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19th century American writer
Answer for the clue "19th century American writer ", 5 letters:
stowe
Alternative clues for the word stowe
- Ski resort near Montpelier
- “Dred” novelist
- "A Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin" author
- Best-selling author who wrote "I did not write it. God wrote it. I merely did his dictation"
- Vermont winter destination
- Novelist Harriet Beecher ___
- Author Harriet Beecher __
- "Oldtown Folks" author
- Madeleine of "Revenge"
- Actress Madeleine
Usage examples of stowe.
Anthony and Harriet Beecher Stowe to speak publically from their rostra, at a time when even white male abolitionists refused to allow women access to public speaking.
The family eventually moved to Cincinnati, where Stowe was encouraged in her desire to write.
The most famous novelist of her day, Stowe also worked for women's suffrage and temperance.
When he rode away from the Moorman outfit and started running with Gib Gentry and Ben Stowe, Eli Patterson warned him against it.
The last time Shevlin had seen Stowe he was living in an abandoned homesteader's shack, rustling a few head of cattle, and riding with a wild bunch.
There comes a time for a man to draw a line, and Mike Shevlin had drawn his, and he had ridden away from Rafter, from Gib Gentry, Ben Stowe, and all the rest of them.
Had Ben Stowe realized that Eli Patterson was connected with the San Francisco owners?
If Ben Stowe had done the planning for this operation he had planned very shrewdly indeed.
If Ray Hollister had been leading us, he would have run Ben Stowe out of the country!
In his office above the bank, Ben Stowe tipped back in his big leather chair and stared thoughtfully out the window toward the trees along the creek.
Old Jack had been seated in his hide chair with a shotgun across his knees when he told Ben Stowe he was a cow thief, and probably a murderer as well, and also told him what would happen if he was ever found on Turkeytrack range again.
Ben Stowe, big, powerful, and tough, had stood there and taken it, but even now he flushed at the memory, grudgingly admitting to himself that he had been afraid.
Until the discovery of gold on Rafter, Ben Stowe had been merely another rustler.
He had looked upon Ben Stowe as a down-at-heel hired man, and he forgot to consider that the fires of ambition might burn just as strongly in another as in himself.
People would soon forget what Ben Stowe had done, or remember it, as the West often did, as the harmless escapades of another time.