“Rockman’s Welfare Reform provides my students with a scholarly overview of the issues and historical context in a manner they find informative, engaging, and accessible. It guides them in interpreting relevant and fascinating primary source materials. In addition, the questions for consideration make excellent writing and discussion prompts. I have implemented it with great success for several years, and each group of students responds well to the variety and issues he addresses.” — Lisa M. Bunkowski, Texas A&M University, Central Texas
“I enthusiastically recommend this collection for scholars and their students of all levels who want to explore the rich debate about the nature of poverty and poor relief in the early republic. Seth Rockman’s lively introductory essay offers a nuanced and balanced account of the plight of the poor and how diverse groups formulated responses to the problem of poverty. My students particularly appreciate how Rockman’s sources include the voices of working people and provide a glimpse inside of the almshouses they inhabited.” — Joshua R. Greenberg, Bridgewater State University
“Welfare Reform in the Early Republic is a superb teaching tool for undergraduates studying the operation of capitalism and the problem of poverty in American history. Rockman’s collection covers welfare reform from multiple angles: elite perceptions of poverty; private and public institutions providing poor relief; and structural explanations and cures for poverty. That Rockman is so attentive to variables of gender and race while highlighting the factor of class only adds to the utility of this impressive document collection.” — Konstantin Dierks, Indiana University
“Seth Rockman’s collection vividly traces how nineteenth-century Americans came to see poverty as a solvable problem rather than an unfortunate but enduring fact. By reading various and conflicting explanations and remedies proposed by reformers—white and black, female and male—students make connections to debates still with us today.” — Kathleen DuVal, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
“This carefully curated collection of documents lends itself marvelously to class discussion. The range of sources included (from poorhouse records to polemics by labor activists) invites students to engage with a diversity of perspectives. It is not only essential reading for anyone interested in the lives of those at the economic margins of the early American republic, but it also raises questions about class, poverty, social policy, and moral responsibility that continue to resonate today.” — Margot Minardi, Reed College
“As yet another generation of elected officials and moral reformers debate the issues of poverty, public welfare programs, and social inequality, Seth Rockman demonstrates how these very same issues bedeviled Americans in the early years of the republic. The book is expertly designed to combine primary sources (including political speeches, almshouse records, and religious tracts) with insightful historical context for any course on American social and economic history. I have had great success with this book in my own classroom, and recommend it highly.” — Jonathan Earle, University of Kansas