Bielskis was born on 1 May 1870 in Seimeniškiai [lt] near Žaiginys in central Lithuania. He was the youngest of 15 children.[1] The family owned no land but claimed descent from an old medieval noble family.[2] His elder brother Jonas Bielskis [lt] (1855–1904) was an engineer and an activist. He participated in the smuggling of the banned Lithuanian press and maintained contacts with leftist activists, including the Zubov family.[3] He had a formative influence on Vaclovas Bielskis.[2]
After graduation, he was not allowed to return to Lithuania due to Russification policies. He worked as an engineer at a steel factory in Dnipro (then known as Yekaterinoslav), Ukraine.[2]
In independent Lithuania, Bielskis worked for the Lithuanian railroad in 1919–1923 and as the director of the Gubernija brewery in 1923–1936. In addition, in 1928–1932, he headed the Šiauliai section of the National Health Insurance Fund.[7] As a member of the Social Democratic Party of Lithuania, he was elected to the Šiauliai City Council in 1920, 1923, and 1925–1931 and for a time was its deputy chairman.[8] As a councilmember, he worked on organizing city's water and sewer service.[7]
He was one of the co-founders of Kultūra Society in 1927 and for a time was its chairman.[7] It was an educational society that organized lectures, published books and journal Kultūra [lt] (Culture), established a folk high school named after Povilas Višinskis (Bielskis was one of its lecturers). He was also active member of the Freethinkers' Society of Ethical Culture.[7]
Bielskis died in Warsaw on 16 September 1936. Due to the bitter dispute over Vilnius Region with the Second Polish Republic, Bielskis' body had to be transported via Latvia to Lithuania.[9] He was buried at the freethinkers' cemetery in Ginkūnai (he financially supported the cemetery's establishment).[7]
Personal life
Around 1896, in Saint Petersburg, Bielskis married Vera Ushakova (1877–1941), a Russian noble from Tver region who claimed descent from General Peter Ivelich.[2] They met through Vincas Čepinskis [lt] who tutored his future wife Maria, a friend of Vera and a daughter of Valentin Korsh [ru]. The two couples remained close friends later in life.[2]
^ abZinkus, Jonas; et al., eds. (1985–1988). "Bielskis, Vaclovas". Tarybų Lietuvos enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Vol. I. Vilnius: Vyriausioji enciklopedijų redakcija. p. 248. OCLC20017802.