he meets and befriends a young white girl named Eva.
Eva's father Augustine St. Clare purchases Tom and brings him to their New Orleans home. There, Tom and Eva develop a deep spiritual friendship, but tragedy strikes when Eva falls ill and dies. Her death prompts St. Clare to begin the legal process of freeing Tom, but before he can do so, St. Clare is killed in an accident. His wife reneges on her husband's promise and sells Tom to the brutal plantation owner Simon Legree.
On Legree's plantation, Tom endures harsh treatment but refuses to compromise his Christian faith. He befriends and encourages two fellow slaves, Cassy and Emmeline, to escape. When Tom refuses to tell Legree where the women have gone, Legree has Tom beaten to death. Just before Tom dies, he forgives the overseers who beat him, causing them to repent. George Shelby, Mr. Shelby's son, arrives at the plantation to buy Tom's freedom, but is too late.