Read The Romanov Sisters (Four Sisters) Online
Authors: Helen Rappaport
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Russia & the Former Soviet Union, #Biography & Autobiography, #Women's Studies, #Family & Relationships, #Royalty, #1910s, #Civil War, #WWI
with other royal cousins, they were largely reliant on the friendship of adults: their Aunt Olga, a few close officers, servants and ladies-in-waiting – and a forty-year-old reprobate and religious maverick
whose continuing influence over their family life was already sowing
the seeds of their ultimate destruction.
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In the late summer of 1909 the Romanov sisters at last found them-
selves with something exciting to look forward – a visit to their royal cousins in England. It would be their first proper official trip abroad, apart from private family visits to Uncle Ernie at Darmstadt and
Wolfsgarten. Crossing the North Sea, the
Shtandart
encountered strong winds from the south and the water was very choppy. All the
children were seasick, and many of the entourage too.1 The crew
made up an area of plaids and pillows for the children to sleep on
where the rocking of the ship was less intense. But Tatiana still
suffered terribly; she had never been a good sailor and had some-
times been seasick even when the yacht was at anchor. ‘A whole
trunkful of special remedies from America’ had been sent for but
nothing worked.2 En route to England, the family had stopped
briefly at Kiel to visit Alexandra’s sister Irene and her family, and then they had made a three-day visit to President Fallières of France at Cherbourg, where they were greeted with the usual pageantry of
gun salutes, crowds, bunting and massed bands playing the
Marseillaise
. After three days of diplomatic meetings, formal dinners and a review of the French fleet – at which the girls had been thrilled to be allowed to take photos of French submarines with their Box
Brownies – the
Shtandart
finally set sail for England.3
Having met at Reval for three days the previous year, both
Nicholas and his cousin Edward VII had been keen to rehabilitate
Russia in the eyes of the world after the terrible events of 1905, at a time when talk of war with Germany was increasing. But it was
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also an opportunity for a much-wanted family reunion. There was,
however, a problem: the impending visit of the tsar caused consid-
erable disquiet in parliament and the British press, far more so than the 1896 visit. After the events of 1905 British radical groups had
damned Nicholas as a brutal despot, the architect of Russian im-
perial oppression. In the run-up to the visit he was further vilified in socialist rallies at Trafalgar Square and elsewhere, with the evidence of Stolypin’s repressive measures against political activists
stacked up against him. In short, Nicholas II was seen as the re-
pository of all evil: ‘The Czar of the “Bloody Sunday”, the Czar of
Stolypins and the Czar of Pogroms and Black Hundreds’.4 The
impending visit divided public opinion in Britain, although Lord
Hardinge, permanent under-secretary at the Foreign Office, put
much of the protest down to scaremongering and dismissed the
Trafalgar Square ‘demonstrators’ as a motley collection of ‘five
hundred Frenchmen, six hundred German waiters, a few Russian
Jews and Italian ice-vendors’.5 One of the most strident opponents
of Nicholas’s visit was the Labour leader Keir Hardie who inspired
130 resolutions from socialist groups, schools, evangelical societies, trade unions, pacifist groups and branches of the Labour Party and
the Women’s Labour League that were sent to the Home Secretary
condemning the visit.6 At some radical meetings there were open
calls for Nicholas’s assassination, should he step on to English soil.
Mindful of the huge security problem for the police on the Isle
of Wight it was soon made clear that the tsar and his family would
not stay on land but on board the
Shtandart
off Cowes, where it was much easier to protect them, surrounded as the yacht would be
by two Russian cruisers and three destroyers as well as ships of the
British fleet. Nevertheless, the most elaborate security arrangements were put into effect, with ‘every possible means of entrance, not
only to Cowes, but to the Isle of Wight’ – landing stages, roads and railways, and ‘even the peaceful rural villages of the interior’ – being watched by hundreds of plain clothes detectives, backed up by a
special ‘bicycle corps’ of thirty men. Many of the detectives adopted the token disguise of double-breasted yachtsmen’s jackets and white
sailing caps, but as one newspaper observed, ‘this was really more
of an advertisement of constabulary duty than a disguise. Instead of
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avoiding attention they invited it . . . As yachtsmen who wandered
about in couples without visible means of support afloat they were
marked men.’7 Cowes itself, as Liberal peer Lord Suffield recalled,
‘was crowded with detectives on the watch for possible assassins,
and everyone seemed to be in fear for the poor hunted Czar’. The
detectives were not just British either; Spiridovich had brought his
own Okhrana men. Suffield had found it all rather unnerving: ‘I do
not know how any man can submit to such thralldom; it is too big
a price to pay for being a potentate.’8
On the evening of 2 August (NS) the
Shtandart
and its escort sailed towards Spithead in the Solent for a rendezvous with the
British royal family on board their yacht the
Victoria and Albert.
The event was filmed and photographed too as an impressive naval review
and regatta of 152 ships watched by both families, following which
the royal yachts sailed into Cowes harbour to be greeted by an
armada of gaily pennanted steam and sail boats and yachts of every
description.9 Four days of intensive receptions and meetings followed, during which the only meal not shared with the British royals was
breakfast. The strain of it all on the empress’s face was evident to
Alice Keppel, Edward VII’s long-standing mistress. Up on deck in
the
Shtandart
surrounded by a dense crowd of people the tsaritsa had ‘presented a frigid calm’, yet, strangely, Alexandra’s moral probity did not prevent her from inviting Mrs Keppel to join her below in
her suite. As soon as the cabin door was closed behind them ‘there
was a sudden lightening of the atmosphere’, recalled Alice. ‘Dropping her regal mask, the Empress had at once become a friendly house-wife, “Tell me, my dear, where do
you
get your knitting wool?” she had urgently demanded.’10
For the Romanov children, spared the strains of officialdom, the
visit was an all too brief glimpse of an entirely new landscape, though for those protecting them it was yet another security nightmare.
