Freedom Press Archive
About this Archive
Administrative/biographical history
Anarchist periodical 'Freedom' was started in 1886 by a group of friends around Peter Kropotkin after their separation from the English Anarchist Circle and The Anarchist (edited by Henry Seymour). In addition to Freedom, the group eventually set up the Freedom Press, the main publisher of anarchist literature in England. The first editors of Freedom were Charlotte M. Wilson 1886-1895, Alfred Marsh 1895-1912 and Thomas H. Keell 1912-1932. Among the contributors to the periodical were George Bernard Shaw, Max Nettlau and Kropotkin. A rival Freedom was published by opponents of T. Keell, including John Turner and Oscar Swede 1930-1936; ceased publication in favour of Spain and the World 1936-1938, edited by Vernon Richards, and changed its name to Revolt in 1939; this was continued as War Commentary, renamed Freedom in 1945, the publication of which continues still today.
Scope and content
- Miscellaneous handbills, newsletters, typescripts and other ephermera, concerning international movements, personalities and campaigns connected with anarchism, socialism, the peace movement and the history of anarchism, collected by bookshop and publishers Freedom Press, 1910-1989.
Quantity
1 box
See the Printed Collections pages for details of the Freedom Press Library.