July 3 – June 20, 1917: Greetings to the
Armies. By a vote of 472 to 271, with 39 abstentions, the Petrograd Soviet
sends greetings to the Russian armies, some
of which were then engaged in the summer offensive. Though the vote may not
seem very close to us, Trotsky sees it as the sign of a shift favorable to the
Bolsheviks and their allies on the left.
July 4 – June 21, 1917: Mood of the
Garrison. A machine gun regiment in Petrograd resolves not to go to the
front unless “the war shall have a revolutionary character.” When threatened
with disbandment, they offered to disband the Provisional Government instead.
Another sign of a leftward shift among the masses.
On the same day,
the skilled workers at the large Putilov factory (36,000 workers in all)
struck. In Pravda, Lenin urged
restraint on the part of the soldiers and workers: “…an immediate attack would
be inexpedient.” The Bolshevik’s Military Organization also warned their Red
Guards against faked summonses to armed demonstration during this time.
July 5 – June 22, 1917: Bolshevik Counsels.
Representatives of 70 Petrograd factories meet with left Bolsheviks, who, in
spite of a worsening economy, continue to urge restraint. The Bolsheviks
believed the Coalition Government would only become weaker as the summer
offensive collapsed.
A number of ills
plagued the economy in Petrograd and throughout Russia: inflation, factory
closings, food shortages exacerbated by the disrepair of the railroads’ rolling
stock, and a destabilized ruble. The Coalition Government had been completely
unable to do anything, even to decide what to do. Counter-revolutionary
activity by the Cadet party, army officers, and Cossack organizations was in
evidence, probably aided by the banks and agents of Russia’s allies in the
Entente.
These were the
concrete conditions – less food, less work, rising prices – giving rise to the
revolutionary mood that was, in a matter of weeks, to produce the July Days.
An incident
occurred that reveals this mood. The Executive Committee of the Petrograd
Soviet sent a car bearing a placard with the slogan “Forward with Kerensky!”
into the Vyborg workers’ district. It was seized by the Moscow regiment, who tore
up the placard and gave the car to the Machine Gun regiment.
July 6 – June 23, 1917: High Point of the
Offensive. The capital receives reports that elements of the Second Russian
Army had captured the first lines of German trenches in their front. Patriots
in the capital were delighted, but the troops had already stopped where they
were and begun deserting instead of continuing the advance.
Meanwhile
elections in the Baranovsky factory sent three Bolsheviks to the Petrograd
Soviet, replacing Social Revolutionaries. And Kronstadt anarchists demanded the
release of prisoners being held in the Peter and Paul Fortress.
July 7 – June 24, 1917: Factory Closings.
Izvestia, the official organ of the
Petrograd Soviet, reports a plan for more factory closings.
On the same day,
the Vyborg Soviet adopted a resolution condemning the summer offensive as an
“adventure of the Provisional Government” on behalf of “old robber treaties”
with Russia’s partners in the Entente. The soviet held the Mensheviks and
Social Revolutionaries equally responsible.
Meanwhile the
Congress of Soviets adjourned without taking any further action against the
Bolsheviks, or, for that matter, against the Coalition Government. At some point during the Congress, the delegates named a
Central Executive Committee and gave it formal authority over all the other
soviets created after the February Revolution. Up to then, the Executive
Committee of the Petrograd Soviet had exercised this authority informally.
July 9 – June 26, 1917: Protest from the Front.
The Grenadier Guards regiment at the front sends a delegation to the Petrograd
garrison to denounce the summer offensive and warn the Central Executive
Committee of the Soviets about joining with the bourgeoisie. Other units,
including sailors of the Helsinki fleet, the 2nd Machine Gun
regiment, and the 3rd Infantry regiment also took steps in support
of the revolution during this time.
July 11 – June 28, 1917: Lenin in Finland.
