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
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GOODBYE. DON’T FORGET ME
Botkin spent the night going from one to the next with valerian
drops to calm them down. Alexey kept trying to lie down and sleep
but in the end gave up. Wan with fatigue, he sat ‘perched on a box,
and holding his favourite spaniel “Joy” by a leash’ as his father paced up and down, endlessly lighting cigarettes.102 They were all grateful for the offer of tea when it finally came at 5 a.m.
Behind the scenes, Kerensky’s evacuation plans had been on the
brink of failure. During the night, workers at Petrograd’s Nikolaevsky Station, who had been preparing the train had begun to hesitate
about whether they would allow it to leave. ‘All night long there
had been difficulties, doubts and vacillations. The railwaymen
delayed the shunting and coupling, put through mysterious phone
calls, made inquiries somewhere.’103 Dawn was already breaking
when the train – comprised of
wagons-lits
and a restaurant car of the Chinese Eastern Railway – finally arrived at Tsarskoe Selo’s
Alexandrovsky Station more than five hours late and was parked
down the tracks, away from the main entrance.104 The station itself
‘was surrounded by soldiers, and troops with loaded rifles’ who had
‘marched out and lined both sides of the road from the palace to
the station, each soldier carrying in his belt sixty rounds of
cartridges’.105
Word by now had got out in Tsarskoe Selo that something was
afoot and as the sun rose on 1 August a triple cordon of guards in
front of the palace was having to hold back an ‘immense crowd of
people hooting and shouting menacingly’, keen to get one last look
at
Nikolashka-durachok
*
as he was taken away.106 At about 5.15, four motor cars finally arrived. It was clearly going to be impossible to
take the family out past the crowds at the main gate; they would
have to cross the Alexander Park to reach the station at its western
end. The entourage tried to steel themselves and remain cheerful
during this final farewell, refusing to say the usual
Do svidaniya
but repeating the more emphatic
Do skorogo svidaniya
, ‘till we see each other soon’.107 Much to her despair the tsaritsa had not been allowed to say farewell to all of her most faithful retainers, particularly her elderly mistress of the robes, Elizaveta Naryshkina, who had served
* ‘Little Nicholas the fool’.
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FOUR SISTERS
three tsaritsas. But she sent her a note: ‘Farewell, darling motherly friend, my heart is too full to write any more.’108 It was only now,
as Alexandra left the palace, that Kerensky, who on their previous
encounters had found her ‘proud and unbending, fully conscious of
her right to rule’ saw for the first time ‘the former Empress simply
as a mother, anxious and weeping’.109
When the family arrived at the station – their cars surrounded
by a mounted escort of Dragoons – they had to walk down the
heavy moist sand of the railway embankment to get to their train,
which had been mocked up with flags and placards proclaiming it
was part of a ‘Red Cross Mission’.110
*
Alexandra could barely manage the walk, nor could she climb up onto the footboard and had to be
‘pulled up with great difficulty and at once fell forward on her hands and knees’. A military escort, headed by Evgeny Kobylinsky, was to
travel with them and their immediate entourage on this train; a
second train was waiting nearby for the remainder of the servants
and the guards.111
When everyone in the Romanov entourage had taken their places,
Kerensky ran up and shouted, ‘They can go!’ and ‘The whole train
immediately shuddered off in the direction of the imperial branch
line’.112 As it did so the quiet and watchful crowd that had gathered as one ‘suddenly stirred themselves, and waved their hands, their
scarves and caps’, in an eerily silent farewell. The sunrise was beautiful, noted Nicholas, as the train headed north in the direction of
Petrograd before swinging south-east in the direction of the Urals;
his attitude to departure as an ordinary civilian from his home of
twenty-two years was as phlegmatic as it had been to his abdication.
‘I will describe to you how we travelled’, Anastasia later wrote
of their journey, in an essay for Sydney Gibbes, in which as usual
she struggled with her English spelling:
* Sources vary on precisely which national flag the train was travelling under.
Some say Japanese, others, including Anna Demidova in her diary, say American.
She clearly talks of Chinese cooks working in the restaurant car and a railway worker eyewitness confirms that the cars were provided by the Chinese-Eastern Railway – a line that operated effectively as an extension of the Trans-Siberian Railway into Manchuria, via Harbin, and out to the Pacific coast at Vladivostok.
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We started in the morning and when we got into the train I
went to sleap, so did all of us. We were very tierd because we
did not sleap the whole night. The first day was hot and very
dusty. At the stations we had to shut our window curtanse that
nobody should see us. Once in the evening I was looking out
we stoped near a little house, but there was no station so we
could look out. A little boy came to my window and asked:
‘Uncle, please give me, if you have got, a newspaper.’ I said: ‘I
am not an uncle but an aunty and have no newspaper.’ At the
first moment I could not understand why did he call me ‘Uncle’
but then I remembered that my hear is cut and I and the soldiers
(which were standing next to me) laugh very much. On the way
many funy things had hapend, and if I shall have time I shall
write to you our travel farther on. Goodbye. Don’t forget me.
Many kisses from us all to you my darling. Your A.113
It was only now, on the train, that the family was finally informed
of the destination.114 ‘And so ended this act of the tragedy, the final episode of the Tsarskoe Selo period’, wrote Valentina Chebotareva
in her diary after they had gone. ‘What’, she wondered, ‘awaits them
in Tobolsk?’115
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N
‘Why are there so many soldiers on this train?’ asked one of the
grand duchesses, as it pulled out of the Alexandrovsky Station. They
were all of course used to being escorted by the military, ‘but the
great number on this occasion excited her surprise’.1 In all, 330 men and 6 officers of the 1st, 2nd and 4th Rifles accompanied the
Romanovs on their journey to Siberia, the 1st occupying the
compartments on either side of the family. Whenever the train
passed through a station the blinds were kept tightly drawn and the
doors locked and it stopped only in sidings at rural halts where there were few, if any, of the curious to ask questions.
