Elise Eugenie Mathilde Wolff Van Sandau (died in 1926, aged 83)
was a British suffragette. She was imprisoned three times, for smashing windows and went on hunger strike. She was awarded the
Women's Social and Political Union Hunger Strike Medal 'for Valour'. She was also a musician and a founder of London's women's chess club and an active vegetarian. Research by the British Library suggests that she used different spellings of her name, including Elsie when arrested as a suffragette.
Life and suffrage activism
Elise Eugenie Mathilde Wolff was born in Dresden, Germany, in 1843.
She was the granddaughter of Dr. E. Schwabe, private chaplain to the Duchess of Kent.
She was a pianist, a music teacher and became a founder member of the London Ladies Chess Club,
and became a leader in vegetarian groups.
Research by the British Library suggests that she used different spellings of her name, including Elsie when arrested as a suffragette.

Wolff Van Sandau joined the militant
Women's Social and Political Union protesting on women's right to vote. She was among the three hundred women brutally attacked by police and men in the crowd for about six hours, on what is known as '
Black Friday' on 18 November 1910, when the women's deputation approached the
House of Commons but were prevented from entering. Over 100 women were arrested, including Miss Wolff de Sandau, as noted in the following day's ''Times'' newspaper but all women were eventually released, without charge.
Wolff Van Sandau joined two hundred women, organised on 1st and 4 March 1912, to carry out what was a second wave of window smashing protests in
Covent Garden
Covent Garden is a district in London, on the eastern fringes of the West End, between St Martin's Lane and Drury Lane. It is associated with the former fruit-and-vegetable market in the central square, now a popular shopping and tourist si ...
, London.
This took place at the same time as the
Parliament was debating a
Conciliation Bill
Conciliation bills were proposed legislation which would extend the right of women to vote in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland to just over a million wealthy, property-owning women. After the January 1910 election, an all-party Con ...
(for some women to get the right to vote, which was not passed). In the same month, she was arrested with
Katie Mills
Katie is an English feminine name. It is a form Katherine, Kate, Caitlin, Kathleen, Katey and their related forms. It is frequently used on its own.
People Sports
*Katie Boulter (born 1996), British tennis player
*Katie Clark (born 1994), Brit ...
for smashing the windows of the Howick Place Post Office: postal services were seen by suffragettes as a 'symbol of oppressive male government'.
Hunger strike

Wolff Van Sandau was sent to prison and immediately went on
hunger strike.
Suffragettes on hunger strike were frequently force-fed and objected to this 'treatment' as well as being treated as criminals not as 'political' prisoners. A roll-call of those being released, excluding
Patricia Woodlock
Patricia Woodlock (born Mary Winifred Woodlock; 25 October 1873 – after 1930) was a British artist and suffragette who was imprisoned seven times, including serving the longest suffragette prison sentence in 1908 (solitary confinement for thr ...
, who got a longer sentence was created (probably for the WSPU welcome event). In recognition of her suffering in prison, the WSPU awarded her a
Hunger Strike Medal
The Hunger Strike Medal was a silver medal awarded between August 1909 and 1914 to suffragette prisoners by the leadership of the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU). During their imprisonment, they went on hunger strike while serving th ...
''
'for Valour designed by
Christabel Pankhurst
Dame Christabel Harriette Pankhurst, (; 22 September 1880 – 13 February 1958) was a British suffragette born in Manchester
Manchester () is a city in Greater Manchester, England. It had a population of 552,000 in 2021. It is bord ...
, with the ribbon in the colours of the women's suffrage movement – green, white and purple, representing 'hope, purity and dignity' – and a bar dated 4 March 1912.
The presentation box was inscribed
ELSIE WOLFF VAN SANDAU – BY THE WOMEN'S SOCIAL & POLITICAL UNION IN RECOGNITION OF A GALLANT ACTION, WHEREBY THROUGH ENDURANCE TO THE LAST EXTREMITY OF HUNGER AND HARDSHIP, A GREAT PRINCIPLE OF POLITICAL JUSTICE WAS VINDICATED.
The
National Archive record lists suffragette prisoners who were officially pardoned when the WSPU discontinued militancy at the start of
World War One. Elsie and Mathilde Wolff Van Sandau are listed separately with a total of three arrests.
First women's chess club
In 1895, Wolff Van Sandau had set up one of the first women's
chess club
A chess club is a club formed for the purpose of playing the board game of chess. Chess clubs often provide for both informal and tournament games and sometimes offer league play. Traditionally clubs host over the board, face to face chess more t ...
s, being elected as the first vice-president of the London Ladies' Chess Club, which initially had to compete against men's clubs. She hosted chess committee meetings at her home 49 Elgin Crescent. She also advertised her music teaching and performances and availability for a more formal school engagement in the chess club magazine.
Women leading in vegetarian societies
In 1897, Wolff Van Sandau, a confirmed
vegetarian, was among those who performed to an audience of 700, at the 4th International Vegetarian Congress of the
International Vegetarian Union in London.
Later in her life, she was chosen to be the honorary secretary of
Brighton and Hove Vegetarian Society.
In 1926, Wolff Van Sandau was lodging in Putney. She died in a local nursing home on 29 August 1926 aged 83 and was buried in
Putney Vale
Putney () is a district of southwest London, England, in the London Borough of Wandsworth, southwest of Charing Cross. The area is identified in the London Plan as one of 35 major centres in Greater London.
History
Putney is an ancient paris ...
Cemetery as Matilda Wolff.
Hunger Strike Medal auctioned
Wolff Van Sandau's Hunger Strike medal came to light in a drawer
in a home in East Sheen, London a hundred years later, and it was auctioned in Derbyshire in June 2019.
It was sold privately for £12,500 and the valuer at Hansons Auctioneers,
Helen Smith, said of her action:
Her decision to go on hunger strike shows she was willing to die for her cause. Would today’s generation of women have been so selfless? We’re very proud to sell this medal, which is worthy of a museum or an important suffragette collection.
The auctioneer Isabel Murtough remarked:
I hope this find reminds people of the sacrifices Miss Wolff Van Sandau and her fellow suffragettes made a century ago to help women gain rights many of us now take for granted.
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Wolff Van Sandau, Mathilde
1895 in chess
English vegetarianism activists
English chess players
English female chess players
English suffragettes
Hunger Strike Medal recipients
Hunger strikers
Women's Social and Political Union