'The cruelties of the Old South’s criminal justice system are laid bare in this account of the Charleston Workhouse Rebellion of 1849. Strickland resurrects slave rebel Nicholas Kelly and embeds his remarkable yet forgotten uprising within the contexts of South Carolina’s largest urban area, the American South, and the broader Atlantic world.'
Jeff Forret - author of Williams' Gang: A Notorious Slave Trader and His Cargo of Black Convicts
'All for Liberty skilfully uncovers a forgotten slave rebellion in Charleston in the summer of 1849. Despite official attempts to downplay the uprising in the Charleston workhouse, sufficient evidence survives to prove that this event will lay to rest any idea that the enslaved were largely pacified between 1831 and 1861.'
Tim Lockley - University of Warwick
'Jeff Strickland’s prodigious research in All for Liberty locates one of the nation’s largest yet underappreciated slave insurrections, in Charleston’s infamous Work House. His careful excavation of events persuasively links the tortured lives confined there, the impact of the Atlantic Revolutions upon them and South Carolina’s response to slave agency: a drive to secession.'
Bernard E. Powers, Jr - Director of the Center for the Study of Slavery in Charleston, College of Charleston
'… brings the horrors and history of the workhouse front and center.'
Harlan Greene
Source: The Post and Courier
‘Strickland's accessible prose, narrative style, and comprehensive contextualization mix well with his fascinating and enlightening analyses of the workhouse and urban enslavement.’
William D. Jones
Source: Journal of Southern History
‘Strickland brings much-needed attention to this forgotten moment in the history of slavery. What is most impressive is that in chronicling the Charleston workhouse rebellion, Strickland does not overstate its importance. He acknowledges that Kelly’s rebellion was opportunistic and lacked the detailed planning seen in other famous rebellions. The Charleston workhouse rebellion was not a rallying cry against slavery, but it did influence local and state politics; it is, therefore, worthy of the attention it receives in All for Liberty.’
Sarah Whitwell
Source: The Journal of the Civil War Era