Nikki M. Taylor's America's First Black Socialist: The Radical Life of Peter H. Clark is a fascinating study of an important figure in nineteenth-century African American history. [...] In the final analysis, Taylor's biography of Peter H. Clark is recommended reading for any who wish to understand nineteenth-century African American politics. Clark was an enigmatic figure, a radical black thinker whose leadership and outspoken oratory greatly commended him to his community. Yet, he was also a leader whose flaws, political missteps, and shifts greatly diminished his earlier reputation. As Taylor's work clearly shows, the life of Peter H. Clark deserves more scholarly attention.
Nikki Taylor's America's First Black Socialist: The Radical Life of Peter H. Clark rescues from obscurity the Cincinnati African American activist and politician who until now was known only to a handful of specialists in that city's history or in African American or labor history.
Nikki M. Taylor has [...] piec[ed] together a wonderful political biography of Clark. In the process, she has produced an important book that reveals much about politics on the local and national level in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and African Americans' response to the changing social and political landscape of the period. With America's First Black Socialist , Taylor makes several important contributions to African American history, not least of which is the recovery of Peter H. Clark's life for a new generation of scholars. Through Clark she also reveals the vibrancy and complexity of African American social and political thought in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. With clarity she demonstrates how Clark's intellectual thought was influenced by a vast variety of traditions, from both within and outside the black community
Journal of the Civil War Era
This work adds a valuable insight into Ohio political history as well as African American history and is worth reading, particularly by students of those fields.
In the end, Nikki Taylor paints not only a picture of Peter Clark, the race man, radical abolitionist, educator, and socialist, but also one of the complexities of black leadership and politics between 1850 and 1885. Her portrayal of the extraordinary life and role of Clark shows that, contrary to the historical record, the Gilded Age was not a barren period for black thought and leadership until the rise of Booker T. Washington, but quite the opposite.
Journal of American Ethnic History
Taylor does an excellent job of reconstructing and analyzing Clark's life. Taylor reminds us that even admirable, charismatic individuals can make poor decisions that can cause all their previous accomplishments to be overlooked and forgotten.
Peter Clark is a name long known to a minority of specialists, but despite his record of intellectual and political achievement, his career has been overlooked even by many experts in nineteenth century studies. Professor Taylor has performed a service to the profession with her brilliant restoration of this important figure to his deserved prominence.
Taylor's lucid and informative biography covers Peter H. Clark's lengthy life, her exploration of his socialist leanings provides an important dimension to black thought. Students of American and African American organizational life and activism will find this book immensely useful.
Journal of American History
In her new book examining the life of Peter Humphries Clark (1829-1925), Taylor continues to shine as a social historian as she reveals other historical moments when African Americans demonstrated their ability to make their own choices, despite laws that attempted to subjugate them. [...] There are many reasons to like this book. It is written in an accessible style and is extremely informative. Taylor reminds us of an entrepreneurial spirit in the African American community in the 19th century. [...] Taylor demonstrates a mastery of the biographical style. Her work is essential for anyone who wishes to understand African American life and civil rights activism in 19th-century Ohio.
Journal of African American History
Taylor excellently traces the various ideological threads that influenced and were influenced by Peter H. Clark throughout his long life, thus showing why he matters in our conception of nineteenth-century black political and intellectual history. [...] [T]his is a fine study of an inappropriately forgotten black leader, useful to any reader who wants to better understand nineteenth-century black Midwestern history; black intellectual, educational, and political history; and the connections between African Americans and radical white thinkers.
"Clark's various ideological shifts in nineteenth century Ohio (and nationally) made him an unusual figure that has not been fully examined in depth. This extended biography corrects this omission."—John Hardin, Professor of History at Western Kentucky University and author of Fifty Years of Segregation: Black Higher Education in Kentucky 1904-1954