1.
EVENTS OF NOVEMBER
7TH
From 4 A. M. until dawn Kerensky remained
at the Petrograd Staff Headquarters, sending orders
to the Cossacks and to the yunkers in the Officers
Schools in and around Petrogradall of whom answered
that they were unable to move.
Colonel Polkovnikov, Commandant of
the City, hurried between the Staff and the Winter
Palace, evidently without any plan. Kerensky
gave an order to open the bridges; three hours passed
without any action, and then an officer and five men
went out on their own initiative, and putting to flight
a picket of Red Guards, opened the Nicolai Bridge.
Immediately after they left, however, some sailors
closed it again.
Kerensky ordered the print-shop of
Rabotchi Put to be occupied. The officer
detailed to the work was promised a squad of soldiers;
two hours later he was promised some yunkers;
then the order was forgotten.
An attempt was made to recapture the
Post Office and the Telegraph Agency; a few shots
were fired, and the Government troops announced that
they would no longer oppose the Soviets.
To a delegation of yunkers
Kerensky said, As chief of the Provisional Government
and as Supreme Commander I know nothing, I cannot
advise you; but as a veteran revolutionist, I appeal
to you, young revolutionists, to remain at your posts
and defend the conquests of the Revolution.
Orders of Kishkin, November 7th:
By decree of the Provisional Government
.
I am invested with extraordinary powers for the reestablishment
of order in Petrograd, in complete command of all
civil and military authorities
.
In accordance with the powers conferred
upon me by the Provisional Government, I herewith
relieve from his functions as Commandant of the Petrograd
Military District Colonel George Polkovnikov
.
* *
* *
Appeal to the Population signed
by Vice-Premier Konovalov, November 7th:
Citizens! Save the fatherland,
the republic and your freedom. Maniacs have raised
a revolt against the only governmental power chosen
by the people, the Provisional Government
.
The members of the Provisional Government
fulfil their duty, remain at their post, and continue
to work for the good of the fatherland, the reestablishment
of order, and the convocation of the Constituent Assembly,
future sovereign of Russia and of all the Russian peoples
.
Citizens, you must support the Provisional
Government. You must strengthen its authority.
You must oppose these maniacs, with whom are joined
all enemies of liberty and order, and the followers
of the Tsarist régime, in order to wreck the Constituent
Assembly, destroy the conquests of the Revolution,
and the future of our dear fatherland
.
Citizens! Organise around the
Provisional Government for the defence of its temporary
authority, in the name of order and the happiness of
all peoples
.
*
* *
Proclamation of the Provisional Government.
The Petrograd Soviet
. has declared
the Provisional Government overthrown, and has demanded
that the Governmental power be turned over to it,
under threat of bombarding the Winter Palace with the
cannon of Peter-Paul Fortress, and of the cruiser Avrora,
anchored in the Neva.
The Government can surrender its
authority only to the Consituent Assembly; for that
reason it has decided not to submit, and to demand
aid from the population and the Army. A telegram
has been sent to the Stavka; and an answer
received says that a strong detachment of troops is
being sent
.
Let the Army and the People reject
the irresponsible attempts of the Bolsheviki to create
a revolt in the rear
.
About 9 A. M. Kerensky left for the Front
.
Toward evening two soldiers on bicycles
presented themselves at the Staff Headquarters, as
delegates of the garrison of Peter-Paul Fortress.
Entering the meeting-room of the Staff, where Kishkin,
Rutenburg, Paltchinski, General Bagratouni, Colonel
Paradielov and Count Tolstoy were gathered, they demanded
the immediate surrender of the Staff; threatening,
in case of refusal, to bombard headquarters
.
After two panicky conferences the Staff retreated to
the Winter Palace, and the headquarters were occupied
by Red Guards
.
Late in the afternoon several Bolshevik
armoured cars cruised around the Palace Square, and
Soviet soldiers tried unsuccessfully to parley with
the yunkers
.
Firing on the Palace began about 7
oclock in the evening
.
At 10 P. M. began an artillery bombardment
from three sides, in which most of the shells were
blanks, only three small shrapnels striking the facade
of the Palace
.
2.
KERENSKY IN
FLIG{HT -ed.}
Leaving Petrograd in the morning of
November 7th, Kerensky arrived by automobile at Gatchina,
where he demanded a special train. Toward evening
he was in Ostrov, Province of Pskov. The next
morning, extraordinary session of the local Soviet
of Workers and Soldiers Depulies, with participation
of Cossack delegatesthere being 6,000 Cossacks at
Ostrov.
Kerensky spoke to the assembly, appealing
for aid against the Bolsheviki, and addressed himself
almost exclusively to the Cossacks. The soldier
delegates protested.
Why did you come here? shouted voices.
Kerensky answered, To ask the Cossacks assistance
in crushing the Bolshevik insurrection! At this there
were violent protestations, which increased when he
continued, I broke the Kornilov attempt, and I will
break the Bolsheviki! The noise became so great that
he had to leave the platform
.
