Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 A profile of the Petrograd working class on the eve of 1917
- 2 The tsarist factory
- 3 The February Revolution: A new dispensation in the factories
- 4 The structure and functions of the factory committees
- 5 Trade unions and the betterment of wages
- 6 The theory and practice of workers' control of production
- 7 Deepening economic chaos and the intensification of workers' control
- 8 The social structure of the labour movement
- 9 The October Revolution and the organisation of industry
- 10 The economic crisis and the fate of workers' control: October 1917 to June 1918
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
3 - The February Revolution: A new dispensation in the factories
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 A profile of the Petrograd working class on the eve of 1917
- 2 The tsarist factory
- 3 The February Revolution: A new dispensation in the factories
- 4 The structure and functions of the factory committees
- 5 Trade unions and the betterment of wages
- 6 The theory and practice of workers' control of production
- 7 Deepening economic chaos and the intensification of workers' control
- 8 The social structure of the labour movement
- 9 The October Revolution and the organisation of industry
- 10 The economic crisis and the fate of workers' control: October 1917 to June 1918
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
DEMOCRATISING THE FACTORY ORDER
On 23 February 1917 thousands of housewives and factory women, angry at the bread shortage, surged onto the streets, ignoring pleas from labour leaders to stay calm. By the next day, 200,000 workers in Petrograd were on strike. By 25 February, huge armies of demonstrators were clashing with troops, and a revolution had commenced. On 27 February, the critical point was reached, when whole regiments of soldiers began to desert to the insurgents. The same day, the worthy members of the Duma refused to obey an order from the Tsar to disperse, and instead set up a Provisional Government. Meanwhile the Petrograd Soviet of workers' and soldiers' deputies came into existence, thereby creating an extraordinary situation of ‘dual power’. By 3 March it was all over: the Tsar had abdicated and Russia was free.
The toppling of the Romanov dynasty inspired workers with euphoria. They returned to their factories determined that the ancien régime would be swept aside in the workplaces, just as it had been swept aside in society at large. They resolved to create, in the place of the old ‘absolutist’ order, a new ‘constitutional’ order within the enterprises. They set to work at once by tearing up the old contracts of hire, the old rule books, and the vicious blacklists. Just as the agents of the autocracy had been driven from the police stations and government offices, so the workers set about expelling those who had been most identified with the repressive administration of the factories.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Red PetrogradRevolution in the Factories, 1917–1918, pp. 54 - 79Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1983