This book explores the impact of the 1917 Revolution on factory life


Rashin, Sostav fab. zav. prol., pp. 19, 21



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Source: Rashin, Sostav fab. zav. prol., pp. 19, 21.

peasant to overcome his rustic habits of work, the instinctive rhythm
of hard and slack work, the dislike of close routine and his longing for
the freedom of the outdoors.65 For a young worker, however, it
certainly would have taken far less time. One must therefore be
cautious in interpreting the data.

In 1908 a survey of 5,720 metalworkers showed that 28% had


worked less than two years in industry; 34% between two and five
years and 39% five or more years. In the large factories with a
workforce of more than a thousand, however, the proportion of
workers with five or more years of service rose to 53% P6 These figures
suggest that a majority of workers were new to industry, yet this need
not mean that the labour force was obviously ‘peasant’ in character.
We know that it took very little time for some peasants to submit to
the cultural pressures of town life and factory work. In view of this,
Soviet historians may well be right to allow only five years as the
average period it would take a worker to become acculturated to
industrial and urban life, but the problem is very under-researched.

The preceding review of data on land-ownership and second-


generation workers clearly reveals that a process of proletarianisation
was taking place among the workers of St Petersburg. The proportion
of ‘cadre’ workers in the workforce was increasing, owing to the
decay of ties with the land and the growing number of hereditary
workers. It is, however, more difficult to try to quantify the proportion
of‘cadre’ workers on the eve of the war. The data on land-ownership

and sending money to the countryside suggest that, at most, a third of
workers had real economic links with peasant society, but these were
not the sum of‘peasant workers’. In addition, there were peasants
who had only just arrived in industry and who would soon lose
contact with the countryside, but who had not yet acclimatised to
factory life. In the five years up to 1914, nearly 85,000 workers entered
the factories of the capital, so that on the eve of the war about
one-third of the total factory workforce had entered industry within
the previous five years.67 One can perhaps hazard that in 1914,
‘peasant workers’ and new workers (not all of whom were peasants)
together comprised nearly half the factory workforce. Cadre workers,
therefore, i.e. those who had severed their ties with peasant society
and who had considerable industrial and urban experience, were
probably in a slight majority.

The war led to a decline in the proportion of‘cadre’ workers in the


industrial workforce of the capital. This was caused partly by
conscription, and partly by the massive influx of new workers into the
factories. Throughout Russian industry about 400,000 to 500,000 (or
20% to 25% of the 1914 workforce) were conscripted into the army.68
In Petrograd the proportion was much less, since workers there were
needed to produce for the war effort. Leiberov and Shkaratan
estimate that about 40,000 industrial workers in Petrograd were
conscripted — or 17% of the 1914 workforce.69 Those conscripted were
mainly young workers without a great deal of experience of industry.
Fully-proletarianised ‘cadre’ workers usually had some skill and so
were less affected, since their skills were in desperately short supply.
In later mobilisations, however, known militants and strike leaders
were drafted into the army as punishment for participation in
industrial and political protest. Leiberov and Shkaratan estimate that
as many as 6,000 workers may have been conscripted on political
grounds.70 They conclude, nevertheless, that the ‘cadre’ proletariat
was preserved during the war. The proportion of ‘cadres’ within the
workforce was reduced not so much by conscription, as by the influx
of new workers caused by the wartime expansion of production.
Between 1914 and 1917 the workforce of Petrograd grew by 150,000;
making allowance for the 40,000 who were conscripted, this means
that some 190,000 workers must have entered industry. These
comprised four main groups: male and female peasants; working-
class women and youth; rural artisans and urban petit-bourgeois
(meshchane); and evacuees. About 68,200 women came into Petrograd
industry during the war, bringing the total number of women workers




