“In Ties That Bound, Schwartz provides a necessary corrective to the popular and scholarly literature on the First Ladies, accounts that tend to focus on their roles as fashionable hostesses. In this fascinating study, Schwartz shows how deeply slavery was embedded in the Founders’ households and explores in exquisite detail the fraught relationships between these Patriot mistresses and the men and women and adults and children whose labor they commanded. A lively and insightful book that complements—and at times contradicts—works glorifying the Founding Fathers and their wives and (white) daughters.”
— Jacqueline Jones, author of A Dreadful Deceit: The Myth of Race from the Colonial Era to Obama's America
“Absorbing. . . . The story of the Founders and slavery is one of the most vexed in American history, analyzed and debated generation after generation. Ties That Bound doesn't unravel the moral or sociological underpinnings and consequences of those tangled connections, but it does contribute a fresh and valuable dimension to that long argument with its fine-grained portraits of domestic life in the South in the early republic.”
— New York Review of Books
“An inventive, integrated portrait of black and white. . . . Her fierce research is distilled into engaging prose. . . . Secrets and lies ensnared these braided lives, and Ties That Bound offers vivid insight into these entangled stories.”
— Times Higher Education
“Both general readers and scholars will benefit by having their knowledge rather uncomfortably enhanced by this substantive study. Highly recommended.”
— Choice
“Ties That Bound provides enlightening depictions of both the savvy that aristocratic women utilized to achieve as much power as their husbands did (even though it was a different kind of power), as well as the disheartening distractions from self-empowerment that these women had to negotiate. . .Schwartz’s expertise clearly shines when she is analyzing the various ways that both black female slaves and white female aristocrats negotiated the man’s world of early nineteenth-century America. . . .A fine and worthy contribution to intersectional studies.”
— H-Net
“Ties That Bound's most important contribution is refocusing our attention on First Ladies as slaveholders and revealing how slaveholding influenced their roles. . . .This book deserves a wide readership.”
— Journal of Southern History
"Fascinating. . . . A thought-provoking explication of the thorny personal relationships between slaveholding and enslaved women, and Schwartz succeeds in depicting these relationships 'as a lived experience'."
— Virginia Magazine
"Many books have been written about America’s First Ladies over the last several decades, but for the most part they have addressed only tangentially the issue of slavery. In Ties that Bound: Founding First Ladies and Slaves, historian Marie Jenkins Schwartz
corrects that significant omission. . . . Schwartz is a fluid writer who provides rich details about the daily lives of this
group of Founding First Ladies and the enslaved people who made their privileged lifestyles possible and with whom they interacted on a daily basis. . . . The book is a solid synthesis that enlarges our understanding of gender, class, race, and the institution of slavery in the early republic."
— North Carolina Historical Review