Catherine Swan Brown Spear
Catherine Swan Brown Spear (6 August 1813 – 29 June 1903)[1] was an American reformer, educator, and abolitionist.[2] Early lifeCatherine Swan was born in Worcester County, Massachusetts[2] on 6 August 1813,[1] the oldest of seven children born to Samuel Swan and Clara (née Hale).[2] Though her father was American-born, he was of Scottish descent, and her mother of English.[2] Both were teachers.[2] Catherine started school at the age of three, continuing until she was 18.[2] She worked as a teacher for three years, and was actively involved in the anti-slavery movement from the age of 19.[2] ActivismIn 1843, Catherine Swan married fellow abolitionist Abel Brown, corresponding secretary and general agent of the Eastern New York Anti-slavery Society.[2] The two met while Brown was in Massachusetts on an anti-slavery lecture tour, and Catherine became known for speaking and singing anti-slavery songs while accompanying her husband on subsequent trips.[3] She was described as having 'unaffected vocal powers'.[3] The couple travelled widely in the cause of the abolition and temperance movements,[2] as well as assisting fugitive slaves.[3] She later wrote:
After just 18 months of marriage,[2] Abel Brown died one day before his 34th birthday.[5] Catherine, pregnant at the time of his death, named her child Abel,[3] and published a biography of her husband in 1849 in an effort to keep his memory alive,[5] and hoping to 'stimulate others, to a life of greater self denial and perseverance in the cause of the persecuted'.[6] Introducing the volume, compiled largely using Brown's correspondence and papers, she wrote:
In 1855, Catherine Brown married her second husband, the Reverend Charles Spear of Boston.[2] Spear, known as 'the prisoner's friend, was a minister and reformer, with whom Catherine visited many prisons, through which her own interest in issues of incarceration and reform grew.[2] She continued to work and petition on behalf of the temperance movement, as well as being active in women's rights and suffrage, and the abolition of the death penalty.[2] Charles Spear was an active, and early, opponent of the death penalty, who argued that 'The taking of his [the criminal's] life will not bring back his victim; it will not prevent others from the commission of crime.'[7] The couple became partners in their efforts to abolish the death penalty, humanise prisons, and establish a halfway house for ex-convicts.[7] Civil War workAlthough a member of the Universal Peace Society, Catherine viewed the American Civil War as necessary, and undertook hospital work during its course, her husband having been appointed a chaplain in Washington, D.C.[2] Charles Spear died in 1863, but she remained in Washington until the war's end.[2] Later yearsSpear moved to Passaic, New Jersey,[2] where she died on 29 June 1903.[1] References
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