Metadata: Russian local government during the war and the Union of Zemstvos

282 THE ZEMSTVOS DURING THE WAR 
Zemstvos and of Towns. At the beginning of September, the pre- 
liminary agreements having been successfully negotiated, the Zem- 
gor obtained from the military authorities an official request to form 
eighty gangs of one thousand men each. Urgent orders were there- 
upon issued to the local committees of the Unions of Zemstvos and 
of Towns to assemble the necessary forces of diggers and carpenters. 
Feverish preparations were begun at Moscow to supply tools, warm 
clothing, and warm portable shelters. Engineers and skilled work- 
men familiar with the building industry were registered by the com- 
mittees. On September 5 the Emperor gave his approval to the nec- 
essary legislation sanctioning the volunteer labor battalions. To 
facilitate the formation of these battalions, the military authorities 
at the front after some preliminary negotiations, agreed to allow 
considerable privileges in respect of liability for military service to 
the men registering for work in this force. 
The news that this unprecedented duty had been entrusted to the 
Zemgor, however, produced in government circles in Petrograd the 
effect of a bombshell. Was it possible? they asked. Were these public 
bodies to be permitted to have an army of their own, equipped and 
organized under the command of zemstvo engineers? Those in favor 
of the new enterprise endeavored to allay these fears, to convince 
these nervous bureaucrats that, even if the unions did cherish evil 
designs, their “army” of 80,000 men, equipped with nothing more 
dangerous than axes and shovels, would be unable to do any harm 
with millions of troops in front of them. They failed, however, com- 
pletely and the higher officials of the Government were seized with a 
truly comical panic. The result was that the Zemgor, on September 
11, was suddenly ordered by Petrograd to cease at once the further 
recruiting of labor and to confine itself to one battalion of a thou- 
sand men, by way of experiment. Thus a vast measure, taken in 
hand with great enthusiasm over the whole of Russia had to be 
abandoned. 
These facts, which today seem almost incredible, clearly illustrate 
the fear and distrust with which the higher circles of the Govern- 
ment regarded the Unions of Zemstvos and of Towns. They also re- 
veal the conflicting views regarding those bodies held by the au- 
thorities at the front and at Petrograd—a conflict that made itself 
felt at every step in their activities. 
In the meantime the first labor battalion organized by the Zemgor
	        
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