Rose Street Club

The Rose Street Club (sometimes the International Rose Street Club[1] and earlier the Local Rights Association for Rental and Sanitary Reform) was a radical far-left / anarchist organisation based in what is now Manette Street, London.[note 1] Originally centred around London's German community, and acting as a meeting point for new immigrants, it became one of the leading radical clubs of Victorian London in the late-nineteenth century. Although its roots went back to the 1840s, it was properly formed in 1877 by members of a German émigré workers' education group, which soon became frequented by London radicals, and within a few years had led to the formation of similar clubs, sometimes in support and sometimes in rivalry. The Rose Street Club provided a platform for the radical speakers and agitators of the day and produced its own paper, Freiheit—which was distributed over Europe, and especially Germany—and pamphlets for other groups and individuals. Although radical, the club initially focused as much on providing a social service to its members as on activism. With the arrival of the anarchist Johann Most in London in the early 1880s, and his increasing influence within the Club, it became increasingly aligned with anarchism.

Rose Street as seen in an original sketch of 1851

Background

The late nineteenth century saw the growth of political organisations in London, many of which formed themselves into clubs, and for a while, so Robert Hampson said, the city was the epicentre of European radicalism during the last decades of the nineteenth century. This was concomitant, so Hermia Oliva notes, with the closure of other European cities to individuals of a radical philosophy.[3]

Rose Street—now Manette Street, Soho—as seen in 2014. The black door on the right is at the original entrance to the Club at number 6 Rose Street.

Rose Street itself was a poor area of London in the mid-nineteenth century and was occupied by brothels and frequently infected by cholera. A contemporary reported that the locality was "thickly inhabited by a poor, and in some instances bad class of people".[4] This half-square mile area contained a higher concentration of foreign immigrants than any other part of London. According to Davide Turcato, "anarchist cosmopolitanism [in the area] was markedly international", yet blended into a local tradition of clublife.[5] The street also housed many artisan workers, which reflected the mixed demographic make-up of what Stan Shipley has termed "metropolitan clubland".[6][note 2] The Club was very near to the Eclectic Hall on Charing Cross Road, and was both the headquarters for a multitude of London political organisations[note 3] Sarah Wise wrote that the clubs "provided a popular platform for various other reform-minded and progressive groups and individuals".[9] Similar clubs were based in Fitzrovia, at the Autonomie Club, the Berner Street Club, and the Jubilee Street Club on Commercial Road.[10] The clubs were primarily hubs for organised social networks, but they performed other roles. For example, they linked immigrant politics with domestic English radicalism beneath the clubs' rooves.[11][note 4] The latter ranged from national organisations such as the O'Brienite Nationalists to local London groups, including the Stratford Dialectical and Radical Club.[13]

The origins of the Rose Street Club lay in the late-19th century European reaction to radical ideas. Particularly formative were the German Anti-Socialist Laws of 1878,[14] and, more broadly, the Paris Commune of 1871 and the collapse of the First International.[15] Anarchists, persecuted by authoritarian states in continental Europe, especially Imperial Germany, fled to Britain and many settled in London. However, Jonathan Moses has suggested that "their political ideals – the destruction of hierarchy, collective decision making, hostility to the state and capitalism, atheism and free love – did little to ingratiate them to Victorian England."[10] In order to overcome the political isolation of these immigrants, they formed clubs such as the Rose Street Club.[16]

Founded in 1877,[17] the Rose Street Club was a section of the CABV (German Communist Workers' Educational Union, previously known as the German Educational Association for Workers), which split into three connected groups in 1879. Apart from Rose Street—the First Section—there was one based in nearby Tottenham Street (Second Section), and another (the Third section) in Whitechapel.[14] The CABV then merged with the Blue Post group, and the resultant merge was to create the Rose Street Club.[18] Originally founded by members of the German diaspora[14]—for which reason it was called the German society by contemporary Londoners[19]—membership swelled during German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck's repression of social democracy with a wave of younger exiles from Germany.[14] In London, radical clubs such as in Rose Street were a predecessor to the plethora of Marxist clubs that developed later in the 1880s,[13] a period that Wise described as being between "the death of Chartism and the rise of the 'New Socialism'".[9] In keeping with the tendency of the time to propagandize the existence of political organisations by bestowing them with "high-sounding titles which the old guard employed in the hope of attracting public interest",[17] in the words of E. P. Thompson, the Cub was occasionally known as the "Local Rights Association for Rental and Sanitary Reform".[17]