to 129,800 by 1917. If one assumes that the 31,800 workers who were
under the age of eighteen in 1917 had entered industry during the
war, then the total number of female and young recruits was about
100,000.71 Many of these may have been from working-class families
where the male breadwinner — husband, father or brother - had been
sent to the Front, and was thus no longer able to support the family. A
majority, however, were almost certainly from the countryside.
Although there are no statistics on the social origin of newcomers to
industry, it has been estimated that between one-half and three-
quarters of the newcomers were from the peasantry.72 About 25,000
to 30,000 recruits to Petrograd industry were drawn from the rural
and urban petit-bourgeoisie.73 When the war broke out, many small
traders, shopkeepers, landlords, porters, domestic servants, artists
and others took jobs in munitions factories in order to escape
conscription. A check on reservists at the Putilov works in August
1917 led to the ‘voluntary’ departure of 2,000 workers, described as
‘book-keepers, shop-owners, tailors, artists, jewellers, corn-
chandlers, coopers, landlords, and cafe-owners’.74 There were var-
ious jingles about such workers which were current in the factories
during the war:

Once he was a yardkeeper

sweeping footpaths,

Now he’s in the factory

making shrapnel.75

Leiberov and Shkaratan estimate that such workers comprised 5% to


7% of the factory workforce in Petrograd.76

Between 40,000 and 50,000 recruits were workers evacuated from


the Baltic provinces and Western parts of Russia. Some twenty
factories were evacuated from Riga — with a combined workforce of
over 6,000 — and about twenty-five from Lithuania.77 In addition,
many Polish workers were removed to the capital. There were around

  1. Poles at Putilov in 1917. Relatively few Chinese, Korean,
    Central Asian or Persian workers came to Petrograd, although scores
    of thousands were drafted into the mines of the Donbass, Urals and
    Siberia, but there were several hundred in the state enterprises of the
    capital.78 If the 1918 industrial census is reliable for 1917, then 15.8%
    of the factory labour force in Petrograd were non-Russians in 1917,
    though by no means all of these had come to the capital during war.
    The largest group were Poles (who comprised 5.8% of the total




labour force),followed by Latvians and Lithuanians (2.6%), Finns
(2.3%), Germans (0.5%), Jews (0.3%) etc.79

Leiberov and Shkaratan conclude that if one subtracts the 190,000


workers who came into industry during the war from the total factory
workforce in 1917, one is left with the number of‘cadre’ workers —
between 200,000 and 220,000 (assuming that most evacuees were
‘cadre’ workers). This leads them to conclude that a majority of the
factory workforce in Petrograd in 1917 - 50% to 52% - were ‘cadres’.
But this assumes that by 1917 all those workers who had been
working in industry in 1914 were ‘cadres’. This seems an un-
warranted assumption, in view of the fact that at least 40% of the
workforce in 1914 had either less than five years’ experience in
industry or were peasant workers. Making some allowance for this,
therefore, it is likely that by 1917 ‘cadres’ no longer comprised a slight
majority of the workforce, as they had done in 1914, but had shrunk to
perhaps as little as 40% of the total workforce.80

Sexual and age divisions

By January 1917 129,800 women worked in the factories of the


capital.81 This compared to 83,000 domestic servants, mostly women,
who worked in dire conditions for shockingly low wages.82 Perhaps

  1. women worked in offices and similar establishments, and a
    similar number worked in shops and in the wholesale and retail
    trade.83 Other women worked in the clothing trade and in various
    kinds of workshops and sweatshops. The proportion of women in the
    factory labour force rose from 20.8% in 1900, to 25.7% in 1913 to
    33.3% in 1917 (see Table 8). The war thus led to a big increase in the
    number of women in Petrograd industry, though this was not as large
    an increase as in Russian industry as a whole, where the proportion of
    women soared from 26.6% in 1914 to 43.2% in 1917.84

The Petrograd textile industry had the highest proportion of
women workers. After the 1905 Revolution millowners had deliber-
ately increased the number of women employees. In 1907 the annual
report of factory inspectors noted: ‘the increase in the application of
female labour is particularly sharply reflected in the cottonweaving
industry, where women weavers have ousted men. The reasons for
this are as before: their greater industry, attentiveness and abstinence
(they do not drink or smoke), their compliance and greater reason-




