Reisner, Larissa, 97
Renault works: only moderate control
operated by factory committee, 163;
strikes, 53; workers demand Red
Guard, 100; young workers on
factory committee, 197
Renev, anarchist from Baltic shipyard,
235
Respirator factory: committee demands
sequestration, 179; workers’ view of
factory committees, 204
Revolution of 1905, 23,43, 73,92,96,142,
253; dramatic development of
shopfloor organisations, 57—8;
Revolution continued
emergence of trade unions out of,
103; temporary shift towards more
liberal industrial relations policy,
37-8
Revolution of 1917, see February
Revolution; October Revolution
Riga: evacuation offactories from, 22;
German occupation of, 171
Robert Krug engineering works: conflict
between factory committee and
technical staff, 234; factory takeover,
237
Romanov dynasty, overthrow of, 54,256
Rosenberg, William, 140, 145
Rozenkrantz works: disputes over wage
classifications, 128; extent of
workers’control, 163; factory
committee seeks fuel supplies, 147;
factory committee shares raw
materials, 148; few strikes at, 53;
stokers form union, 106; white collar
workers on works committee, 134
workers’ militia, 98
Rubtsov, V.D., hi, 185
Russian-Asiatic bank, 7
Russkaya Volya, seizure by printworkers,
143
Russo-Baltic works: factory committee
phases out female employment, 176;
workers condemn evacuation plans,
173 . .
Russo-Belgian metallurgical company,
workers check accounts, 176
Ryabushinskii, P.P., i8i,297n.66
Ryazanov, D.B., 112, 158, 185, 186, 189,
220, 249
Rykatkin, V.I., 179
Rykatkin engineering works,
sequestration of, 179
Rykov, A.I., 239, 241
sabotage by employers, 151,172,180,
237, 238, 258; Bolsheviks see
economic disruption as direct result
of, 158,167,211; factory committees
on guard against, 148, 175, 179, 182
safety standards, factory, 41, 78,85, 237
St Petersburg, 4; demographic structure
of, 6, 267 n.5; industrialists and
financiers of, 75-6; residential
mixing of social classes, 12—13 ;see
also Petrograd
Sampsionevskaya Mill, women workers,
53. 193. >94
Schmidt, V.,68,111, 112,158,174, 189,
213
Schwarz, Solomon, 84, 182
‘scientific management’, 31,39
searching of workers, 38,91
Second International, 263, 264
sectionalism, 2,128-9, >34
‘self-management’, workers’, 149,160,
167, 223, 259-60,306 n.7;
Bolsheviks’ approach to, 228-9;
CCFC Instructions aspire to, 212,
214; distinction between workers’
control and, 240-1; experiments in,
177—8, 237; factory committees and,
227-8, 229; Putilov works committee
on, 81; repudiated by
representatives of Artillery
enterprises, 62-3; resolution passed
at naval enterprises conference
preferring workers’ control to, 182;
see also factory takeovers
Selitskii, V.I., 139
Semenov engineering works, closure of,
>76
semi-skilled workers, 31—2,32—3,47
sequestration offactories, 8,178, 179,
236.239.240
Sestroretsk works: activities offactory
committee, 85,93,96,148, 174;
election of committee, 205—6; far-
reaching control of committee, 163;
number of workers, 8; political
composition offactory committee,
162; starosty at, 58,61; workers blame
industrial chaos on disorganisation
of capitalist system, 172-3; works
committee claims main task is to
maintain production, 147
SFWO, see Society of Factory and Works
Owners
Shaposhnikov tobacco works, wages at,
117
Shatov, Bill, 157, 221
shift systems, 43
shipbuilding industries, effects of
demobilisation of industry on, 243
Shkaratan, O.I., 21,22, 23,244
Shlyapnikov, A., 107, 108, 125, 128-9,
158,220,249
shop stewards’ committees, 58-9,81-2,
89,91,93; sluzhashchie create, 135;
supplementary to factory
committees, 81; in West, 59; see also
starosty
shop assistants, 40, 136; strike, 118; union
of, 104; working hours, 67
shopowners, 6,22
sickness benefit, 42-3
Siemens-Halske works: co-existence of
factory and stewards’ committees,
58; payment of workers serving in
militia, 99; strikes, 53; worker fired
for drunkenness, 93
Siemens-Schukert works: conditions of
