Thomas Skidmore (reformer)
Thomas Skidmore (August 13, 1790 – August 7, 1832) was an American politician and political philosopher. He is remembered as the co-founder and leader of the Working Men's Party in New York when it first emerged in the fall of 1829. He was forced out of the organization shortly after its initial electoral campaign by moderate party leaders on the grounds of "excessive radicalism and unbending personality". Skidmore went on to establish another short-lived political organization in 1830, known as the Agrarian Party.
Skidmore was the author of three books, including the 1829 political treatise written against the ideas of Thomas Jefferson, The Rights of Man to Property! which depicted a two-class society consisting of a propertied ruling class and a propertyless majority inevitably subjected to a sort of economic slavery which made true liberty impossible. It advocated a constitutional convention to abolish debt, end the right of inheritance, and bring about an equal distribution of productive and personal property of the nation among its adult citizens.