Sean Griffin is a historian of the nineteenth-century United States and has taught at the City University of New York and the College of Charleston.
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Description
Introduction Chapter 1. Tom Paine's Progeny: Slavery, Labor, and Democracy in the Radical Atlantic Chapter 2. "A Very Intimate Connexion": The Working Men's Parties, Equal Rights Democrats, and Antislavery Immediatism Chapter 3. "The Genius of Integral Emancipation": Antislavery and Association Chapter 4. "The Greatest of All Anti-Slavery Measures": Working-Class Land Reform and Antislavery's Common Ground Chapter 5. A "Union of Reformers": The National Industrial Congress and the Antislavery-Land Reform Alliance Chapter 6. From Free Soil to Homestead: Working-Class Land Reform and Antislavery Politics Chapter 7. Antislavery, Labor, and the Res Publica: The Rise of the Republican Party Epilogue Notes Index Acknowledgments
"Exceedingly well researched in an impressively wide range of source materials, The Root and Branch brings together histories of American antislavery and of nineteenth-century labor reform exceptionally well to show how these movements intersected more frequently and more meaningfully than is typically understood. By bringing together these movements so fully and extensively, this book offers an invaluable contribution to scholarship on both American antislavery activism and labor radicalism." (Corey Brooks, Liberty Power: Antislavery Third Parties and the Transformation of American Politics)