Trotsky says Lenin is ill and recovering in Finland on this day. It’s my
impression that, given his prescience about the mood of the revolution (and the
coming July Days), Lenin may possibly have been ill, but he was certainly in
Finland. He editorialized daily, sometimes twice daily, in Pravda during this time.
July 13 – June 30, 1917: Zemsky Nachalniks.
The Coalition Government dismisses the zemsky nachalniks, officials over the
agricultural villages drawn from petit bourgeois landowners. Since Alexander
III had created the office in the late 19th century, they had
exercised administrative and judicial powers over the peasantry to the
exclusion of local councils and even the aristocracy.
The zemsky
nachalniks were feared and despised by the peasantry. But Trotsky views the
government’s action as a “belated partial reform”; it was certainly no
substitute for a genuine agrarian policy.
July 14 – July 1, 1917: Mensheviks Heckled.
At a meeting of the Grenadier Guards regiment, the soldiers heckle Menshevik
speakers and arrest the president of the regimental committee.
Meanwhile the
All-Russian Congress of Landed Proprietors convened in Moscow, signaling
renewed resistance among aristocratic and other large landowners to the
Coalition Government’s (feeble) attempts at land reform, and to attempts by the
peasantry to take matters into their own hands.
July 15 – July 2, 1917: Cadets Resign Their
Ministries. The four ministers representing the Constitutional Democrats
(Cadets) in the Coalition Government resign en
masse. The Cadets had been the voice of the bourgeoisie in the government,
led by former Minister of War Miliukov, whom Kerensky replaced in May.
The resignations
became the signal for the July Days. Trotsky analyzes the Cadet political
strategy as follows. The pretext for the resignations was an agreement the
Coalition Government struck with the Ukraine; it did not accommodate the
imperial ambitions of the bourgeoisie sufficiently well. The timing coincided
with the failure of the summer offensive, known to the well-informed in the
capital if not to the public generally. Thus the right-socialists remaining in
the government would have to face the fallout of the failure, including the
protests of the revolutionary masses, alone. If the government (a “coalition”
now of only right-socialist parties) had to put down the anticipated
demonstrations by force, an opening might develop for weakening the Soviet side
of the dual government. So Miliukov may have thought. And things did start to
work out along these lines.
Meanwhile,
Trotsky and Lunacharsky addressed the Machine Gun regiment on the occasion of
the departure of one of their companies to the front as replacements. This was
the regiment that, after the June Demonstration, had resolved not to send out
replacements unless the war “…shall have a revolutionary character.” They now
declared this company the “last” replacement company they would agree to send.
The regiment proved to be an open flame amid the combustibles of the July Days.
Also on this day,
on the occasion of a conference of the Trotskyites, Pravda printed a statement on their behalf, saying that there were
“no differences either in principle or tactics” between them and the
Bolsheviks.
July 16 – July 3, 1917: July Days: The
Vanguard. The Machine Gun regiment meets and sacks the leadership of its
soldiers’ committee. The soldiers wanted the question of demonstrations
immediately put before the meeting. An anarchist spoke, urging them to take to
the streets of Petrograd in arms. The new committee chairman, a Bolshevik,
wanted to ask the advice of the Bolshevik Military Organization
The head of that
organization, Nevsky, was responsible for Bolshevik ties to party elements in
the garrison, as well as armed Red Guards units among the workers. Dispatched
at length to the meeting, Nevsky preached the party line: restraint – wait
until the summer offensive collapses as expected.
But by 3:00 p.m.,
the regiment had voted for armed demonstrations. They began sending envoys to
the workers and to other military formations, including the Kronstadt naval
fortress, seeking support.
The Machine Gun
regiment was truly the vanguard of the revolutionary soldiery, in ideology, in
agitation for the July Days, and as it proved, in the coming march.
Additional posts
follow, focusing on different organizations and institutions, to show their
actions, reactions, and role in the events of the day. They’re arranged so the
end of the day appears last.
