Despite the
appearance of Prava the next morning
with a blank sheet for a front page, the manifestation of the July Days
continues, now bearing every sign of Bolshevik guidance and organization. In
fact, that is the reason for the problem with Pravda: an article composed the previous afternoon calling for
restraint had to be withdrawn when the Bolsheviks, confronted with a fait
accompli, decided to lead the demonstrations instead. A separate leaflet
announced the latter.
The second day of
the manifestation belonged more to the workers than the soldiers. Since the
February Revolution, communications between the factory committees, the
workers’ districts, and the militant units in the garrison had improved. This
was in evidence in the run-up to the day’s march. At the direction of the
Bolshevik Military Organization, armored cars were dispatched to cover the
bridges and principal street crossings. The Machine Gun regiment still manned
the Peter and Paul fortress in the river.
The demonstrators
began to assemble at about 11:00 a.m., workers at the head of the march.
Factories struck and held meetings instead of working. Those whose workers had
held back on the first day, even if their factory committees were dominated by
Mensheviks and Social Revolutionaries, joined the march. Trotsky says the
second day of the manifestation was “more impressive and organized” under “the
guiding hand of the party.”
Neighboring
garrisons also sent troops to join or protect the march as necessary – significantly,
the Kronstadt sailors. Even the Social Revolutionaries in their ranks, and the
commissar or the Provisional government himself, had voted to join the march. Ten
thousand sailors disembarked on the banks of the Neva River at about noon, and presently
appeared at Bolshevik headquarters in the palace formerly of the ballerina.
There, addressed by Lunacharsky, they shouted for a speech from Lenin. “By the
way,” Trotsky says, Lenin happened to be in town, returned from his sickbed in
Finland. Apparently still not quite well, but well enough to speak briefly, he
reminded the marchers of the meaning of the slogans on their banners.
The leadership of
the left contingent of the Social Revolutionaries who’d joined the march
objected to the prominence of a banner bearing the standard of the Bolshevik
Central Committee. The rank and file not sharing the objection, the march
continued with the banner in place.
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