The novel, unlike previous examples of plantation literature, acted as a criticism of Abolitionism in the United States, and how easily anti-slavery organisations such as the Underground Railroad could be manipulated by pro-slavery superiors - a concept previously discussed in an earlier anti-Tom novel, Frank Freeman's Barber Shop by Rev. Baynard Rush Hall (1852).
Northern Ireland | Northern Territory | Northern Pacific Railway | Kimberley, Northern Cape | Northern Illinois University | Northern Cape | Northern England | Army of Northern Virginia | Northern California | Bride of Frankenstein | Northern Italy | The Princess Bride | Royal Northern College of Music | Northern Ireland national football team | Northern | Northern Hemisphere | Northern Exposure | Northern Ontario | Northern Province | Northern Mariana Islands | Northern League | Northern Rhodesia | United States District Court for the Northern District of California | Palmerston, Northern Territory | Northern Germany | Northern Wei | Northern Ireland Assembly | Katherine, Northern Territory | Father of the Bride | Northern Ndebele people |