work, 41; factory committee blocks
closure plans, 175; payment of
workers serving in militia, 99;
redundancies, 246; strikes, 53
six-hour day, demand for, 135,198
Sixth Bolshevik Party Congress, 159
skill divisions, 27-33,127-8,27on.io2;
see also semi-skilled workers; skilled
workers; unskilled workers
skilled workers, 28-30, 31-3, 34, 35,44,
45,94,131, 244; dominant in labour
organisations, 60,91,190-1,255;
wages, 47, 70-1, 129,130; see also
‘cadre’ workers; craft unions;
masterovye
Skobelev, M.I., 170-1; see also Skobelev
circulars
Skobelev circulars, 171, 180-1
Skorokhod shoe factory, 7,25; demand
for eight-hour day, 65,69; far-
reaching control offactory
committee, 163; management stop
payment of committee members,
181; minimum rates achieved by
militant action, 68-g, 279 n.83;
political complexion offactory
committee, 160-1,162; re-election of
factory committee, 205; relations
between workers and sluzhashchie,
137; workers insist on dismissal of
administrative personnel, 55
Skorokhodov, A.K., 161, 294^92
Skrypnik, N.A., 112,158,189,211,216,
219
sluzhashchie, 6,40; Central Council of
starostas of Factory Sluzhashchie, 135—
6,137; involved in running factories,
237,240; relations with other
workers, 134-5, J36-8,233-4, 273
n.23; serving on factory
committees, 134,135; strikes, 137,
235-6; unions, 136, 183
Smirnov, Yakov, 94
Snaryadosoyuz, 7
SNKh S.R. (Northern Region economic
council), 224, 232, 238, 239, 240,
243,248,250
socialism, transition to: Bolshevik policy
on, 223,228-9, 259, 261-4; CCFC
policy on, 211,214-16,224, 228,
261; Industrialist group’s view of,
132-3
Socialist Revolutionaries (SRs): on All-
Russian Council of Workers’
Control, 213; dislike of workers’
control, 151-2; factories supporting,
52,53,89; influence in factory
committee movement, 58,61,66,81,
84,90,96, 100,114,160-3, :64,178,
198,211; influence in trade unions,
104-5, 1 !4>1 ■Si 187,217,2870.50;
Left SRs, 51,101,114, 152, 166; on
Petrograd Soviet, 77; Right SRs,
114; SR Maximalists, 115, 152, 167;
support for state control of economy,
151-2,153-4,258; onVTsIK
commission on workers’ control,
210; zemlyachestvos swing to
Bolsheviks from, 197
Socialist Union ofWorking Youth
(SUWY), 197
Society of Factory and Works Owners
(SFWO): in agreement with
Provisional Government’s labour
policy, 66-7, 76-7; attitude to
factory committees, 78-9, 180, 231;
complains of workers’ ‘excessive’
demands, 169; founding, structure
and tasks, 75-6; proposals for
minimum wage, 73; and wage
contracts, 108,121-8, 130,131,132,
-
n. 100; and white collar
workers, 135, 137
Soikin print works, factory takeover,
238-9
Sokolov, I.N., 124
soldiers: form zemlyachestvos, 15,197; join
insurgents in October 1917,51,54;
sent to factories to do unpopular
jobs, 49
Somov, General, 41
Sormovo, conclusion of collective wage
contracts in, 120
Southern Russia: closure of factories, 168;
lockouts, 169; mineowners call on
Ministry of Labour, 170
soviets, 5,87, 154-5, 162,213; calls for
transfer of power to, 112,113,114,
126,149,157
sovnarkhozy, see Councils of National
Economy
Spain: success of anarchism in, 291 n.18;
syndicalist collectivisation of
industry, 306 n.7
Spasskii, A.V., 55
Special Commission on Defence, 147, 171
SRs, see Socialist Revolutionaries
starosty, 33, 119, 256; attempts to revive,
58; origins of, 57; women as, 194; see
also shop stewards committees
starshie, 39,254
starvation, 48,88,247, 248, 251 \ see also
food
‘state capitalism’, 223—4,229
state control of economy, 155-6,157-8,
165, 223-9, 258-9, 261-2, 2940.115
State Food Committee, 86
State Papers print works: ‘court of
honour’ at, 94; size of, 4
state sector, 7-8,9,10, 239; concern with
workplace democracy, 182;
evacuation plans, 171; social
insurance in, 42-3; strikes in, 53;
wages, 46, 73,158, 225; workers’
control in, 59-64, 149, 163, 182,
256
‘state workers’ control’, concept of, 155,
'57.158-9,225,294 n. 115