Back in Petrograd, when the news got out that the imperial family
had been sent away, there was considerable confusion about where
it was heading for. Talk of the Crimea abounded; others heard that
the train was going west to Mogilev, and out of Russia. ‘This caused
a panic in the Narva suburb of Petrograd’, recalled Robert Crozier
Long:
A crowd of Bolshevik working-men proclaimed that the counter-
revolutionary Government of Kerensky had treacherously sent
the Tsar for safety to Germany, and that the result would be an
immediate invasion with the aim of Restoration.2
Elsewhere rumour was rife that the train was heading all the way
out to Harbin in Manchuria – a destination already becoming a
refuge for White Russians fleeing the revolution.3 Perhaps Kerensky
had this in mind as an ultimate destination, but for now the
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objective was to get the Romanovs beyond the tentacles of Petrograd’s militants.
*
Despite the close proximity of so many guards, chambermaid
Anna Demidova did not find the journey unpleasant. That first day
on the train, as she noted in her diary, it was unbearably hot, but
their compartments were very clean and comfortable and the food
laid on in the restaurant car was surprisingly good, prepared by
Chinese and Armenian cooks of the railway line.4 Alexey and his
mother, who were both exhausted, did not join them, but dined
together in her compartment. Finally at 7.30 in the evening, the
heat still oppressive, they were all allowed off the train to stretch their legs and Anna and the girls even stopped to pick bilberries
and cowberries. But they were all apprehensive about where they
were headed:
It’s hard thinking about where they are taking us. While you’re
on the way there you think less of what lies ahead, but your
heart is heavy when you start to think about how far you are
from your family and if and when you might see them again. I
haven’t seen my sister once in five months.5
But she slept well that night, relieved after two weeks of terrible
uncertainty and very little sleep that she now at least knew their
destination, although the thought of Tobolsk made her heart sink.
Later that day when the train pulled up at a rural halt, she heard
questions being asked of one of the guards by a railway official:
‘Who’s on the train?
‘An American Red Cross Mission.’
‘Then why does no one show themselves and come out of the
wagons?’
‘It’s because they are all very sick, barely alive.’6
Resting in her compartment, Alexandra sat scrupulously noting
down the stations as they passed: Tikhvin – Cherepovets – Shavra
* It has been suggested that Kerensky had considered Tobolsk as a stopgap and that from there he did indeed hope to evacuate the family out to the safety of Japan on the Trans-Siberian Railway via Manchuria.
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– Katen – Chaikovsky – Perm – Kamyshevo – Poklevskaya: aside
from Perm, all obscure way stations in a vast empire that she and
Nicholas had never got to know and from which they were now to
be for ever separated.
Later on, near the River Slyva at Kama, they were allowed off
the train once more for an hour’s walk; they stopped to admire the
view of the beautiful valley of Kungur and the girls picked flowers.
Now more at ease, that evening Anna Demidova played whist with
Dr Botkin, Ilya Tatishchev and Vasily Dolgorukov.7 Another long
hot day followed as they crossed the endless Russian steppe with its
vast fields of ripening grain stretching far into the distance. The
train finally crossed the Urals into western Siberia on the 4th and
rattled on through the big railway junction at Ekaterinburg. Nicholas noticed a distinct chill in the air by the time they pulled up in sight of the landing stage at Tyumen at 11.15 that evening.8
There was no railway line to Tobolsk and it was accessible by
boat only for the brief four months of summer, so the family now
boarded the American-built steamer the
Rus
for the remainder of their journey. They were given no special privileges on board, just
plain hard beds like everyone else; much to the disgust of Anna
Demidova there were no carafes of water in any of the cabins, and
the most primitive washing facilities. She came to the conclusion
that the boat was designed for people who didn’t wash very much.
It took all night to load all the baggage and the escort onto two
additional steamers, the
Kormilets
and the
Tyumen
, and it was not till 6 a.m. on 5 August that the
Rus
finally
set off on the 189-mile (304-km) river journey to Tobolsk.9
The low-lying river banks on either side were thinly populated
and had little to distinguish them. Dr Botkin’s son Gleb later recalled
‘the same brown fields, the same groves of sickly looking birches.
Not a hill, not the slightest elevation of any sort to break the
monotony of the landscape.’10 Thirty-six hours later and now on
the wider waters of the Tobol River, the boat entered the Irtysh – ‘a little sluggish stream that drains, or partially drains one of the great marshes of eastern Siberia’ – which brought them into Tobolsk.11
Having heard of the former tsar’s imminent arrival, many gathered
to catch sight of him. ‘Literally the entire town, I am not
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exaggerating, spilled out on to the shore’, recalled Commissar
Makarov of the guard.12 The church bells were ringing for the Feast
of the Transfiguration and as the
Rus
drew up at the landing stage at 6.30 on the evening of 6 August, Nicholas recalled that the
family’s first sight was ‘the view of the cathedral and the houses on the hill’.13 Below, on the banks of the Irtysh, Tobolsk itself was a
jumble of low wooden houses and dirt roads built on treeless marsh-
land. It was significant for two things: as a former place of exile –
Fedor Dostoevsky had spent ten days in a cell here in transit to