Henri van Kol

Henri van Kol
Henri van Kol (1918) by Albert Hahn
Born
Hendrikus Hubertus van Kol

(1852-05-23)23 May 1852
Eindhoven, Netherlands
Died22 August 1925(1925-08-22) (aged 73)
Aywaille, Belgium
Occupation(s)Member of parliament, engineer, coffee plantation investor
Spouse
(m. 1883; sep. 1919)
RelativesDrs. P (Heinz Hermann Polzer, grandson)

Henri van Kol, also known as Henri Hubert van Kol (23 May 1852 — 22 August 1925), was a Dutch politician, engineer, and part owner of a coffee plantation in the East Indies. In the first half of the 1870s, he studied hydraulic engineering at Polytechnic School in Delft, during which he was introduced and became increasingly interested in socialism that supported colonialism. Van Kol went to Indonesia where he worked as an engineer, met the woman who became his wife, Nellie van Kol, and they had their children.

He wrote under his own name, and a pseudonym, about his socialistic viewpoints. He became the first socialist in the East Indies. In 1876, he joined the First International. Van Kol was a member of the Social Democratic League (Sociaal Democratische Bond (SDB)), a Dutch socialist political party, and broke away from the party to co-found the Social Democratic Workers' Party in 1894. From 1897 to 1909, van Kol was elected to the States General of the Netherlands (parliament).