Name

Originally based in Great Windmill Street, and called The Great Windmill Street Club as a result,[19] the club took its eventual name in July 1878 when it moved to number six Rose Street, in Soho, which was just off the Charing Cross Road[20] in Soho Square West.[21] This had previously been occupied by the St James and Soho Working Men's Club, although the building by now almost derelict.[22] They were much larger premises, however, and membership increased proportionately,[20] while at the same time the umbrella organisation were diminishing in popularity. Therefore, working-class leftists formed or joined local clubs.[13]

Origins, organisation and activities

Thousands were expatriates, hundreds of families broken up, hundreds imprisoned; [...] a great number sought refuge in London and our club in Rose Street presented at times the appearance of an arrival or departure platform at a station with luggage and cases of prohibited literature and bewildered emigrants going to and fro.

Frank Kitz,[23] Freiheit, 1897

The Rose Street Club was an umbrella term for a number of individual societies.[20] Although originally formed within London's German community, it expanded to include a variety of socialist, social-democratic, and radical groups.[14] It also expanded into other languages, and by the time it arrived in Rose Street the club had several distinct language sections: English, French, German, Polish and Russian, reflecting the main countries from which the refugees were arriving.[23] The club—described by Tom Goyens as a "storehouse of revolutionary ideas"[24]—became a model for other clubs for political exiles,[14] in its provision for both refugees and their political organisations,[9] and the most important of them.[25] The Rose Street Club was a firm backer of the radical, anarchist German-language newspaper Freiheit and its political position.[14] The paper was published on the Rose Street premises, which also housed the editorial and composition offices,[21] and was the heart of a complex smuggling operation for European-wide distribution.[24] This political allegiance position was shared by the Whitechapel club, but not by that in Tottenham Street,[14] which by 1880 had become an offshoot of the Rose Street Club for those members who leant towards Marxism rather than anarchism, which, under the leadership of Johann Most, Rose Street was realigning towards.[26]

Much of the membership of Britain's early Marxist organizations came from the popular radicals of the London clubs and the British associates of the European exiles...But at least in the early 1880s, their politics were either republican or vaguely anarchist forms of radicalism.

Mark Bevir,[27] The Making of British Socialism, 2011.

The Rose Street Club was not only a political organisation for gatherings of like-minded people, but a social one which provided succour for newly-arrived refugees.[10] Originally dedicated to political propaganda,[3] Frank Kitz later recalled how the Rose Street Club gave hospitality, food, shelter, and advice on what the near future might bring their newly-arrived compatriots.[23][28] According to Mark Bevir, the club was a mixture of "fun, education and politics".[13] Between 14 and 20 July 1881,[29] the Rose Street club was the setting for a series of conferences organised by a chapter of the International Working People's Association, the International Workingman's Association, although the IWA's activities were very little increased by these meetings.[30] Other speakers and organisations that visited the Club included brothers Charles and James Murray, who led a discussion of the poetry of Shelley, with reference to his views on the Irish,[31][13] and Henry Hyndman.[32][note 5] At one point, Hyndman expressed interest in the Rose Street Club forming the basis of an official Democratic Party,[33] and a meeting to discuss that proposal was held on 2 March 1881, which comprised a significant cross-section of radical thinkers of the age.[34] Although a resolution was passed which emphasised the importance of forming of a new, broader, party, the proposal came to nothing,[33] and no minutes or other records of how the discussions proceeded have survived.[35][note 6] Also in regular attendance at the Club were the members of the Manhood Suffrage League.[13] In 1882 the French Section of the Rose Street Club split off and moved to new premises.[37] In 1881 the Club held a joint mass-meeting with the Labour Emancipation League on Mile End Waste condemning the government's policy of providing financial assistance to encourage the unemployed to emigrate.[38][note 7] In July 1883, it was a signatory to the Manifesto of the World, issued by the Social Democratic club.[42][note 8] The Club also organised, and became the headquarters of, the defence committee[44]—called the English Revolutionary Society[45]—supporting Johann Most against his prosecution in April 1881,[44] led by radicals F. W. Soutter and Dr G. B. Clark.[46] The committee New-York Tribune described how Most had been "locked up promptly" at the time of his arrest", and had subsequently been charged with publishing what they called "a scandalous, malicious and immoral libel, justifying assassination and murder, inciting persons to conspire against the lives of the sovereigns and rulers of Europe".[47] Although the campaign failed and Most imprisoned, it has been identified as the catalyst for the swift spread of anarchist ideas in Britain, and the growth of organised anarchist groups.[44]

The Rose Street Club published John Sketchley's pamphlet Principles of Social Democracy in 1879.[42]

