A short biography of Jewish anarchist Woolf, aka William, Wess, active in the Socialist League in East London.
“He was the most modest of men” - Rudolf Rocker
Woolf Wess was born to a Jewish family in Vilkomar (or Ukmerge) near Kovno in Lithuania in 1861.
He was the son of a Hasidic master baker and at age of 12 was apprenticed to a shoemaker.
Early in his career, he worked as a factory machinist in Dvinsk and emigrated to England at the age of twenty in 1881, smuggled out to avoid military service. He learnt English and got a good knowledge of English conditions.
In 1885 the International Workingmen's Educational Club was founded in Berner Street in the East End of London. Wess was the Club's secretary and he was the first witness called at the inquest of Elizabeth Stride, an alleged victim of Jack the Ripper, in October 1888, whose body was found in the early hours of the morning in the yard next to the Club.
He was active in the Hackney branch of the Socialist League alongside Joe Lane and George Cores and he was a liaison with the Jewish movement through the Berner Street Club from March 1885 onwards. He acted as secretary of the strike committee during the strike of East London tailors in 1889, alongside Charles Mowbray and John Turner.
In 1891 with Yanovsky he went on a speaking tour of London and further afield. He spoke at South Place Institute on November 11th alongside Kropotkin, Louise Michel, Malatesta and Yanovsky.
Wess was involved from 1889 in typesetting of Freedom newspaper. He was manager of the Freedom office from 1891. When the landlord seized the assets of the premises of the New Fellowship Press where Freedom was housed, Weess transported type and materials to the house of Hermann Stenzleit, an old member of the Rose Street Communist Club. In 1893 Wess moved with Freedom to Camden Town. Freedom was housed in a very damp basement, and this effected Wess's health.This led to ptypesetting and printing being moved elsewhere.
He was a leading light in the setting up of a Jewish cooperative bakery in Brushfield St, Spitalfields. He became editor of Arbeiter Fraint (Workers Friend) in 1895 after Yanovsky left for the States in January 1894.
He worked hard, in a conscientious fashion, on the paper. He held the post for a year in Romford St, E1 before offering the job to the anarchist Frumkin. During his term he had to write practically all the copy and compose the type as well.
Wess was heavily involved in the labour movement and assisted in the foundation of many Jewish trade unions. He was a member and typesetter/office manager for the Freedom group. He wrote the appeal in July 1892 first published in Freedom which called for fair play for anarchist union delegates at the Zurich socialist congress. He was a friend of Kropotkin.
During the 1890s Wess founded and was secretary of the Federation of East London Workers' Unions; he was also secretary successively of the International Tailors, Machinists and Pressers' Trade Union, and the United Ladies and Mantle Makers' Association.
Wess withdrew from his activities in the Jewish trade union movement at the beginning of the twentieth century and took up a job as a book-keeper in a tobacco factory. In 1904 he shared a house in Leyton for 18 months with Tom Keell, the compositor and manager of Freedom and his wife Lillian. It all ended when Lillian and William ran off together. In February 1906 they were key figures in setting up the Arbeiter Fraint club in Jubliee street, Whitechapel ( Lillian tried to set up an Anarchist Sunday School around this time. Later, as Lillian Evelyn, she ran a school modelled on the principles of Francisco Ferrer, the Ferrer School in Charlotte Street, London).
In June 1906 alongside Rudolf Rocker he served on the strike committee of tailors. He was involved in the reconstitution of the London Freedom Group in 1928-9 with John Turner and others. It closed down in 1931.
The group was revived with Wess’s involvement in the late 30s. According to Albert Meltzer Wess joined the Labour Party in the 30s even though he worked with Emma Goldman in Spanish solidarity work in 1936. Goldman appears not to have known about this.
William Wess died in May 1946 at the age of 84.














