Thomas Keell

Thomas Henry Keell (24 September 1866 – 26 June 1938) was an Englishman compositor who edited the anarchist periodical Freedom.[1][2] He attended the International Anarchist Congress of Amsterdam in 1907, where he was hailed by Emma Goldman as "one of our most devoted workers on the London Freedom".[3] Keell also contributed to Voice of Labour for many years, and was an outspoken opponent of the First World War.[4] He was arrested along with companion Lilian Wolfe during a 1916 raid of Freedom offices; the pair were imprisoned and later lived together in Whiteway Colony in Gloucestershire from the 1920s until Keell's death in 1938.[4]

See also

Footnotes

  1. Becker 1986, p. 20
  2. Graur 1997, p. 119
  3. Goldman 1970, p. 403
  4. 4.0 4.1 Avrich 2006, p. 512

References