An interview with one of the last living Russian countesses before her death in 1991.
By Robert Hudson Westover
Part Two of a Series
By Robert Hudson Westover
Part Two of a Series
August 2014 marked one hundred years
since the start of World War I, the “war to end all wars” or more to the point
the war to launch a century of bloodshed, upheaval, more wars of horrific proportions and
the greatest rewrite of national territories since the fall of the Roman Empire
in the 4th Century.
Perhaps the most catastrophic collapse of these latter day empires was that of Russia. For more than three hundred years the Romanov dynasty had held their empire together with a supreme autocratic rule that mirrored the nation’s cultural inheritance from the Byzantine Empire. It was no accident of history that the throne the tsarina’s sat upon during the coronation of a new tsar in the Kremlin’s Annunciation Cathedral was claimed to be the very throne of the Byzantine empresses that once rested on a green marble slab on the first tier of the cavernous and magnificent “greatest church in Christendom” the 5th Century Hagia Sophia in ancient Constantinople.
Perhaps the most catastrophic collapse of these latter day empires was that of Russia. For more than three hundred years the Romanov dynasty had held their empire together with a supreme autocratic rule that mirrored the nation’s cultural inheritance from the Byzantine Empire. It was no accident of history that the throne the tsarina’s sat upon during the coronation of a new tsar in the Kremlin’s Annunciation Cathedral was claimed to be the very throne of the Byzantine empresses that once rested on a green marble slab on the first tier of the cavernous and magnificent “greatest church in Christendom” the 5th Century Hagia Sophia in ancient Constantinople.
As with so many of us, the cataclysms
of life changing events are often unexpected and we look back to our time
before the incineration of what we once knew with a strange melancholy or
sentimental fascination.
In the following interview Olga
Morgan, born Countess Olga de Chrapovitsky, looks back to her vanished world of
imperial Russia from the perspective of nearly 70 years.
Olga was destined to be connected by either blood or marriage to two of the most prominent and tragic families of the Twentieth Century, the Romanovs and the Kennedys. Part Two and Three of these interviews with Olga are something of an amazement in that any one person would be an intimate witness, per se, of both the bloody and murderous fall of the House of Romanov and the tragic event Jackie Kennedy, her niece via marriage, experienced on the on that horrible day in Dallas when her husband, President John F. Kennedy, was assassinated in front of the entire world.
It’s a wonderment to me that anyone, seeing
what Olga had observed from the front lines of several of humanities' most wrenching and barbarous hours, could
still hold out hope for the betterment of the species.
Robert H. Westover and Olga C. Morgan in Olga's garden, Laguna Beach, CA (April 1991) Photo Credit: Lawrence R. Westover |
Olga was destined to be connected by either blood or marriage to two of the most prominent and tragic families of the Twentieth Century, the Romanovs and the Kennedys. Part Two and Three of these interviews with Olga are something of an amazement in that any one person would be an intimate witness, per se, of both the bloody and murderous fall of the House of Romanov and the tragic event Jackie Kennedy, her niece via marriage, experienced on the on that horrible day in Dallas when her husband, President John F. Kennedy, was assassinated in front of the entire world.
Olga C. Morgan's nephew, Hugh D. "Yusha" Auchincloss III (left next to JFK) is pictured here at JFK's and Jackie Kennedy's wedding reception held at Hammersmith Farm, Newport, RI. |
But she did.
And her joyous and hopeful attitude, laced with her noble spirit inspired me in my darkest times and I hope will inspire the reader as well.
Note: All photographs are either the property of the author, used by permission or thought to be in the public domain.
World War I for a Russian Countess
A Compilation of Two Interviews with Olga C. Morgan
Location:
Mrs. Morgan’s villa overlooking the Pacific Ocean, Laguna Beach, California. 1983
(Dr. Richard Pierce*)/1991 (Robert H. Westover)
Richard Pierce (RP): And then the war? [World War I]
Morgan: We were still studying when the war
broke out in August 1914. I still had a year, but we refused to study German
after that; we thought it was unpatriotic.
RP: Was this suggested?
Morgan: No, no, we refused, and mother was
furious with us.