steel production, 145
Stein company, workers’ resolution
calling for workers’ control of
production, 165
Stepanov, Z.V., 116,117,139,164
Stetskaya, Olga, 96
stewards, see shop-stewards; starosty
stokers’ union, 106-7
strikes, 21, 37,38, 253; Bolshevik policy
on, 218, 250; as chief weapon of trade
unions, 187; over collective wage
contracts, 108,121,123,126,130,
137; on ‘dignity’ issues, 40-1;
problems ofdistinguishing between
‘economic’ and ‘political’, 49; during
War, 48-53; widespread in summer
1917,116—19; seealso ‘go-slows’;
working to rule
Strumilin, S.G., 32,35,43,44,47,87,
116, 190, 248
Sukhanov, N.N., 94,95
Supreme Council of National Economy
(VSNKh), 209, 212, 213, 224-5,
227,237,238,239,241; seealso
Councils of National Economy
SUWY, see Socialist Union ofWorking
Youth
Svetlana factory, women workers, 192
syndicalists, anarcho-syndicalists:
influence in factory committees, 84,
143,144,150,157,188; influence in
Petrograd labour movement, 142—3,
145, 258; influence in trade unions,
111,217; and movement for workers’
control, 140,141,152, 167, 211,212;
opposed to subordination offactory
committees to trade unions, 220-1;
see also anarchists
syndicates, 7, 154
tailors, avoidance of conscription, 22
Tamsin, worker at Lebedev factory, 178
‘tariffs’, see collective wage contracts
Taylor, F.W., 31
Taylorism, 133,250
technical staff, see sluzhashchie-,
technicians’ union
technicians’ union, 183
technology, advanced: effect on workers
of introduction of, 30-1, 254; in
Petrograd industry, 8-9, 27
temperance campaigns, 92
Tentelevskii chemical works: control of
hiring and firing by factory
committee, 65; cooperation between
workers and salaried employees,
135; workforce insist on dismissal of
administrative personnel, 55
Terent'ev, anarchist delegate to factory
committee conference, 235
textile industry: employers’ attitude to
workers’ control, 231; factory
takeovers, 235; size of mills, 12;
working hours and conditions, 42,
43,44,67; see also textile workers
textile workers, 10, 12,29,32-3,34-5,40,
160; proletarianisation of, 16,18, 19,
20; standard ofliving, 44-5; strikes,
53; wages, 46,48,69-70, 72, 131,
133; women workers, 23-4, 29,48,
I04> '33. '93. '94. 235—6; seealso
textile industry; textile workers’
union
textile workers’ union, 104, 105,194, 200,
201,216,217; political influence
within, 114
theatre, working class, 97
theatre employees’ union, excluded from
PCTU, 111
theft, 89,91,94; see also searching of
workers
Thornton textile mill, militancy of
women workers, 55
Tik, K.P., 130
Tikhanov, A., 33
Timofeev, P., 16,30,41
Tkach, 26, 114
tobacco workers: union membership,
105; wage differentials, 131
‘toiling people’, 152, 166,167
Torgovo-Promyshlennaya Gazeta, 57,168,
181
Touraine, Alain, 27—8
Trade and Industry, Ministry of: on
employers’ reaction to economic
crisis, 169; Labour Department of,
76, 78; relations with Ministry of
Labour, 171; survey on absenteeism,
89
trade union conferences, 67-8, 107, 159,
187,194, 200,216,217,220,223,230
trade unions: ‘bureaucratisation’ of, 202,
203,207,208,257; and collective
wage contracts, 120-34; compared
with factory committees, 203-4; and
Decree on Workers’ Control, 210,
212,214; democracy in, 200-3;
district organisation of, 84,202-3;
emergence and growth of, 38,57,59,
64,103-9,256-7; and evacuation of
industry, 174; and labour discipline,
73,93,247,250; Lenin’s view of, 226,
259; membership, 105-6,200-1; and
‘new’workers, 196,199-200; and
organisation of food supply, 87;
political composition of, 109-16; re-
assessment of role after October
Revolution, 216-19,251;
relationship with factory
committees, 185-9, 2I3> 219-23,
260; SFWO recognition of, 76; and
unemployment, 169; women
members, 193—4; and workers’
clubs, 96; see also craft unions;
industrial unions; Petrograd
Council of Trade Unions; trade
union conferences
transport system: demand for
militarisation of, 171; disruption of,
9,86,145,172; SNKH S.R.
