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Report of the Chief of the Petrograd Okhranka, Major-General Globachev,
to the Ministry of Internal Affairs on Events in the Capital, 26 February
1917
26 February 1917
In order to obviate the possibility of revolutionary activists making use of
the spontaneous disorders which have broken out in the capital, today, 26 February,
around 100 members of revolutionary organisations were arrested before dawn.
These included five members of the Petrograd committee of the Russian Social-Democratic
Workers' Party.
Additionally, at a meeting in the evening of 25 February at the premises of
the Central War Industries Committee, two members of the workers' group of that
committee were arrested. These two had evaded arrest in January, when this criminal
group had been liquidated. The other participants at this meeting were asked
to disperse.
Today, 26 February, at 3.30 p.m., a crowd gathered near the City Duma. Three
blank rounds were fired at this crowd, after which it dispersed.
At the same time live rounds were fired on Ligovskaya Street, resulting in
injuries.
Substantial crowds poured out of various sidestreets onto Znamenskaya Square,
where they were met with live rounds, resulting in dead and injured.
In addition, live rounds were fired at the corner of Nevsky and Vladimirsky
Avenues, where a crowd of about 1000 had gathered, and also at the corner of
Nevsky Avenue and Sadovaya Street, where the crowd had reached approximately
5000. No dead or injured were found at the latter place; presumably the crowd
had taken them away.
By 4.30, the entire length of Nevsky Avenue had been cleared of crowds, and
on Znamenskaya Square the police collected the bodies of about 40 dead and around
the same number of injured. At the same time, the dead body of an Ensign in
the Life Guard of the Pavlovsky Regiment, with his sabre in his hand, was found
at the corner of Ital'yanskaya and Sadovaya Streets. His identity and the circumstances
of his death are being investigated.
At 5 o'clock in the afternoon, on the corner of 1st Rozhdestvenskaya Street
and Suvorovsky Avenue, troops fired on a crowd which had gathered there. Ten
people were killed and several were injured, some of whom, it would seem, were
taken away by their comrades.
In the course of today's disorders secondary school pupils appeared at various
points in the capital. They were wearing large Red Cross armbands on the coats
of their uniforms and white aprons under their outer clothes. They set out in
groups to Nevsky Avenue as volunteers to pick up the injured and render them
first aid. With the same intentions, students at women's higher education institutions
entered the places where the injured were being held. They were extremely insolent
to the police officers who tried to get them to leave.
During the disorders the rioting crowds in general behaved extremely provocatively
towards the troops. In response to requests to disperse, the crowds threw stones
and lumps of snow from the street. When the troops fired over the heads of the
crowds as a warning, not only did they not disperse, they responded with laughter.
Only when live rounds were fired into their midst was it possible to disperse
the mobs. Most of the participants, however, merely took refuge in the courtyards
of the nearest buildings, only to reemerge once the shooting had stopped.
It should be mentioned that the dead on Znamenskaya Square included two people
in soldiers' uniform, and they were also taken away by the crowd. This circumstance
suggests that in all probability those killed were not soldiers, but demonstrators
who had put on the uniforms of lower ranking soldiers.
Once the mobs on Znamenskaya Square had been dispersed, the rioters began to
congregate on Nevsky Avenue in the area known as Old Nevsky (from Znamenskaya
Square to the Aleksandr Nevsky monastery), and on Goncharnaya Street. They then
melted away into the buildings on the corners, form where they shot at the troops
with revolvers.
According to reports received from our agents, a secret meeting of representatives
of revolutionary organisations is scheduled to take place at 8 o' clock this
evening in the Eliseev building on Nevsky Avenue. A F Kerensky, the member of
the State Duma, and Sokolov, the barrister, will be present. The meeting will
consider how best to use the disturbances which have arisen, and how to plan
and lead them in future in order to further revolutionary aims. We propose to
arrest those present.
Major-General Globachev
Original held in GARF, f. 1788, op. 1, d. 74, ll. 34 - 35 ob. First published
in A G Shlyapnikov, Semnadtsatyy god, Moscow-Leningrad, 1924. Republished
in O A Shashkova (compiler), Fevral'skaya revolyutsiya 1917 - sbornik dokumentov,
Rossiyskiy gosudarstvennyy gumanitarnyy universitet, Moscow, 1996, pp. 59 -
61. Translated by Dr Francis King.
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