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
Omsk in 1850 – and as the haunt of mosquitoes ‘said to be of a size
and a ferocity unequalled elsewhere’.14 Malaria haunted the miasmas
of the marshy forests that stretched for miles around the town.
A small, eighteenth-century kremlin of white stone – the only
one of its kind in Siberia – dominated the view from the top of a
steep bluff inland, and was pretty much all that Tobolsk had to offer the adventurous tourist. Its major attraction was the former bishop’s palace – now a courthouse – the St Sophia Cathedral, and a museum
containing ‘large collections of old instruments of torture: branding tools, used to stamp the foreheads and cheeks of prisoners, instruments for pulling out the center bone of the nose [a favourite of
torturers during the reign of Boris Godunov], painful shackles, and
other horrible devices’.15 Churches dominated the town: twenty had
been built to serve a population of around 23,000 people. Kerensky
knew Tobolsk, having visited it in 1910, and had chosen it for the
Romanovs, not as a lesson in the iniquities of tsarism, but because
it had no industrial proletariat, no railway depots or factories seething with political activists, and because for eight months of the year it was ‘shut off from the world . . . as remote from human association
as the moon’.16 The Siberian winter was a better policeman than
any prison; as Olga was soon to discover: ‘Tobolsk is a forgotten
corner when the river freezes.’17
While the family waited on board the
Rus
,
Kobylinsky, Dolgorukov, Tatishchev and Makarov went ahead to inspect the family’s accommodation. The former Governor’s House – hastily rechristened
Freedom House – was on the also appropriately revolutionary
Freedom Street. It was one of the two best buildings that the town
had to offer, and had the advantage of surrounding boardwalks to
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spare the pedestrian from the quagmire of the intractable autumn
mud. But two hours later the three men came back with grim faces:
the ‘dirty, boarded-up, smelly house’ had ‘terrible bathrooms and
toilets’ and in its present state, was totally uninhabitable.18 Until three days previously it had been used as a barracks by deputies of
the local Workers’ and Soldiers’ soviet, who had left it filthy and
practically stripped of furniture. There were no chairs, tables, washstands, or even carpets. The double winter windows were grimy and
had not been removed and there was rubbish everywhere. Forced
to remain on board the
Rus
and in order to pass the time while waiting for the house to be got ready, the Romanov family took
some excursions on the river and made the most of any opportunity
to get off and walk.
Anna Demidova had meanwhile gone on ahead to help prepare
the house and had been deeply depressed at the sight of its derelict
interior. Soon she was trudging round town with Nastenka
Hendrikova and Vasily Dolgorukov in search of household supplies:
jugs and ewers for the washstands, buckets, tins of paint, flat-irons, inkpots, candles, writing paper, wool and thread for darning, as
well as a much needed laundress to handle all the family’s washing.
She stopped to admire the fur coats and warm
valenki
on sale in the market – all at horribly inflated prices, deliberately raised in
the knowledge of the imperial entourage’s arrival in town. But
otherwise ‘everything here is very primitive’ she noted in her diary.19
Makarov meanwhile had been hunting for a piano for Alexandra
and the grand duchesses as well as additional furniture, while a team of upholsterers, carpenters, painters and electricians was gathered
together – some of them German prisoners of war – to refurbish
the house at speed.20 Most urgent were repairs to the inadequate
plumbing, but there was also considerable concern about where
exactly the authorities would put all the staff who could not be
accommodated in the Governor’s House.
‘The family is bearing everything with great sangfroid and
courage’, wrote Dolgorukov. ‘They apparently adapt to circum-
stances easily, or at least pretend to, and do not complain after all their previous luxury.’21 Finally, on Sunday 13 August the house was
ready. Only one carriage was laid on to take Alexandra from the
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ON FREEDOM STREET
ship to the house, accompanied by Tatiana; the rest of the family,
servants and entourage walked the mile (1½ km) into town. When
they entered, the whole of the ground floor was a mass of luggage
and packing cases; nevertheless they were allowed an impromptu
Sunday service conducted by the local priest, who went round
blessing the rooms with holy water.22
Although their packing had been hurried, Alexandra had ensured
that they had brought with them not just their personal clothing
and possessions but also many of their favourite pictures, silver
tableware, monogrammed china, table linen, a phonograph and
records, their cameras and photographic equipment, favourite books,
a trunkful of photograph albums, and another containing all
Nicholas’s letters and diaries (which he had not destroyed). The
girls had left behind all their beautiful court dresses and their large picture hats, bringing only simple linen suits, white summer dresses, skirts, blouses, sunhats and, as instructed, plenty of warm cardigans, scarves and hats, fur jackets and thick felt coats.
The family was accommodated on the first floor of the two-storey
house, with the girls sharing a corner bedroom facing the street.
Alexey had another with his
dyadka
Nagorny in a small room next to it.23
*
There was a bedroom for Nicholas and Alexandra, as well as a study for him and a private drawing room for her, a bathroom
and toilet. A large upstairs ballroom opposite Nicholas’s study would be used for church services, furnished with the field chapel that the family had brought with them from Tsarskoe Selo and with
Alexandra’s lace bedspread serving as an altar cloth. Services would
be conducted by the priest and deacon from the nearby
Blagoveshchensky Church, assisted by four nuns from the Ivanovsky
Convent outside town, who came to sing the liturgy (and also brought
welcome gifts of eggs and milk).24
With a typical lack of complaint the four sisters immediately set
about making the most of their new surroundings by ensuring that
* Alexey’s other
dyadka
, Derevenko, did not travel with them to Tobolsk; his behaviour towards the boy had changed since the revolution. He had become harsh and churlish in his manner towards Alexey and was no longer perceived as the kind and trustworthy carer he had once been.