responsible for organising, 224; see
also transport workers
transport workers, 6,40,172
Triangle rubber-works: activities of
factory committee, 148,178,260;
closure of, 244; composition of works
committee, 134, 135,161; expulsion
offoremen, 55; labour discipline, 93,
94; peasant workers, 15; rivalry
between factory and stewards’
committees, 58; wages, 279 n.83;
women workers, 25,194; workers’
control, 165,231
Troshin, anarchist militant at
Kozhenikov textile mill, 235
Trotsky, Leon, 84,112, 159,185,283
n.90,287n.43,307 n. 13
tsarist autocracy: industrial relations
under, 37-8; overthrow of, 54, 256
Tseitlin, D.A., 235, 236
Tsvetkova, M., 195
turners, 28,29,32
typesetters, 33, 73,115,130, 254
unemployment: discontent caused by,
246-7; high level of, 168-9, 244;
measures to reduce, 68,113;
organisations, 247; and women
workers, 195; unemployment
benefit, 43,247; see also redundancies
Union of the Russian People, 246
Union of Socialist Working Youth, 97
Union of Workers for the Defence of
Their Rights, 109
unskilled workers, 30,32,33,244; part
played in labour movement, 122,
190,196-7,199,207; wages, 70-2,
-
30,133; see also chemorahochie
Urals metallurgical industry: factory
seizures, i8o;mineowners’ labour
relations policy, 74, 76,169; foreign
workers, 22
U.S.A.: labour movement, 106, no, 142;
‘scientific management’ in, 31; size
offactories, 12
Ustitskii, A.A., 232
Vankov, S.N., 7
Vasilevski district, 12; district council of
factory committees, 83,165;
Economic Council of Workers of,
220; soviet, 196; workers’ club, 96
Vasko, 167
Vdovin, A. I., 244
Veinberg, G., 216, 219, 220, 241
Volin, 143,144,157,188
Volkov, I., 111,112
Volodarskii, V., 123
Voronkov, 220
Voskov, Sestroretsk factory delegate to
factory committee conference, 188
vote at 18, demand for, 197-8
VSNKh, see Supreme Council of National
Economy
VTsIK, see Central Executive Committee
of the Soviets
Vulcan works: administration threatens
to halve factory committee’s wages,
181; committees seek fuel supplies,
147; factory committee blocks
closure plans, 175; gives loan to
Kersten factory, 236; sequestration
of, 239; swing to Bolshevik Party, 52
Vyborg district, 12, 13, ioijcouncilof
factory committees, 83, 220;
metalworkers’ union, 104; soviet,
101; workers’ militia, 98,99
Vyborg spinning mill: director ‘carted
out’, 193; wage rates, 72; working
hours, 67
wage differentials, 33,46-7, 70-2, 120-1,
129-31,250,257
wages: after February Revolution, 68-73,
116-17; before War, 44; and
conciliation chambers, 77; during
War, 45-8; factory committees’
regulation of, 63,64,68, 70, 72,84;
fixed by foremen, 39; management
resistance to demands for higher,
69-70; minimum, 68,69, 72—3,135,
250; Russian, compared with other
countries, 274 n.51; stewards’
committees and, 58,82, 135; strikes
for higher, 51, 70, 116, 118—19;
women’s, 47—8,69-70, 71, 72; see also
collective wage contracts; equal pay;
piece-rates; wage differentials
Wagon Construction works, strikes at, 53
War, 1914-18; blamed for economic
chaos, 151; effect on Petrograd
industry, 8-9,12,31; effect on prices,
45; efTect on wages, 45-8; effect on