Notable members

Johann Most in an 1879 photograph, was responsible for taking the Rose Street Club from holding a traditionally radical political stance to an anarchist organisation

Little is known as to the precise composition of the Rose Street Club, and no membership lists are known to survive.[48] Its first president was John Lord[35] of the English Section.[13] Frank Kitz, the Section's secretary[49] and a London dyer, had been instrumental with Lord in forming the English Section in 1879,[50] and would go on to found the Homerton club.[27] Kitz, who was half-English and half-German, had been in London since 1873. Neither the Rose Street Club nor Kitz was an anarchist in 1877,[51] and probably would never have been if not for the arrival of Johann Most in London the following year.[44] The Club's gradual drift into anarchist politics has been identified, from that point on, as correlating with Kitz' own political shift in that direction during his tenure as part of the Club's leadership.[52] Described by Thompson as "the only Socialist in London", he was a "bluff, breezy chap, fond of his beer and jolly company".[53]

Johann Most was one of the radicals who fled Bismark's legislative program in the late 1870s. Soon after joining Rose Street, he began publishing the radical newspaper Freiheit[14] (English: Freedom).[23] The first issue was January 1879, and it saw immediate popularity; by December that year, it had a relatively large readership in Germany.[14] Most was an advocate of the propaganda of the deed, and in one of his most famous articles he approved of the assassination of Tsar Nicholas II[14] of Russia, for which he was prosecuted in the British courts.[14][note 9] Even though he was sentenced to 16-months' hard labour,[56][note 10] Freiheit survived, and continued a similar editorial line. The following year Irish Fenian radicals assassinated Lord Cavendish and Thomas Burke in Dublin. The paper stated that the assassination was "the unavoidable result of English tyranny in Ireland". Frank Kitz took over as editor[23] before production was transferred from Rose Street to Switzerland on a temporary basis.[14]

Along with Kitz,[57] another of the Club's co-founders had been Victor Dave,[17] and anarchists Errico Malatesta, an Italian,[58] and the Russian Peter Kropotkin were also members during their stays in London. Jack Williams regularly spoke at the Rose Street Club on matters ranging from Irish nationalism to British republicanism, popular at the time among lower-class Londoners.[59] With Williams there were other English militants based at the Club, including Joseph Lane and Edwin Dunn.[60] Lane was an "intensely earnest" agitator (according to his colleague Ambrose Barker, and a "tireless propagandist" according to Harry Lee) for the Rose Street Club from the late 1870s.[61] Dunn played a leading role in convening the meetings surrounding discussion of the creation of a new democratic party in early 1881.[60] In 1880, Louise Michel, a leading French anarchist who had fought with and lived through the Commune, stayed at the Rose Street Club during her sojourn in London following her exile in New Caledonia. The Club was instrumental in raising the funds required for her return to Paris following the 1880 amnesty for those who had taken part.[62]

Legacy

Although its membership was dominated by refugees,[63] the Rose Street Club has been described as overseeing a transition between the previous, older generation of political radicals—such as Chartists, republicans and O'Brienites—and the younger socialists and anarchists.[64][63] The street has been described by Nick Heath as having "probably more long-term associations with anarchism –and radicalism in general than any other street in Britain";[65] it was still actively connected to anarchism in the 1950s when the London Anarchist Group held open-air meetings in what by then was Manette Street.[66] Henry James' novel The Princess Casamassima is set against the backdrop of the anarchist politics of working-class London in the 1880s, and a scene is set at the Rose Street Club itself; although a twentieth-century commentator has "questioned whether to praise or to blame James for meddling in a subject he himself admits he knew next to nothing about".[67]

