Book description
The abolitionist John Woolman (1720-72) has been described as a
"Quaker saint," an isolated mystic, singular even among a
singular people. But as historian Geoffrey Plank recounts, this
tailor, hog producer, shopkeeper, schoolteacher, and prominent Quaker
minister was very much enmeshed in his local community in colonial New
Jersey and was alert as well to events throughout the British Empire.
Responding to the situation as he saw it, Woolman developed a
comprehensive critique of his fellow Quakers and of the imperial
economy, became one of the most emphatic opponents of slaveholding,
and helped develop a new form of protest by striving never to spend
money in ways that might encourage slavery or other forms of iniquity.
Drawing on the diaries of contemporaries, personal
correspondence, the minutes of Quaker meetings, business and probate
records, pamphlets, and other sources, John Woolman's Path to the
Peaceable Kingdom shows that Woolman and his neighbors were far
more engaged with the problems of inequality, trade, and warfare than
anyone would know just from reading the Quaker's own writings.
Although he is famous as an abolitionist, the end of slavery was only
part of Woolman's project. Refusing to believe that the pursuit of
self-interest could safely guide economic life, Woolman aimed for a
miraculous global transformation: a universal disavowal of greed.
"A carefully researched and quietly brilliant work that
provides a genuinely new perspective on a familiar figure in the
history of antislavery. Plank finds in Woolman not only an early
opponent of slavery but also an ardent critic of most every facet of
commercial life in the Delaware Valley and, more generally, the
British Empire."-Christopher Brown, Columbia University
Geoffrey Plank is Professor in the School of American Studies,
University of East Anglia. He is author of An Unsettled Conquest: The
British Campaign Against the Peoples of Acadia and Rebellion and
Savagery: The Jacobite Rising of 1745 and the British Empire, both also
available from University of Pennsylvania Press.