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Frederick Stowe and the Burden of Fame

7/3/2020

1 Comment

 
Picturedetail image from HBHS exhibit To Give It All to This Cause
Frederick William Stowe was Harriet Beecher Stowe and Calvin Stowe’s fourth of seven children. Born in 1840, Frederick was twelve years old by the time Harriet published Uncle Tom’s Cabin in 1852. Frederick was often separated from Harriet and Calvin, due to Calvin’s frequent business trips to Europe and several family tragedies.

Cholera was common in the nineteenth century, and especially in Cincinnati. Harriet herself even caught cholera. When Frederick was nine years old, Harriet’s third son, Samuel Charles, died as an infant due to Cholera. Frederick often suffered from a lack of attention from his mother, and by the time he was sixteen, Frederick had already become an alcoholic.

While Harriet was off on a European tour in the 1850s, Frederick was sent to his uncle, Rev. Thomas Beecher, who had experience helping people with addictions recover. Frederick was a patient of the “water cure”, a popular method at the time. By drinking large amounts of water and taking frequent baths, patients would purify their bodies of all harmful substances. Frederick made a lot of progress and was reaching the point of becoming fully sober. Frederick at age seventeen had a setback, when his oldest brother Henry Ellis drowned in the Connecticut River.

Joining Harriet and some other siblings on another European tour in 1859 and 1860, Frederick expressed positivity and hope for the future in letters to Calvin. With his return to the United States, Frederick decided to become a doctor and enrolled at Harvard medical school. After less than a semester at Harvard, Frederick’s life, along with thousands of others, suddenly changed. Frederick, at the age of twenty-one, became a part of the 1st Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry and was one of the initial 75,000 volunteers called for by Abraham Lincoln. While Harriet was worried about “the temptations of the camp” (meaning alcohol), she visited him before he marched off, describing him as “in high spirits.” Serving in the Union army was certainly the high point of Frederick’s life. After a skirmish, Frederick participated in the First Battle of Bull Run.

​After Bull Run, Frederick’s spirits dropped for two years, as he transferred from the 1st Massachusetts Infantry to the Heavy Artillery regiment, spending the majority of his time in Union camps and forts. Harriet later received a letter from Frederick describing how boring and repetitive camp life was. She decided to act. After a letter to Harriet’s friend, Brig. Gen. Adolph von Steinwehr, Frederick was moved and promoted to Captain within the XI Corps of the Army of the Potomac. Frederick was a part of the general’s staff, and as such was exempt from combat (A sneaky move from Harriet). This changed at the battle of Gettysburg. As Frederick went into combat again, he was wounded by a fragment from a shell.


Frederick’s luck, bad as it always was, failed him yet again. Frederick did recover, slowly and over several months. He was later discharged from the army, as it was clear he was in no shape to go back to fighting. Frederick returned to his parents, but he soon relapsed into alcoholism. Harriet had not given up and sent him to manage a citrus farm in Florida. Frederick did not do well and was later sent to another alcoholism treatment center, but to no avail. Frederick decided to sail to San Francisco. He arrived but then disappeared. He did mention becoming a sailor, but what happened to him is unknown. Despite several investigations by the Stowes, his fate remains unknown.
 
Given the incredible loss of siblings and the time with his parents, one may understand why he turned to alcohol as an effort to escape. With his mother becoming one of the most famous women of the nineteenth century, he must have felt that she was on a plane at an unreachable height above him. I’m sure that this was part of the reason he joined the army, to make her proud.

About the author:
Emmett Looman is a Youth Docent at the Harriet Beecher Stowe House in Cincinnati. He enjoys history and is always happy to learn new interesting facts about the past.
 
Sources:
https://www.historynet.com/frederick-stowe-in-the-shadow-of-uncle-toms-cabin-january-99-americas-civil-war-feature.htm
 
https://www.geni.com/people/Lt-Frederick-Stowe-USA/6000000000699446385

http://hd.housedivided.dickinson.edu/node/35123
 
http://www.mainelegacy.com/8.html
 
https://www.andoverlestweforget.com/faces-of-andover/stowe-tyer/frederick-stowe/
 
https://www.harrietbeecherstowecenter.org/harriet-beecher-stowe/family/

1 Comment
Beecher S Bassford
3/25/2022 03:56:58 am

In latter years Harriet had dementia and lived next to Mark Twain. Who was writing Tom Sawyer. Poor Harriet was running out in the street to every carriage that came by. She thought Frederick was on the carriage. This was in Hartford Connecticut

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