24 Red Petrograd

Table 8: Sexual and age breakdown of Petrograd workforce






%

of workers

% increase

Branch of Industry

Year










of women and




men

women

youths

youths 1913-17

All branches

*9*3

66.2

25-7

8.1

7.7




*9*7

585

33-3

8.2




Metalworking

*9*3

*9*7

91.2

73*



2-7

20.3

6.1

6.6

18.1

Woodworking

19*3

*9*7

96.9

71.8

1.1

20.7

2.0

7-5


25-1

Textiles and

*9*3

32.0

57-o

11.0




Sewing

*9*7

18.7

68.6

12.7

*3-3

Food

*9*3

51.8

40.7

7-5

29.6




*9*7

22.2

66.0

11.8

Leather and shoes

*9*3

71.1

20.5

8.4

24.8




*9*7

46.3

42.8

10.9

Chemicals

*9*3

56.1

41.6

2-3

9.3




*9*7

46.8

46.7

6-5




Minerals

*9*3

76.2

16.7

7-*

17.2




*9*7

59-0

20.6

20.4





Source: Stepanov, Rabochie Petrograda, p.34.

ableness in respect of pay’.85 The textile workforce was composed


mainly of young single women. A survey of 7,000 textileworkers in
Petrograd in 1918 revealed that 18% were aged 17 or under; 17%
aged 18 to 20; 28% aged 21 to 30; 18% aged 31 to 40; and 19% aged 41
and over. 69% of women were under the age of 30 compared to 39% of
men, most of the latter being boys under 17.86 Amongst the male
textileworkers, who comprised only 13% of the total, 70% were
married, 2% widowed and 28% single. Amongst the women,
however, only 33% were married, 11% widowed and 56% single.
This reflected the large share of young girls in the industry, and also
the fact that the marriage rate had gone down as a consequence of the
war. This was particularly striking among women textileworkers
aged 20 to 30. In 1909, 74% of this group were married, whereas nine
years later, only 49% were.87

By 1917 more women in Petrograd worked in the metal industries


than in textiles - approximately 48,000 as against 30,000. The
proportion of women in the metal industries rocketed from 2.7% in
1913 to 20.3% (see Table 8). These women worked in mass-

production factories producing cartridges, shells, shrapnel, etc. Some

  1. women worked in the ‘chemicals’ industry, of whom over

  1. were employed at a single plant — the giant Triangle
    rubber-works, which produced everything from galoshes to gas
    masks. A further 10,000 women were employed in the food and
    tobacco industries. Finally, about 5,000 women worked in the leather
    industry, including 3,000 at the Skorokhod shoe factory which made
    boots for soldiers. All these jobs had one thing in common, they were
    unskilled and badly-paid. The distribution of women in factory jobs
    thus reflected the fact that the sexual division of labour within the
    patriarchal peasant household had been transposed into a factory
    setting.88

Prior to the war, the employment of children was less widespread in
the capital than in Russian industry generally. In 1914 about 8% of
the workforce under the Factory Inspectorate in St Petersburg
consisted of youths aged 15 to 17. In addition, about 2,000 children
aged 12 to 15 were employed in porcelain and glass factories,
printshops and other small enterprises.89 In the course of the war the
number of young workers in Petrograd grew, but less than the
national average. The number of under-i8s rose from 22,900 to
31,800, but their proportion within the factory labour force remained
about the same (see Table 8). Although the proportion of young
workers was the greatest in the textiles, food and leather industries,
young workers were most numerous in the metal industries. It was
this industry which provided a base for the youth movement in
Petrograd in 1917.