They had till now seen little or nothing beyond their homes at St
Petersburg, Tsarskoe Selo and Peterhof. On the morning of 3 August
all five of them made their first trip ashore, to East Cowes and a
visit by open landau to Osborne Bay, just down from Osborne House
(the large part of which had now become a naval officers’ training
college). Here they played with their cousins on the private beach,
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paddling in the sea, collecting shells and digging sandcastles, much
as their mother and their grandmother Alice had done before them.
Olga and Tatiana made a second impromptu trip ashore that after-
noon with their chaperones and a posse of detectives, and were
delighted to be allowed to walk rather than take the carriage into
West Cowes to do some shopping in the main street. It was such a
rare thing for them to be able to move freely in this way; the cobbled high street of West Cowes might not be the glamorous Nevsky
Prospekt but
Shtandart
officer Nikolay Vasilievich Sablin noted that many of the shops were subsidiaries of the big London stores, open
specially for the yachting season and the Cowes Regatta, and had
plenty of luxury goods and souvenirs with which to tempt the girls’
pocket money. Olga and Tatiana were extremely animated throughout
their visit. They talked in English to the shopkeepers and took great pleasure in spending their money in a newsagent’s shop on pennants
of the various nations, commemorative picture postcards of their
royal relatives and even of their own parents. After that they moved
on to a jeweller’s where they snapped up gifts for members of the
crew. They also treated themselves to some perfume from Beken &
Son’s pharmacy.
West Cowes meanwhile had come to a complete standstill, for
word had quickly spread about these charming young Russian visi-
tors in their smart matching grey suits and straw hats.11 Soon the
sisters were being followed round the town by a large crowd of
curious holiday-makers and across the floating bridge into East
Cowes, where they visited Whippingham Church and saw the chair
Great- grandmama had sat in when attending services. Throughout
their visit, as
The
Times
reported on 7 August, Olga and Tatiana
‘behaved with complete self-possession, smiling when one or two
enthusiasts raised a cheer for them’. They were still laughing and
talking excitedly at the end of their three-hour visit.12
The whole family came ashore the following day, the girls and
Alexey bowing and waving at the crowd, on their way to see the
private wing of Osborne House and the Swiss Cottage – a playhouse
for learning practical skills, created in the garden for his children by Prince Albert – in which Alexey took particular delight. After
enjoying five o’clock tea at Barton Manor with their cousin George,
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Prince of Wales, and his family, everyone sat for their photographs.
The Princess of Wales thought the Romanov children ‘delicious’
and everyone commented on how unaffected and delightful they
were.13 The two cousins, George and Nicholas, who had not seen
each other for twelve years, seemed remarkably alike with their blue
eyes, neatly trimmed beards and similar stature, particularly when
they posed for photos with their two sons – David in his naval
uniform (the future King Edward VIII was then at the Royal Naval
College at Dartmouth) and Alexey in his own trademark white sailor
suit.14 David had been delegated to escort his cousins at Osborne,
that task having originally been earmarked for his younger brother
Bertie (the future King George VI). But Bertie had gone down with
whooping cough shortly before the visit and such had been the
imperial doctors’ paranoia of exposing the tsarevich to any possible
infection that he was bundled off to Balmoral and his role given to
his brother. During the visit David took rather a shine to Tatiana
(despite his grandmother having seen Olga as a possible future bride
for him). He could see how protective she was of her timid little
brother and could not help noticing a ‘frightened’ look in Alexey’s
large, watchful eyes.15 But as for the ‘elaborate police guard’ thrown around the tsar’s every movement, he later recalled that it ‘made
me glad I was not a Russian prince’.16
During those four idyllic, sunny days in August 1909, when ‘all
the world was on the water’ and the Solent was ‘like a sea of glass,
the sun going down like a red ball leaving the evenings still and
warm’, one stately ceremony had followed another. As General
Spiridovich later recalled, ‘the colossal fleet’ that had gathered at Cowes ‘motionless and as if asleep, seemed a vision from a fairytale’
– the effect enhanced by the night sky illuminated by the lights
from all the ships anchored off shore. The night before the
Romanovs’ departure the bands played and there were fireworks
and dancing, with Admiral Fisher, commander of the British fleet,
partnering each of the girls in turn. Then everyone sat down to a
final grand dinner – the ladies with Alexandra in the
Shtandart
– the men with King Edward in the
Victoria and Albert
. After a final lunch party on the 5th – the hottest, and most windless, day of the year
so far – the
Shtandart
weighed anchor at 3.30 p.m. and, with Nicholas,
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Alexandra and their five children up on deck waving goodbye to
their relatives in the
Victoria and Albert
, the imperial yacht
headed off into the English Channel. As it disappeared from view,
Superintendent Quinn of the Cowes police force was seen ‘offering
a cigarette out of a gorgeous gold cigarette case, shining with
newness, and bearing the intimation that it was “a present from the
Czar”’. One of his colleagues was wearing ‘a scarf pin with the
Imperial crown in diamonds, and still another sported a gold watch’
– all of them ‘gifts for their care’ from a grateful Russian emperor
and empress. But the British police were, nevertheless, intensely
relieved that ‘the strain was over’.17
All in all the Russian imperial visit to England was a triumph
– an unforgettable coming together of two great royal families that