She has been criticized,[5] but also defended,[6] for seeing motherhood as a fundamental role of women, and linking abolitionism with the maternal.
Lydia Maria Child wrote John Brown while he was in jail in Virginia in 1859, asking if she could visit and nurse him; he declined. Rebecca did not ask; she traveled to Charles Town, Virginia, to meet with Brown and offer what consolation she could, and after delay, was allowed to meet with him twice. In her published description of her visits, she implied that there was something holy, even Biblical, in his person, and that he deserved her veneration.[6] f
During the American Civil War, Spring and her husband supported a Virginia-based school for slave children. They also financed a soup kitchen to aid the increasing number of fugitives and refugees traveling north in the wake of the Emancipation Proclamation of 1863.[7]
Spring, Rebecca Buffum (1994). "A visit to John Brown in 1859". In Salitan, Lucille; Perera, Eve Lewis (eds.). Virtuous lives : four Quaker sisters remember family life, abolitionism, and women's suffrage. New York: Continuum. pp. 122–123. A different version was published in the New York Tribune, December 2, 1859, p. 6.
Writings about Rebecca Buffum Spring (most recent first)
Mullaney, Marie Marmo (1990). "Rebecca Buffum Spring, 1811-1911". In The Woman’s Project of New Jersey (ed.). Past and Promise: Lives of New Jersey Women. Metuchen, New Jersey: Scarecrow Press. pp. 84–86.
Mullaney, Marie Marmo (Fall–Winter 1986). "Feminism, Utopianism, and Domesticity : The Career of Rebecca Buffum Spring, 1811-1911". New Jersey History. 104 (3–4).
Warren, Dale (Summer 1967). "Uncle Marcus". New England Galaxy: 16–26. JSTOR41946562.
The Rebecca Spring papers were purchased by the Stanford University Library. There is a published guide.[4] Minser discusses the collection.[8]
References
^Mullaney, Marie Marmo (Fall–Winter 1986). "Feminism, Utopianism, and Domesticity : The Career of Rebecca Buffum Spring, 1811-1911". New Jersey History. 104 (3–4).
^Swerdlow, Amy. "Abolition's Conservative Sisters: The Ladies' New York City Anti-Slavery Societies, 1834- 1840". In Yell, Jean Fagan; Van Horne, John C. (eds.). The Abolitionist Sisterhood: Women's Political Culture in Antebellum America. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. pp. 31–44.