The labour force in Russia was remarkable for the low proportion


of middle-aged workers and the almost complete absence of elderly
workers in its ranks. In 1900 23% of St Petersburg factory workers
were aged 16 to 20; 52% were aged 21 to 40; and only 12% were older
than 40.90 The First World War dramatically changed this age
balance. The fullest data on this question are provided by the
industrial census of 1918, but because of the collapse of industry in the
first half of that year, these data can be applied to 1917 only with some
caution. The census showed that among male workers, 4.2% were
under 15; 6.3% were 16 to 17; 6.5% were 18 to 20; 41.7% were 21 to
39; 38.4% were 40 to 59 and 2.9% were 60 or more.91 This
represented an enormous increase in the proportion ofover-40s and a
significant decline in the proportion of workers aged 21 to 40. This
was an obvious consequence of conscription. Among women workers,




2.7% were under 15; 7.8% were 16 to 17; 18.4% were 18 to 20; 52.7%
were 21 to 39; 17% were 40 to 59 and 1.3% were 60 or over. Women
workers thus had a younger age profile than men in 1918, with a
bigger proportion of under-2is and a far smaller proportion of
over-40s.92

In 1918 60% of industrial workers in Russia were married or


widowed. This compared to 63% of male and 46% of female
metalworkers in Petrograd in the same year.93 Late marriage was the
norm: 45% of male and 48% of female workers aged 21 to 30 were
unmarried in Petrograd in 1918.94 Among the more highly-paid
groups of workers, the marriage-rate and average family size were
greatest. A survey of metalworkers in 1908 showed that 46% of those
earning less than 1,5or. a day were single, compared to 21 % of those
earning more than 2-50r. a day.95 In 1918 married male workers in
Petrograd had an average of 2.4 dependants, but skilled metalworkers
had 3.7.96 Whereas in 1897 only 30% of married metalworkers had
lived with their families, in 1918 three-quarters of skilled fitters in
Petrograd did so.97 In that year 71 % of all married workers lived with
their families - an important indication of the extent to which workers
had broken ties with the countryside since 1897.

One Soviet anthropologist has suggested that women had a higher


status in the working-class family than in the peasant family, and that
there was a more equal division of labour within the former than the
latter. She cites as evidence the opinion of M. Davidovich, surveyor of
St Petersburg textileworkers, who wrote in 1909: ‘While the woman
hurries straight home from the factory to the children, the husband
goes off to market and to the shops to buy provisions for supper and
next day’s dinner ... in his spare time the husband must always look
after the children.’98

Yet there is a good deal of other evidence to suggest that domestic


labour remained as much the responsibility of the woman in the
‘proletarian’ family, as it was in its peasant counterpart. A. Il'ina,
writing in the journal of the textileworkers, Tkach, gives this agonising
description of the lot of the working mother:

Having finished work at the factory, the woman worker is still not free. While
the male worker goes off to a meeting, or just takes a walk or plays billiards
with his mates, she has to cope with the housework — to cook, to wash and so
on ... she is seldom helped by her husband. Unfortunately, one has to admit
that male workers are still very prejudiced. They think that it is humiliating
for a man to do ‘woman’s’ work
[bab’yu rabotu].
They would sooner their sick,


worn-out wife did the household chores [barshchinu] by herself. They would
rather tolerate her remaining completely without leisure - illiterate and
ignorant - than condescend to help her do the housework. And on top of all
these yokes and burdens, the woman worker has still the heavy load of
motherhood ... Today for a working class woman, having a baby is no joy -
it’s a burden, which at times gets quite unbearable."

For single women who left their families, factory work may have


brought a measure of economic independence,100 but for married
women, the burdens of being a housewife and mother, as well as a
wage-worker, were onerous in the extreme. Low wages, together with
the obligation to perform unpaid domestic labour, made married
women economically dependent on the wages of their husbands.

Skill divisions

The definition of‘skill’ is a thorny problem. Skill refers to the quality


of work: a skilled job demands greater precision, dexterity and mental
exertion than an unskilled job. Skill differences are rooted in the
labour process - in the physical and intellectual requirements of
particular operations within the process of production. Some writers
have argued that it is possible to measure skill by comparing the
length of training necessary for different jobs.101 The problem is,
however, that while skills do have real existence in the requirements
of a job and in the capabilities of the worker, they are also partially
determined by class struggle. Workers’ organisations can ‘artificially’
create skills, by restricting access to particular jobs; they can control
the institutions and practices whereby skills are acquired, trans-
mitted and recognised.102 Because skill determination is a site of class
struggle, the usefulness of criteria such as length of apprenticeship or
relative wage levels as ‘objective’ measures of skill must be fairly
limited.

