4-10 June 1917

All over the country disorders, anarchy, seizures, violence and ‘republics’ still continued; people took the law into their own hands, soldiers mutinied, and regiments disbanded … The Bolshevik Central Committee controlled most of the Workers’ Section in the Soviet, as well as the majority of the Petersburg proletariat.
(N.N. Sukhanov, The Russian Revolution 1917: a Personal Record
, Oxford 1955)
4 June
Memoir of Princess Paley
Thus passed the months of May and June, 1917. One would have liked to find something to relate but nothing happened apart from the incoherence of the regime of Kerensky, who inspired everyone with a feeling of profound contempt … Kerensky, blinded by his imaginary glory, saw and heard nothing else. Denying himself no fantastic notion, he went so far as to install himself in the Winter Palace and to sleep in the bed of the Emperor Alexander III. This offensive proceeding created more enemies for him than he had already.
(Princess Paley, Memories of Russia, 1916-1919
, London 1924)
5 June
Memoir of Albert Rhys Williams
Chiedze, the President of the Soviet Congress, asked my why I came to Russia. ‘Ostensibly as a journalist’, I told him. ‘But the real reason is the Revolution. It was irresistible. It drew me here like a magnet. I am here because I could not stay way.’
(Albert Rhys Williams, Through the Russian Revolution
, New York 1921)
6 June
Note from Secretary Lansing, explaining the Aims of the American Extraordinary Mission to Russia
The High Commission now on its way from this country to Russia is sent primarily to manifest to the Russian Government and people the deep sympathetic feeling which exists among all classes in America for the adherence of Russia to the principle of democracy … To stand side by side, shoulder to shoulder against autocracy, will unite the American and Russian peoples in a friendship for the ages.
( Russian-American Relations: March 1917-March 1920
, New York 1920)
7 June
Diary entry of Joshua Butler Wright, Counselor of the American Embassy, Petrograd
Had a touch of the Russian Foreign Office secret service yesterday in an attempt to run down accusations against an American woman correspondent here, against whom the cumulative evidence is not reassuring. Very warm - and a perfect plague of flies.
( Witness to Revolution: The Russian Revolution Diary and Letters of J. Butler Wright
, London 2002)
8 June
Enemy aeroplanes had been over about 4 a.m. and awakened us; discontented murmurings came from most beds. We took turns in washing, with as little water as possible. Once or twice we had tried to persuade Rupertsov, our tent-boy, to scrounge another bucketful for us. He would screw his face up and shake his head. Smirnov’s tent was next door to the water-cart and woe betide the person who tried to steal more than his share, for Smirnov knew each one’s quota to a spoonful. Our water-cart had to go to Bojikov to be filled, so we had been warned not to be extravagant.
(Florence Farmborough, Nurse at the Russian Front: A Diary 1914-18
, London 1974)
9 June
Memoir by the Menshevik Nikolai Sukhanov
On June 9th proclamations signed by the Bolshevik Central Committee and the Central Bureau of the Factory Committees were pasted up in the working-class districts. These proclamations summoned the Petersburg proletariat to a peaceful demonstration against the counter-revolution at 2 o’clock on June 10th.
(N.N. Sukhanov, The Russian Revolution 1917: a Personal Record
, Oxford 1955)
Diary entry of Louis de Robien, attaché at the French Embassy
Lubersac, who has just returned from the front, is more pessimistic than ever; anarchy is gaining ground and the artillery, which up till now had resisted the infection better than anyone, is beginning to be contaminated … He mentioned the names of several officers who have been murdered by their men. One of them was buried with great pomp by the very men who had killed him. They had invited the Germans, and it is said that a German band marched at the head of the funeral procession. There are many cases of Russians fraternizing with Germans. Sometimes it ends badly: in one village the Russian troops had invited the Germans to a big banquet, but the German officers who came refused to sit down at the same table as their men and the Russian soldiers. The tovariches were offended, and it ended in a battle … I do not know whether it is one which is mentioned in despatches.
(Louis de Robien, The Diary of a Diplomat in Russia 1917-1918
, London 1969)
Diary of Nicholas II
It’s exactly three months since I came from Mogilev, and that we are here like prisoners. It’s terribly hard to be without news of dear Mama, but as to the rest, I’m indifferent.
(Sergei Mironenko, A Lifelong Passion
, London 1996)
Memoir of Pierre Gilliard, tutor to the Tsar’s children
As the Grand Duchesses were losing all their hair as the result of their illness, their heads have been shaved. When they go out in the park they wear scarves arranged so as to conceal the fact. Just as I was going to take their photographs, at a sign from Olga Nicolaevna they all suddenly removed their headdress. I protested, but they insisted, much amused at the idea of seeing themselves photographed like this, and looking forward to seeing the indignant surprise of their parents. Their good spirits reappear from time to time in spite of everything. It is their exuberant youth.
(Sergei Mironenko, A Lifelong Passion
, London 1996)
10 June
Diary entry of Joshua Butler Wright, Counselor of the American Embassy, Petrograd
The ‘Bolsheviks’, or ultra-socialists who have been trying to make trouble for the government for some weeks, announced yesterday that they intended a peaceful demonstration against the government for today. The Provisional Government promptly announced, by placards in the streets, that all gatherings were prohibited for the next three days and that any such that might be held would be dispersed by force! Whereupon the Pravda, the labor publication that has given us all so much cause for anxiety lately, in its edition of this morning said that such meetings should not be held. It is to be considered as another proof of the government’s returning strength and of the opinion in general that the extremists have been too radical.
( Witness to Revolution: The Russian Revolution Diary and Letters of J. Butler Wright
, London 2002)
The Bolsheviks sought to exploit the war-weariness by staging a second mass demonstration on June 10 – this time, with the participants fully armed – in order to embarrass the government and, should the opportunity present itself, overthrow it. The event, which had aroused considerable opposition in the Bolshevik Central Committee as premature, was cancelled at the last moment on the insistence of the Soviet. But even as they yielded, the Bolsheviks put the Soviet on notice that in the future they would not be bound by its wishes.
(Richard Pipes, A Concise History of the Russian Revolution
, London 1995)
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10 June 2017
It’s often the details that speak loudest. The tentative steps towards a new reality. Mieville describes how when Brusilov became Commander-in-Chief his willingness to work with soldiers’ committees was seen as treachery by the army old-guard, but his dealings with ordinary soldiers had a certain Theresa May gaucheness to it: he would try to show his democratic credentials by greeting ordinary soldiers with a handshake, thereby creating a considerable commotion and fumbling of weapons. The worsening situation with food by June was starkly embodied by the skeletal horses on the streets of Petrograd. Meanwhile, the political momentum was definitely turning more radically left. On 4 June, at the First All-Russian Congress of Soviets of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Deputies, Tsereteli, a Menshevik minister in the Coalition government, declared that ‘there is no political party in Russia which at the present time would say “Give us power”’. To which a voice rang out from the back of the hall, ‘There is
such a party’. Corbyn. I mean, Lenin.
