The Unfinished Business of 1776: Why the American Revolution Never Ended
By (Author) Thomas Richards
The New Press
The New Press
13th May 2026
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
History of the Americas
Hardback
368
Width 152mm, Height 228mm, Spine 23mm
A clarion call for taking back the American Revolution from the far right, published for the 250thanniversary of the Declaration of Independence
Who gets to claim the legacy of the American Revolution and the mantle of patriotism that goes along with it In a sharp, irreverent, deeply informed account of the nation's founding moment and its enduring legacies, historian Thomas Richards Jr. invites us to see the Revolution not just as a one-time fight for political freedom from Britain but as an ongoing struggle for equality, justice, and social and political independence for all Americans.
A riveting work of narrative history, The Unfinished Business of 1776 shows that the Revolutionary struggle did not end in 1787, when the Constitution was ratified: across ten dramatic chapters, Richards introduces readers to the vividly drawn characters who kept the Revolution alive for the next century and beyond, including the women's rights advocate Judith Sargent Murray, the enslaved rebel Gabriel, the protosocialist Solomon Sharpe, and the utopian dreamer Joseph Smith-each pushing for freedoms that extended well beyond the traditional narrative of the Revolution, and each revealing how the unfinished work of 1776 fueled demands for economic, social, and legal equality that lasted well beyond the Revolution itself.
A myth-busting book about the history we think we know, The Unfinished Business of 1776 is the perfect antidote to jingoistic celebrations of America-offering an inclusive vision of our common past.
Praise for The Unfinished Business of 1776:
Thomas Richards understands that Americans have never stopped battling over the meaning and substance of the American Revolution. Telling the story through a diverse cast of individualswho encompass an expansive geography and who illustrate lasting revolutionary ideas and issuesis a terrific idea and it hasnt been done in anything like this way.
David Waldstreicher, author of Slaverys Constitution and The Odyssey of Phillis Wheatley
Thomas Richards Jr. teaches history at Springside Chestnut Hill Academy in Philadelphia and holds a PhD in History from Temple University. The author of Breakaway Americas: The Unmanifest Future of the Jacksonian United States, he lives in Gulph Mills, Pennsylvania, where George Washington once camped.