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The Rose Street Club (sometimes the International Rose Street Club and earlier the Local Rights Association for Rental and Sanitary Reform) was a far-left, anarchist organisation based in what is now Manette Street, London. 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

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  • The Rose Street Club (sometimes the International Rose Street Club and earlier the Local Rights Association for Rental and Sanitary Reform) was a far-left, anarchist organisation based in what is now Manette Street, London. 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. (en)
dbo:dissolutionYear
  • 1882-01-01 (xsd:gYear)
dbo:formationYear
  • 1877-01-01 (xsd:gYear)
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  • left (en)
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  • #FFFFF0 (en)
dbp:caption
  • Rose Street as seen in an original sketch of 1851 (en)
dbp:colorcode
  • black (en)
dbp:country
  • United Kingdom (en)
dbp:headquarters
dbp:ideology
dbp:leader
dbp:logo
  • Rose Street, Soho, London, 1851.jpg (en)
dbp:logoAlt
  • Rose Street as seen in an original sketch of 1851 (en)
dbp:name
  • Rose Street Club (en)
dbp:newspaper
  • Freiheit (en)
dbp:position
dbp:president
dbp:quote
  • 1880.0
  • 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. (en)
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  • left (en)
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dbp:source
  • 1897 (xsd:integer)
  • —Mark Bevir, The Making of British Socialism, 2011. (en)
  • —Frank Kitz, (en)
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  • 25 (xsd:integer)
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  • The Rose Street Club (sometimes the International Rose Street Club and earlier the Local Rights Association for Rental and Sanitary Reform) was a far-left, anarchist organisation based in what is now Manette Street, London. 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 (en)
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  • Rose Street Club (en)
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  • Rose Street Club (en)
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