
The son of renowned sociologists Robert Staughton Lynd and Helen Lynd, Staughton Lynd grew up in New York City. He earned a BA from Harvard, an MA and PhD in history from Columbia. He taught at Spelman College in Georgia (where he was acquainted with Howard Zinn) and Yale University. In 1964, Lynd served as director of Freedom Schools in the Mississippi Summer Project. An opponent of the Vietnam War, Lynd chaired the first march against the war in Washington DC in 1965 and, along with Tom Hayden and Herbert Aptheker, went on a controversial trip to Hanoi in December 1965 that cost him his position at Yale. In the late 1960s Lynd moved to Chicago, where he was involved in community organizing. An oral history project of the working class undertaken with his wife inspired Lynd to earn a JD from the University of Chicago in 1976. After graduating the Lynds moved to Ohio, where Staughton worked as an attorney and activist.
Series
Books

Accompanying
Pathways to Social Change
2012

From Here to There
The Staughton Lynd Reader
2010

Intellectual Origins of American Radicalism
1968

Living Inside Our Hope
1997

Nonviolence in America
A Documentary History
1966

Doing History from the Bottom Up
On E.P. Thompson, Howard Zinn, and Rebuilding the Labor Movement from Below
2014

Lucasville
The Untold Story of a Prison Uprising
2004

We Are All Leaders
1996

Labor Law for the Rank & Filer
Building Solidarity While Staying Clear of the Law
2008

Solidarity Unionism
Rebuilding the Labor Movement from Below
1992

Wobblies and Zapatistas
Conversations on Anarchism, Marxism and Radical History
2008