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the room they shared was as congenial as possible. It had a tradi-
tional, tall white-tiled stove in the corner, a small sofa scattered with cushions, a table which was soon stacked with books, pens and
writing paper. Simple white bentwood chairs stood at the foot of
each of the girls’ four modest campbeds, brought from the Alexander
Palace and surrounded with screens covered with colourful throws
and shawls, which the girls also draped on the bare and draughty
white walls to create a sense of warmth and intimacy. On their tiny
bedside tables the sisters crammed their favourite knick-knacks, icons and photographs. Each girl also fixed many pictures on the wall
above her own bedhead: the younger two opting for fond reminders
of the Tsar’s Escort in their Cossack uniforms at Mogilev and other
friends, relatives, pets and much-loved wounded officers, while their older sisters’ more sober tastes focused on religious images and a
large photograph of their parents on board the
Shtandart.
25
The dining room was located downstairs, as was a room occupied
by Pierre Gilliard where he also gave the children lessons. Later
on, shared rooms downstairs were allocated to the maids Aleksandra
Tegleva and Elizaveta Ersberg who looked after the children, Mariya
Tutelberg who attended Alexandra, and other staff including
Nicholas’s valet Terenty Chemodurov. For now the rest of the
entourage and servants were housed in the even more ill-prepared
and uncongenial Kornilov House opposite: Nastenka Hendrikova
and her maid Paulina Mezhants, Dr Botkin (who in mid-September
was joined by his two children, Gleb and Tatiana), Dr Derevenko
and his family, Tatishchev and Dolgorukov. Here, occupying crudely
partitioned cubicles in a large draughty hall, and with very little
concession to privacy, the women were later joined by Trina
Schneider and her two maids Katya and Masha and another tutor,
Klavidya Bitner.26 Although the family remained under house arrest
with only the yard outside to move about in and occasional excur-
sions to the nearby church, the entourage and servants were, for
the time being, allowed to go about freely in town.
*
The weather remained hot and sunny in Tobolsk well into September,
but the family had been deeply disconsolate to see that the ‘so-called
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garden’ was a ‘nasty little vegetable patch’ that would only grow a
few cabbages and swedes at best.27 In addition, at the back of the
house were a lean-to greenhouse, woodshed and barn, and a few
spindly birch trees. There were no flowers or shrubs at all. The
only concession for the children was a couple of swings. Nicholas
was bitterly disappointed that the garden offered no scope for the
physical labour and recreation that he craved, though within days
he had chopped down a dry pine tree and was allowed to put up
his horizontal bar on which he did his daily chin- ups. To the side
of the house the authorities had hastily created a square dusty
courtyard for recreation – twice a day, between 11 and 12 and after
lunch until dusk – in a fenced-off part of the unpaved road.
The uncertainties of the family’s new environment were very
quickly compounded by the increasingly erratic arrival of letters.
‘My dear Katya,’ Anastasia wrote within days of their arrival, ‘I am
writing this letter to you being certain that you will never get it . . .
It is so sad to be unable to hear from you. We often, often think
and talk of you . . . Have you received my letter of 31 July and the
card that I wrote long ago?’ She was now numbering her letters in
hopes of keeping track of them. But her thoughts were already
turning to happier times: ‘Ask Victor whether he still remembers
last autumn. I am now remembering a lot . . . everything good, of
course!’ Enclosing a red petal from a poppy in the garden she
apologized for having so little to say: ‘I cannot write anything interesting . . . we spend our time monotonously.’28
The monotony was, however, broken soon after by unexpected
news: Olga’s friend Rita Khitrovo had arrived in Tobolsk anxious to
see the family and pass on to them some fifteen or so letters (which
she had hidden in a travelling pillow), as well as gifts of chocolate, perfume, sweets and biscuits, and icons sent by various friends.29
The highly-strung and excitable twenty-two-year-old, whose ingen-
uousness and devotion to Olga – to the point of hero worship – were
equalled only by her fearlessness, had taken it upon herself to make
the journey without any thought of the possible repercussions.
Refused admittance to the Governor’s House Rita went to the
Kornilov House opposite to see Nastenka Hendrikova, from where
she waved and blew kisses to the four sisters who had come out on
the balcony to try and catch a glimpse of her.
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But her arrival alarmed the authorities. During her journey she
had sent postcards home that had been intercepted and interpreted
as suspicious. It was thought she might be colluding with Anna
Vyrubova and other monarchist friends in a conspiracy to rescue
the family, rumours of a nebulous plot by ‘Cossack officers’ having
already been circulating in Tobolsk. Soon afterwards, on the orders
of Kerensky, men came to inspect all the things Rita had brought
for the family. The letters were checked and deemed harmless,
but she was put under arrest and sent back to Moscow for ques-
tioning. Hearing the story later, Valentina Chebotareva thought a
‘mountain had been made out of a molehill’, for Rita insisted that
her journey had been undertaken entirely out of a personal desire
to see the family. But she had, unwittingly, caused them harm: ‘an
obliging fool is more dangerous than an enemy’, as Valentina
observed.30 Commissar Makarov was recalled by the Provisional
Government and replaced by a new man, Vasily Pankratov.
Pankratov was an archetypal, old-school revolutionary. The son
of peasants, he had been active in the extremist
Narodnaya Volya
[People’s Will] movement of the 1880s and in 1884 had been
sentenced to death for killing a gendarme in Kiev. It was only his
youth that had saved him from the gallows; instead he served four-