A short biography of William Brand Parker (usually known as W.B. Parker), anarchist active in the Socialist League who later moved to the ILP and pro-war politics.
W. B. Parker was a stalwart of the Socialist League and an anarchist within it. He had been a founder of the Social Democratic Federation and appears to have joined the League in 1886. He took a regular part in SL propaganda work and was often a speaker and lecturer.
He was living in Dalston in 1885 and in Holborn in 1888. He took part in the benefit to help the Berner Street Club run by Jewish anarchists in January 1888. He again came to the help of the Club when it was attacked by the police on 16th March 1889 and three of its members arrested, speaking at the subsequent defence meeting. In 1888 he was an organiser of the Committee set up by the League to celebrate both the Chicago Anarchist Martyrs and Bloody Sunday 1887 when the police brutally attacked socialists rallying in Trafalgar Square.
. He was secretary of the Stoke Newington and Stamford Hill branch of the League and informed the Secretary of the League that he was prepared to take charge of the Kingsland Green speakers’ pitch if the League could assure him of a regular supply of lecturers.
In the same year W.B. Parker himself became Secretary of the League and appears to have carried out that role competently.
Alongside Kitz, Mowbray and Nicoll he addressed large meetings during the dockers’ strike of 1889. Again with Nicoll, Mowbray and John Turner he was involved in the “No rent! agitation of 1891. He was one of the speakers at the large Hyde Park protest meeting following the arrests of Mowbray and Nicoll in 1892. In the same year he was secretary of an anarchist group set up in Paddington.
W.B. Parker was one of the fairly considerable number of anarchists who defected to the Independent Labour Party in the 1890s in what can be described as a “loss of nerve” within the ranks of the anarchist movement. In 1906 he was chairman of Islington Trades Council.
In 1912 he still felt enough loyalty to his former comrades to speak at the large meeting held in Trafalgar Square to protest the threatened deportation of Malatesta.
He was vice-chair of the Islington Trades and Labour Party at the beginning of the First World War and indeed he adopted a pro-war stance and he was one of the ILP notables who addressed mass meetings to recruit for the armed forces. He was a Labour Poor Law Guardian for a considerable period of time. He died in the 1930s. Max Nettlau in a letter to Fred Charles in 1930 perhaps rather unkindly describes him as a “very active and plausible comrade, but..not of an elevated character at all and of no interest to history” but may have had his defection to the ILP in mind.
Nick Heath
Sources:
Oliver, H. (1983)The international anarchist movement in late Victorian London. Croom Helm.
Quail, J. (1978) The slow burning fuse. Paladin.
Weller, K (1985) Don't be a soldier! The radical anti-war movement in North London 1914-1918.
Comments
Thanks for this. I don't
Thanks for this. I don't suppose anyone knows if he contributed to the 'Labour Leader' using the initials 'W. B.'?
KirstAnneHarris wrote: Thanks
KirstAnneHarris
I may be wrong but W.B Hodgson used to write for the "labour Leader" maybe he's the W.B you're thinking of.
Thanks for replying - much
Thanks for replying - much appreciated. I shall check that out.
Hello, I have an English
Hello,
I have an English grandfather named William Brand Parker. The time period matches with my grandfather. I have no other information about him. I am wondering if this is my maternal grandfather. Would anyone have some other information?
Sorry, that's great
Sorry, that's great grandfather, not grandfather.
Jacki, I guess you'd have to
Jacki, I guess you'd have to check public records, genealogy sites, etc. See if you can find evidence of him living in Dalston and Holborn in those periods. Your possible granddad gets a brief mention HERE as well. Other than that, send a private message to Battlescarred, see what else he knows.
Thank you. I'll use
Thank you. I'll use ancestry.com to further my search. All the best!
Jacki wrote: Thank you. I'll
Jacki
Best of luck and please let us know if you do find out he is the same person, especially if it means you have any more information about him or a photo or something