This publisher printed an image captioned “Emancipated Slaves, White and Colored,” which exposed the difficulties of identifying racial identity in the 1860s. For 10 points each:
[10m] Name this publisher that featured illustrations of the Civil War in its series “Pictorial History of the Civil War.” Illustrations by Winslow Homer and cartoons mocking Tammany Hall were often featured by this publisher.
ANSWER: Harper [or Harper’s; accept Harper’s Weekly]
[10e] So-called “white slave propaganda” was employed by abolitionists to expose the hypocrisies of the one-drop rule, including this author, who described Eliza as “all but white” in Uncle Tom’s Cabin.
ANSWER: Harriet Beecher Stowe
[10h] Ellen, a woman with this surname, spread “white slave propaganda” through books like Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom. While escaping slavery with her husband William, who had this surname, Ellen wore an arm sling.
ANSWER: Craft [accept Ellen Craft or William Craft]
<NS, American History>