The soldier deputies and the Ussuri
Cossacks decided to arrest Kerensky, but the Don Cossacks
prevented them, and got him away by train
. A
Military Revolutionary Committee, set up during the
day, tried to inform the garrison of Pskov; but the
telephone and telegraph lines were cut
.
Kerensky did not arrive at Pskov.
Revolutionary soldiers had cut the railway line, to
prevent troops being sent against the capital.
On the night of November 8th he arrived by automobile
at Luga, where he was well received by the Death Battalions
stationed there.
Next day he took train for the South-West
Front, and visited the Army Committee at headquarters.
The Fifth Army, however, was wild with enthusiasm
over the news of the Bolshevik success, and the Army
Committee was unable to promise Kerensky any support.
From there he went to the Stavka,
at Moghilev, where he ordered ten regiments from different
parts of the Front to move against Petrograd.
The soldiers almost unanimously refused; and those
regiments which did start halted on the way. About
five thousand Cossacks finally followed him
.
3.
LOOTING OF THE
WINTER PALACE
I do not mean to maintain that there
was no looting, in the Winter Palace. Both after
and before the Winter Palace fell, there was
considerable pilfering. The statement of the Socialist
Revolutionary paper Narod, and of members of
the City Duma, to the effect that precious objects
to the value of 500,000,000 rubles had been stolen,
was, however, a gross exaggeration.
The most important art treasures of
the Palacepaintings, statues, tapestries, rare porcelains
and armorie,had been transferred to Moscow during
the month of September; and they were still in good
order in the basement of the Imperial Palace there
ten days after the capture of the Kremlin by Bolshevik
troops. I can personally testify to this
.
Individuals, however, especially the
general public, which was allowed to circulate freely
through the Winter Palace for several days after its
capture, made away with table silver, clocks, bedding,
mirrors and some odd vases of valuable porcelain and
semi-precious stone, to the value of about $50,000.
The Soviet Government immediately
created a special commission, composed of artists
and archæologists, to recover the stolen objects.
On November 1st two proclamations were issued:
CITIZENS OF
PETROGRAD!
We urgently ask all citizens to exert
every effort to find whatever possible of the objects
stolen from the Winter Palace in the night of November
7-8, and to forward them to the Commandant of the Winter
Palace.
Receivers of stolen goods, antiquarians,
and all who are proved to be hiding such objects will
be held legally responsible and punished with all
severity.
_Commissars for the Protection of Museums and Artistic
Collections,_
G.
YATMANOV, B. MANDELBAUM.
*
* * *
TO REGIMENTAL
AND FLEET COMMITTEES
In the night of November 7-8, in
the Winter Palace, which is the inalienable property
of the Russian people, valuable objects of art were
stolen.
We urgently appeal to all to exert
every effort, so that the stolen objects are returned
to the Winter Palace.
Commissars
.
G.
YATMANOV, B. MANDELBAUM.
About half the loot was recovered,
some of it in the baggage of foreigners leaving Russia.
A conference of artists and archæologists,
held at the suggestion of Smolny, appointed a commission
of make an inventory of the Winter Palace treasures,
which was given complete charge of the Palace and
of all artistic collections and State museums in Petrograd.
On November 16th the Winter Palace was closed to the
public while the inventory was being made
.
During the last week in November a
decree was issued by the Council of Peoples Commissars,
changing the name of the Winter Palace to Peoples
Museum, entrusting it to the complete charge of the
artistic-archæological commission, and declaring that
henceforth all Governmental activities within its
wall were prohibited
.
4.
RAPE OF THE WOMENS
BATTALION
Immediately following the taking of
the Winter Palace all sorts of sensational stories
were published in the anti-Bolshevik press, and told
in the City Duma, about the fate of the Womens Battalion
defending the Palace. It was said that some of
the girl-soldiers had been thrown from the windows
into the street, most of the rest had been violated,
and many had committed suicide as a result of the
horrors they had gone through.
The City Duma appointed a commission
to investigate the matter. On November 16th the
commission returned from Levashovo, headquarters of
the Womens Battalion. Madame Tyrkova reported
that the girls had been at first taken to the barracks
of the Pavlovsky Regiment, and that there some of
them had been badly treated; but that at present most
of them were at Levashovo, and the rest scattered about
the city in private houses. Dr. Mandelbaum, another
of the commission, testified drily that none
of the women had been thrown out of the windows of
the Winter Palace, that none were wounded, that
three had been violated, and that one had committed
suicide, leaving a note which said that she had been
disappointed in her ideals.
On November 21st the Military Revolutionary
Committee officially dissolved the Womens Battalion,
at the request of the girls themselves, who returned
to civilian clothes.
In Louise Bryants book, Six Red
Months in Russia, there is an interesting description
of the girl-soldiers during this time.