Also on this day,
but not in connection with these events, the Provisional Government reached a
preliminary agreement with the Ukrainian Rada (parliament) on the question of
national independence. But the agreement fell apart within a month.
July 16 – July 3, 1917: July Days: The
Central Committee. When the envoys of the Machine Gun regiment arrived at
Bolshevik headquarters in the former palace of the ballerina Kshesinskaia that
afternoon, the Central Committee could not immediately decide whether the
regiment’s armed manifestation was a threat or an opportunity. The party had
been calling for restraint, saying that the press of events would offer a
better time for action of this kind. The reaction would be weaker if the
government were weaker.
On the other hand
was the opportunity. Tomsky expounded what Lenin, who was absent in Finland,
might have thought, “It is impossible to talk of a manifestation at this moment
unless we want a new revolution.” That is, a proletarian revolution to overthrow the bourgeois-liberal
Provisional Government. But the risks of premature action appeared too great.
Volodarsky told the regimental envoys that the machine gunners “must submit to
the decisions of the party”; they were sent back to the regiment. An appeal for
restraint was prepared for front page of Pravda
the next morning.
The meeting broke
up at about 4:00 p.m. and those attending dispersed to the workers’
neighborhoods and the factories with the same message. Stalin was dispatched to
the headquarters of the Petrograd Soviet with the news. He remained the party’s
liaison with the Executive Committee throughout the July Days.
July 16 – July 3, 1917: July Days: The
Factories. Envoys of the Machine Gun regiment arrived that afternoon at the
Putilov factory, one of Petrograd’s largest, bearing the message of the armed
manifestation. They told the workers that the regiment had decided not to send
anyone to the front, but to take to the streets instead. The secretary of the
factory committee was a Bolshevik, but he was unable to persuade the assembled
workers, some 10,000, to send to the Central Committee for guidance.
Representatives of the Central Executive Committee of the Soviets had no better
success.
At about 6:00
p.m., the meeting got word that the Vyborg workers were already on the march to
the headquarters of the Soviet in the Tauride Palace. This decided the matter.
In fact, the same result was reached virtually everywhere. The Renaud factory,
for example, provided trucks to the machine gunners at their request. The Red
Guards contingents in the factories took up arms.
July 16 – July 3, 1917: July Days: The
Manifestation. By 7:00 p.m., the main street on the Vyborg side of the
river was packed with demonstrators. The Machine Gun regiment took the lead,
followed by the workers, with the Moscow regiment bringing up the rear. As
these marchers were the militants, not the mere sympathizers, Trotsky says,
they did not reach the numbers of the June Demonstration. But as many as 500,000
workers and soldiers may have participated, including all or part of seven
other regiments of the garrison.
The Bolshevik
headquarters was the first stop. There Nevsky and others again urged the
soldiers and Red Guards to go home, again without success. Seeing the policy of
restraints had been a failure, party leaders on the scene, including members of
the Central Committee, decided instead to, Trotsky says, “guide the developing
movement” along peaceful and politically advantageous lines.
Hearing the
decision, the marchers sang the Marseillaise. The party prepared a list of
demands for submission to the Petrograd Soviet at the Tauride Palace, next and
final stop on the march. Some of the machine gunners crossed the canal to the
Peter and Paul fortress, in the river opposite Bolshevik headquarters,
intending to bring the garrison and its artillery over to the side of the
demonstrators.
The principal
demand adopted by the marchers and now articulated by the Bolsheviks was for
the Central Executive Committee to end the dual government by taking power into
its own hands: All Power to the Soviets! The sequel proved ironic.
July 16 – July 3, 1917: July Days: The
Central Executive Committee. As the banners of the marchers in Nevsky
Prospect approach the Tauride Palace, meetings of the two sections of the
Central Executive Committee of the Soviets are already in session.
