This is the first study to systematically explore similarities differences and connections between the histories of American planters and Irish landlords. The book focuses primarily on the comparative and transnational investigation of an antebellum Mississippi planter named John A. Quitman (17991858) and a nineteenth-century Irish landlord named Robert Dillon Lord Clonbrock (180793) examining their economic behaviors ideologies labor relations and political histories. Locating Quitman and Clonbrock firmly within their wider local national and international contexts American Planters and Irish Landlords in Comparative and Transnational Perspective argues that the two men were representative of specific but comparable manifestations of agrarian modernity paternalism and conservatism that became common among the landed elites who dominated economy society and politics in the antebellum American South and in nineteenth-century Ireland. It also demonstrates that American planters and Irish landlords were connected by myriad direct and indirect transnational links between their societies including transatlantic intellectual cultures mutual participation in global capitalism and the mass migration of people from Ireland to the United States that occurred during the nineteenth century.