The origins of the St Petersburg metal industry go back to the first


quarter of the eighteenth century, but the modern metallurgical and
metalworking industries came into existence only in the 1890s. From
the first, they were machine-based industries, fairly advanced in
technology, but still dependent on the manual skills of craftsmen. The
sociologist, Alain Touraine, has distinguished three phases in the
organisation of work: the first was the old system which relied on
craftsmanship and required only universal machines, such as lathes,
not limited to the production of a single product; the second saw the




break-up of a job into its component parts, the development of
mechanisation and the feeding of machines by unskilled workers; the
third phase is the phase of automation, where direct productive work
by human beings is eliminated.103 One could say that in the decade
prior to 1917 the metalworking industry of Petrograd was moving
from the first to the second of Touraine’s phases.

Skilled craftsmen (masterovye) played a crucial role in the labour


process in the metal industry of Petrograd. Highly-skilled workers,
such as instrument-makers, pattern-makers, milling-machine oper-
ators, electricians, platers or engravers, performed complex precision
work, working independently from technical drawings and using
sophisticated measuring instruments. Beneath them were many
skilled workers who were fully trained and who could work from
technical drawings, but whose work was not especially complex or
precise. These included most fitters (slesan), turners (tokari), electri-
cians, mechanics, planers, mortisers, etc.104 These highly-skilled and
skilled men (there were no women in these trades) were directly
involved in production: the rapidity of their reflexes, their visual,
auditory and tactile sensibilities were crucial to the operation of the
machine or tool. They were deeply knowledgeable of their work, used
to taking decisions about their work, used to thinking for themselves
and to exercising control over their jobs. They were respected by
other workers and by management for their manual and intellectual
skills. As such, they were not unlike craftsmen at Armstrong-
Whitworth, the Schwarzkopf works in Berlin or at Fiat-Centro in
Turin.

One should not imagine, however, that the skilled metalworker in


St Petersburg was a ‘labour aristocrat’. Some of the most highly-paid
men did constitute a small ‘aristocracy’, but the average skilled
man was far removed from the craftsman one might associate with
the British ‘new model’ unions of the mid-nineteenth century. Firstly,
Petersburg metalworkers were not organised into exclusive craft
unions, capable of controlling entry to the trade, of imposing
standard pay and conditions and of regulating workshop matters
through ‘custom and practice’.105 Secondly, metalworkers did not
serve a formal five- or seven-year apprenticeship. A survey of fitters
at the Putilov works in 1918 showed that 67% had served an appren-
ticeship, averaging 3.3 years and starting at about the age of 15 or 16;
32% had trained on the job as assistants to craftsmen (podruchnye), for
4.5 years on average.106 Thirdly, unlike British engineers in the
nineteenth century, the metalworkers of St Petersburg did not rely so




exclusively on manual skill: they operated up-to-date drilling
machines, turret lathes, vertical boring mills, self-acting planing
machines and horizontal milling machines. There were, of course,
still turners who were masters of the parallel lathe, but there were
many who worked automatic lathes which required them only to
assemble parts, measure their dimensions and sometimes to regulate
tools. Similarly, there were traditional fitters, who fitted parts with a
file and scraper, ran the bearings and assembled all the parts
themselves, but limit-gauges were already dealing a blow to their
skills. The skilled metalworkers of St Petersburg were thus distant
from British ‘labour aristocrats’, but neither were they yet the
‘mass-production’ workers of the modern assembly plant.

The masterovye of the metal trades were distinguished by their


craft consciousness. Many worker-memoirists remark on this. A.M.
Buiko, who worked at the Putilov works at the turn of the century,
recalled:

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