One hundred years
ago this week, plus three, it was still October in Russia, because they were
still using the old-style Julian calendar. Today there will be one entry for
the whole eventful week that led up to Red October.
The Week
beginning October 31 – October 18, 1917: “Vigorous Preparations.” With intensified Bolshevik agitation, led by Trotsky, in
the background, forces aligned with that party vigorously gathered the political
and physical resources that would be necessary for a successful insurrection,
the date of which had not and could not yet be fixed. When Trotsky refused to
answer a question in the Petrograd Soviet (where rumors were flying) about the
date, Kamenev’s comment made it seem like the Bolsheviks thought an
insurrection might not even be necessary. But this of course was not the case;
it was Kamenev’s opinion. Kamenev well knew how the votes in the Bolshevik Central
Committee had gone. Read about it here
and here.
November 2 – October 20, 1917: Kamenev Resigns. Hearing of this, Lenin denounced it as a ”trick.” Accordingly
Kamenev offered to resign from the Bolshevik Central Committee. The offer was
accepted, and Kamenev was further admonished to remain silent on the issue.
Under the pressure of events, cracks were appearing in the wall of party
solidarity! Read about it here.
November 3 – October 21, 1917: Resolution of the Garrison
Conference. The Garrison Conference accepted three proposals made by
Trotsky: that the garrison would support the Military Revolutionary Committee,
that the garrison would take part in the review of forces planned for the
following day, and that the Congress of Soviets should “take the power in its
hands.” Even the Cossack regiments agreed. These proposals were of
course consistent with and essential to the overall plan of insurrection.
November 4 – October 22, 1917: The Day of the Petrograd
Soviet. As the delegates to the Congress of Soviets began to assemble,
the Petrograd Soviet held a review of its revolutionary forces, now to include
those of garrison who had agreed to take part the day before. There were
meetings in the public halls and squares. One audience would assemble, listen
to the speeches, then depart. Then another audience would file in. Read
about it here.
November 5 – October 23, 1917: The Peter and Paul Comes
Over. The Garrison Conference having definitely broken the chain of
command that led back to the Coalition Government, the Bolsheviks began to
appoint commissars who sought to fill the power vacuum thus created. When the commissar
sent to the Peter and Paul fortress and prison in the middle of the Neva River
was resisted by the officer in command, Trotsky went over to talk to the soldiers
themselves. In the result, the fortress, its artillery, and 100,000 rifles for
the Red Guards came over to the insurrection. Read about it here.
You can read the
whole chapter on the Day
of the Petrograd Soviet here. Or read the whole story from the beginning by
following this link.
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