Julia
Ward Howe
Author, Hymn Writer, Philanthropist,
Reformer
May 27 is the anniversary of the birth
Julia Ward Howe, author of one of the great
rallying songs of the Civil War Era, “The
Battle Hymn of the Republic”. The words for
this hymn first appeared in the February,
1862, issue of The Atlantic Monthly magazine
and was considered by many as the Civil
War’s battle song of the Republic.
Julia Ward Howe was born on May 27, 1819
into a prominent New York City family that
had a distinguished lineage on both sides.
Though she was raised in a conservative,
Christian home, she rebelled against the
strict religious views of her father,
becoming a liberal thinker. Yet Julia
maintained a firm belief in a personal,
loving God and a strong faith in Christ.
Since her mother died when she was only five
years old. she was raised by her father with
the help of various members of her extended
family. Her father saw to it that she
received the best education available,
attending various private girls’ schools
also being tutored at home. She grew into a
gracious and intelligent young woman with a
strong literary bent. Due to her marked
abilities, she was readily accepted into the
society of such notables as Margaret Fuller,
Horace Mann, and Ralph Waldo Emerson.
In 1843, Julia married the Boston Reformer,
Dr. Samuel G. Howe, nearly 20 years her
senior. It proved to be a rather stormy
marriage. Even though Dr. Howe was involved
in numerous reform movements, he was
strongly opposed to married women being
involved in public life. While he permitted
his wife to assist him “behind the scenes”
in his own work, for years she was limited
in her work and her role was largely that of
an impatient onlooker, especially as the
troubled events of the 1850’s led her
husband to become an active abolitionist.
She did, however, pursue her writing
career, even against her husband’s wishes.
In 1854, despite her husband’s disapproval,
Julia anonymously published her first volume
of poems, “Passions Flowers”. It was met
with success and she continued writing and
publishing volumes of poetry, several plays,
and many magazine articles on various
themes. This caused friction between husband
and wife as Dr. Howe emphatically objected
to Julia’s speaking in public and her
literary career.
In the fall of 1861, after the Civil War
began, Mrs. Howe accompanied her husband to
Washington, D.C., where he was involved in
medical service for the government. During
the visit, Julia became deeply disturbed as
she noted the growing angry mood of the
Nation. Mrs. Howe daily watched troops
marching off to war singing “John Brown’s
Body”, a song about an unconventional man
who had been hanged in his efforts to free
the slaves. One day, one a friend suggested
that she write some “decent words for that
tune”. Julia agreed. That evening, after
retiring to bed, the words came to Julia.
She rose in the predawn hours and scrawled
the verses of the poem that was to become
famous as “The Battle Hymn of the Republic”.
The poem was published in the Atlantic
Monthly and Mrs. Howe received a mere $5 for
this literary work. But soon the song was
being sung by regiments all over the north
and it wasn’t long before the entire nation
was united in singing, “Mine eyes have seen
the glory of the coming of the Lord...”. It
is recorded that this hymn was sung as a
solo at a large patriotic rally that was
attended by President Abraham Lincoln. It is
said that after the audience had responded
with loud applause, the President, with
tears in his eyes, shouted, “Sing it again!”
And it was sung again and again for well
over a hundred years, becoming one of our
finest national hymns, finding its way into
almost every American hymnal.
In the postwar years, her husband finally
gave up his violent opposition to Julia’s
public life and she became a leader in her
own right. Mrs. Howe became involved in the
Woman’s Suffrage Movement, joining with Lucy
Stone to form the American Woman Suffrage
Association and began actively promoting a
suffrage amendment. She became a frequent
lecturer at conventions and legislative
hearings and was founder, editor, and
contributor to a weekly publication called
“Woman’s Journal”. She not only fought for a
woman’s right to vote, but also struggled to
free women from traditional stereotypes,
especially in marriage, that kept women from
sharing their ideas or becoming all that God
intended them to be.
By the time she reached her eighties,
Julia had become a national figure, beloved
by the American people. In 1908, two years
before she died at the age of ninety-one,
Julia Ward Howe was the first woman to be
elected to the prestigious American Academy
of Arts and Letters.
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