"Matthew Raffety carries a bright lantern from the dark hold of a deep-sea sailing ship to the federal court room and back again, casting fresh light on several of the biggest issues of American history."
— Marcus Rediker, author of The Amistad Rebellion: An Atlantic Odyssey of Slavery and Freedom
“In this insightful revisionist history Matthew Taylor Raffety explores how American sailors’ legal standing changed in significant but subtle ways between 1789 and 1861. Sailors spent more time in court than most Americans, but no other historian has revealed how activist judges pushed for protective labor legislation during the antebellum era, or how changing conceptions of mastery, service, citizenship and masculinity affected American admiralty law. Raffety presents Jack Tar in a new light, one not to be ignored.”
— John Arthos, author of Speaking Hermeneutically: Understanding in the Conduct of a Life
“The Republic Afloat is the first work to investigate in any depth the relationship between American mariners and the law. A subtle and rewarding book.”
— Danny Vickers, author of Young Men and the Sea: Yankee Seafarers in the Age of Sail
“In this insightful revisionist history Matthew Taylor Raffety explores how American sailors’ legal standing changed in significant but subtle ways between 1789 and 1861. Sailors spent more time in court than most Americans, but no other historian has revealed how activist judges pushed for protective labor legislation during the antebellum era, or how changing conceptions of mastery, service, citizenship and masculinity affected American admiralty law. Raffety presents Jack Tar in a new light, one not to be ignored.”
— W. Jeffrey Bolster, author of Black Jacks: African American Seamen in the Age of Sail and The Mortal Sea: Fishing the Atlantic in the Age of Sail
"Raffety has written an authoritative study that makes a noteworthy contribution to a previously understudied field. Extensive and detailed endnotes shed light on the diverse body of manuscripts and other primary source material consulted, illustrating the groundbreaking nature of his research."
— Law Library Journal
“The argument here is an important one. Raffety makes a compelling case for the emergence of a truly national identity developing among maritime labourers in the years prior to the Civil War. . . . This work provides a significant contribution to a growing body of literature on the role of seamen in the early republic. Countless sailors were quick to seize on the idea of citizenship and look to the government to advance their interests, and their story forms a crucial part of labour history in the early republic.”
— Northern Mariner