The committee had
had news of the Machine Gun regiment’s plans earlier in the day. Kamenev and
the other Bolsheviks present offered to go to the regiment and ask for
restraint. But the Executive Committee preferred to issue a proclamation declaring
demonstrations to be treachery to the revolution. Meanwhile Tseretilli gave the
joint session his ideas for addressing the cabinet crisis brought on by the
resignation of the Cadet ministers the day before.
Realizing a
proclamation might not be enough to stop the what they were calling the
“insurrection,” the Compromisers (i.e., Trotsky’s name for those in the Soviet
who sought accommodation with the Provisional Government and by extension the
bourgeoisie) cast about for the armed protection of troops. Not finding any of
the garrison who were then willing to take their side, they sent to the Fifth
Army, nearest Petrograd at the front. By evening, scarcely a hundred had been
found by the Menshevik assigned this task. Trotsky remarks more than once on
the irony of this effort: The Soviet answering the demonstrators’ demand that
it seize the power, by recruiting troops to suppress the demonstrators rather
than the Provisional Government.
The workers’ and
soldiers’ section of the Central Executive had gone back into session. Recent
elections had given the Bolsheviks a majority in that section, or so the
right-socialists feared. Zinoviev was giving a speech against the Compromisers
when the marchers reached the palace. In response, Kamenev proposed selecting a
commission of 25 members to lead the demonstration; Trotsky seconded. Seeing
the tendency of the debate that followed, the Mensheviks and Social
Revolutionaries walked out of the meeting. The Bolsheviks and Trotskyites who
remained passed a resolution calling on the Central Executive to take power,
and named fifteen members to the leadership committee, leaving ten places open
in case the right-socialists should have second thoughts.
Meanwhile,
Cheidze, Menshevik president of the Soviet, confronted the crowd outside the
palace. When he faltered, Voitinsky took his place, but was also met with
silence. Trotsky fared better when his turn came, but he stopped short of
advocating insurrection (as his enemies were later to claim).
Events did not
stop unfolding at midnight.
Overnight, July 16-17 – July 3-4, 1917: The
Putilov Factory Marches. The march of the Putilov workers, their wives and
children, begins before midnight.
But by then,
after shouting, pushing and shoving, and struggles over the banners of the
soldiers and workers, gunfire had broken out on Nevsky Prospect. We know the
demonstrators were armed; so were their enemies in that bourgeois neighborhood.
The Grenadier Guards regiment returned a volley when shots were fired at them,
possibly by right-wing Cavaliers of St. George or officers crippled in the war,
possibly by provocateurs. Panic ensued; dead and wounded lay in the street.
Meanwhile the
Petrograd Soviet reconvened in joint session. The Menshevik Dan offered a
resolution inviting anyone who would not be able to support the decision of the
committee to leave the meeting beforehand. It was dropped when the Bolsheviks
appeared. The delegation from the demonstrators demanded to be heard, but was
ignored. Little was accomplished except the airing of accusations. A member of
the Jewish Bund accused the Bolsheviks of conspiracy; Tseretilli accused the
demonstrators of aiding the counter-revolution. The meeting adjourned at 5:00
a.m., needless to say without taking any concrete action on any of the
demonstrators’ demands, much less to seize the state power.
The Bolsheviks
and Trotskyites also met late into the night, debating again the question
whether to hold back the demonstration or lead it, and deciding for the latter.
Then Zinoviev was called to the telephone. News from Kronstadt came that the
sailors would march to the aid of the demonstrators that morning. Social
Revolutionaries among the sailors, and even the commissar appointed by the
Provisional Government, had voted to join the march when they’d learned the
Bolsheviks were leading it.
By 3:00 a.m.,
after first encountering obstruction and gunfire, the Putilov workers and
family members, joined on the march by workers of other factories and now some
80,000 strong, reached the Tauride Palace. The Central Executive agreed to
receive their representatives, while the wearied marchers lay on the grounds of
the palace, wondering about the next day, sure only that they would be too
tired to go to work.
July 17 – July 4, 1917: The Manifestation
Continues. 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.
No comments:
Post a Comment