workforce, 10, 21-2,23,25,31-2,44,
60, 254; shutdown of war
production, 242-5,259; and
suppression of trade unions, 103
War Industries Committee, 74-5,148,
177,179; see also Workers’ Group
War Industries syndicate, 7
watchmakers’ union, 107
Weber, Max, 206
welders’ union, 107
Westinghouse works, resolution on
workers’ control, 165
white collar workers, see sluzhashchie
Whitleyism, 120
Winter Palace, storming of, 114
‘Wobblies’, 142,157
women workers: age of, 25-6; clothing,
45; discrimination against, 29,175-
6, 195, 254; education and literacy,
34-5.95-6,97; equal pay for, 70,
123,133, 135,194; and labour
discipline, 91,94; married women,
-
7,92; numbers of, 21-2,23-5, 33;
participation in labour movement,
:92_5> 199.207,253; serving on
militias, 98; and strike activity, 53,
118; wages, 47-8,69-70, 71, 72;
working conditions, 42; working
hours, 37,44,67,170
woodturners’ union, 68,108,113,114,
119> '32, 133
woodworking industries, 10,67,243;
union membership, 105,200; wage
differentials, 131 \see also
woodturners’ union
work-books, 249
workers, see factory workers
workers’ control of production: attempts
to revive more radical forms of,
during Civil War, 305 n. 102;
formulations used in workers’
resolutions on, 165-7;
‘informational’ or ‘responsible’, 63,
183-4; originsofidea,61, I42;
phases in development of, 149;
radical concept of, after Bolshevik
seizure of power, 214-15,230-42; as
reflection of workers’ concern to
realise gains of February
Revolution, 182; as response to
economic chaos, 145-9, 151, 179,
182,242, 258; syndicalist element in
movementfor, 140,141,142-3;
theory of, 139—41; Western
interpretation of, 141, 149-50; see
also Decree on Workers’ Control;
distribution; finances; ‘state
workers’ control’; and also under
anarchists; Bolsheviks; Mensheviks;
Socialist Revolutionaries
workers’ directorates, 236,238
Workers Group ofWar Industries
Committee, 49,52,53,58,62, 77,
110,170, 191
Workers of Russia’s Manchester, 109
Workers Voice group, 109
working class, Russian: Marxist notion
of, 166, 253,263; ‘peasant’ character
of, 14; social differentiation within,
36; working class unity, 129, 134,
255; see also class consciousness
working conditions, 41-4,48,58-9,82,
121, 188,240; see also accidents;
hygiene; safety standards
working hours, 37,43-4,88, 121,133,
250; see also eight-hour day; overtime
working; six-hour day
working-to-rule, 275 n.88
writers’ union, excluded from PCTU, 111
Yakovlev, I., 135, 136
‘Years ofReaction’, 43,58, 77, 103
young workers: conscription of, 21; join
Red Army, 244; legislation of, 37;
and night work, 44, 170; numbers of,
25-6; participation in labour
movement, 52-3,197-8,255;
problems of discipline among, 91;
proletarianisation of, 254; and
redundancies, 242; wages, 72; see also
youth movement
youth movement, 25,97,197
Yugoslavia, workers’ self-management
in, 306 n. 7
Y uzevich, 115
Zaks, 210
zemlyachestvos, 15, 197
Zemo Pravdy, 114
Zhivotov, 222
Zholnerovich, I.F., 114
Zhuchaevich, V.V., 56
Zhuk, I., 144, 152, 157,167
Zinoviev, G., 155,217-18
Zubatov, S.V., 37,109
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