Notes

  1. In 1895 Rose Street was renamed after Dickens' fictional character, Dr Manette, who had a surgery in Soho in A Tale of Two Cities. Rose Street itself may originally have named after a tavern.[2]
  2. There was, conversely, also a House of Charity run by High Anglican nuns on Rose Street at the same time.[7]
  3. Some groups used the Rose Street Club as a method of avoiding self-destruction. In the late 1870s a club based in Rupert Street, who followed the political line of Ferdinand Lassalle, had been engaged in years of internecine political warfare with the Internationalists—followers of Marx and Engels—eventually resolved their differences by merging together into the General Communist Workers' Union and basing themselves at Rose Street.[8]
  4. It has been suggested that English public opinion—or at least the police—was firmly of the view that these émigré clubs were "hotbeds of international anarchist conspiracies", and according to di Paoli, at least one senior police officer considered London's political clubs to be the source of much of Europe's radical publications.[12]
  5. One of Hyndman's lectures, on 30 October 1881, was entitled "The Tyranny of Capital in America and England".[32]
  6. Not, at least, with the Rose Street Club. Although the meeting of the 2nd March was the "first step"[34] towards the formation of a broad umbrella Social Democratic Party, it was not until 1884 that the Social Democratic Federation came into existence on the outskirts of the Liberal Party.[36]
  7. Mile End Waste—open land either side of the Mile End Road—was a popular spot for popular protest, and has been described as "an East End equivalent of Hyde Park, hosting political debates and large-scale strike meetings",[39] by, for example, the East End Radicals in 1885,[40] and the striking matchwomen of 1888.[41]
  8. Apart from the Rose Street Club (which he calls the "German Club") the other signatories were, according to Harry Lee, the International Club in Poland Street, Stephen Mews in Rathbone Place, another German Club in Featherstone Street (off the City Road), some French Communards, the LEL and MSL, the Chelsea Labour Association, the Homerton Socialist Club, and the Stratford and Patriotic Radical Clubs.[43]
  9. The reason for the British government's hard line with political radicalism when it advocated armed struggle was the result of the then-recent armed Fenian campaign:[54] "Britain had been the target of attacks from the American branch of the Irish republican movement since 1870, and a new onslaught started just as Most's case began".[55]
  10. It was rumoured in London that Bismark had personally requested that Britain take action against Most. Although Home Secretary William Harcourt, denied the accusation in the House of Commons, the Rose Street Club offered a £300 reward for the letter Bismark was supposed to have written to the British government.[55]

References

  1. Bantman 2013, p. 31.
  2. Sheppard 1966, pp. 190–192.
  3. Hampson 2011, p. 91.
  4. Sheppard 1970, pp. 182–184.
  5. Turcato 2012, p. 133.
  6. Wise 2017, p. 291.
  7. White 2007, p. 425.
  8. Thompson 2011, p. 278.
  9. Wise 2017, p. 289.
  10. Moses 2016.
  11. di Paola 2013, p. 161.
  12. di Paola 2013, p. 162.
  13. Bevir 2011, p. 113.
  14. Laqua 2018.
  15. Thompson 2011, pp. 281–282.
  16. Marshall 2009, p. 489.
  17. Thompson 2011, p. 282.
  18. Samuels 1971, p. 25.
  19. Lattek 2006, pp. 243–244 n. 12.
  20. Lattek 2006, p. 227.
  21. Carlson 1972, p. 182.
  22. Solly 2011, p. 236.
  23. di Paola 2013, p. 160.
  24. Goyens 2017, p. 35.
  25. Bevir 2011, p. 47.
  26. Lincoln 1977, p. 80.
  27. Bevir 2011, p. 48.
  28. Smith 1909, p. 404.
  29. Panayi 1995, p. 196.
  30. di Paola 2013, p. 56.
  31. Lincoln 1977, p. 184.
  32. Bevir 2011, p. 114.
  33. Tsuzuki 1961, pp. 37–38.
  34. Crick 1994, p. 13.
  35. Lincoln 1977, p. 171.
  36. Laybourn 1997, p. 3.
  37. Bantman 2013, p. 35.
  38. Thompson 2011, p. 286.
  39. Port Cities 2004.
  40. German & Rees 2012, p. 135.
  41. Raw 2011, p. 187.
  42. Wrigley 2009, p. 80.
  43. Wrigley 2009, pp. 80–81.
  44. Thomas 2005, p. 5.
  45. Thomas 2005, p. 35.
  46. Lincoln 1977, p. 185.
  47. Foreign correspondent 1881, p. 1.
  48. Shipley 1971, p. 73.
  49. Shipley 1971, p. 62.
  50. Bevir 2011, pp. 47–48.
  51. Walter 1979, p. 211.
  52. Bantman 2013, p. 28.
  53. Thompson 2011, pp. 376–377.
  54. & Porter 1980, pp. 833–856.
  55. Bantman 2013, p. 135.
  56. Porter 1980, p. 834.
  57. McKercher 1987, p. 166.
  58. Gibbard 2004.
  59. Aldred 1940, p. 64.
  60. Lincoln 1977, p. 166.
  61. Lincoln 1977, p. 215.
  62. Beach 2005, p. 170.
  63. Bantman 2013, p. 27.
  64. Bantman 2013, pp. 27–28.
  65. Heath 2008.
  66. The University Libertarian 1955, p. 11.
  67. Stoehr 1970, p. 96.

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