RP: When the war broke out, we were in
the country; I remember it very well. We were more or less expecting it,
because there was that murder in Sarajevo, and the whole thing which led up to
it, but we knew a lot of the military men. My step-father having been commander
of a division, all the men who were stationed in the country, in Gatchina, for
instance, had to come and call on us and leave their visiting cards, and then
some of them were invited to the house; mother knew their family or something;
she wanted us to have some kind of rapport with other people. We used to drive
to the station to see all the regiments off, and wave goodbye to them, and it
was all very heart-rending, that they were all leaving.
Robert Westover (RW): How did people look at the war?
Countess Olga de Chrapovisky with departing troops at her home in Gatchina, Russia (1914) |
RP: And then the casualties began to
mount?
Morgan: Yes, and then we were called on to
help in the hospitals. We were very young; I was 17, but we were asked. All the
young girls in town who were well bred were asked. It was not a military
hospital, but they had nobody else. I think there was one doctor for the whole
hospital, because the nurses had all gone to the front. Everything was
depleted.
RP: So although technically a nurse's
aid you were taking the role of a nurse?
Morgan: I don't even know what role we took,
because we had nothing to do with the bed making, or cleaning up or anything of
that nature. They had peasant women who did all the work, but what we had to do
was bandage, help the doctor when he was seeing patients, and sometimes stay late and wait at the door for people who would come in.
I remember one evening I was asked to
stay later, and this man came in and he said "I got off the train. I was
going to the front but I got off the train because I feel very ill." There
was nobody in the hospital except me, that is, of the staff; it was full of
patients, but they were mostly peasants. So I took him up to a room which was
free, and I took his temperature which was very, very high. "I'll leave a
note for the doctor when he comes in the morning," I said.
In the morning the doctor called me,
and he said, "Did you touch that man?"
"Yes," I said, "I took
his temperature."
And he said "You'll have to go
into quarantine because he has spotted typhus."
I had noticed when I was taking his
temperature that his chest was all covered with spots, so I was in quarantine
for two or three weeks. It was very boring obviously; I couldn't work in the
hospital; I couldn't see anyone; I just had to stay in my room.
RP: Your room at the hospital?
Morgan: No, no, at home. So I could have
given it to everybody at home, if I had had it. I think spotted typhus was
carried by lice. I don't think it came from touching a person. Well, anyway,
they didn't have a chance in my case, because I never got it, but it was very
annoying. I was completely quarantined; I couldn't go and see any friends.
RP: So you were in this capacity
throughout the war?
Morgan: Throughout the war, yes. Then,
towards the end of the war a lot of wounded began to come in, and then mother
decided to open a little hospital. We had a building, it was not very big, but
I think it had about thirty beds in it, and it was fixed up, more or less. I
don't know who took care of it or anything.
I know that we spent all our days
there, but we didn't really do anything very much except bandage. Sometimes the
bandage would fall off immediately because we didn't know how to do this thing,
but I suppose it was a morale builder, and they were not really people who were
very ill, but they were somebody, for instance, who came with a broken leg and
had to wait until the leg mended. You know, things like that; it took a little
time. They were not ordinary citizens; they were military men who were
convalescing, and then they'd have to go back to the front again.
So different doctors used to come in
every day and check everybody, and it was a little bit better taken care of
than the one we had worked in first, and mother was paying for it.
In our moments away from the hospital we used to go to a little tennis club, and that's where we had our fun. We all played tennis, and all these officers would come and be playing tennis too.
Then, during the sport, we didn't seem to have a governess with us all the time.
RP: A governess was around, then, even while you were working in the hospital?
Morgan: Oh yes! Sometimes they used to come and pick us up at the hospital and walk us home; very rarely did they let us walk in the evening alone. But at the tennis club we were free, and we met some very attractive young men there, and flirtations started.
RP: The family must have had very good
means.
Morgan: Oh, mother was very wealthy. But unfortunately
she took all her fortune out of the United States and took it over to Russia
about 1910 so it went down the drain with the revolution, completely.
RW: Did you like working in the hospital? And did it become more horrific as the casualties mounted?
Morgan: No, I didn't like it, working in the hospital, but my sister [Maya] and I were very patriotic. We had to
do it. There was no question whether the war was for the right or for the wrong; we hated the Germans and we wanted to do everything we could for the war.
Yes, things did become more difficult as the war continued. Now I assisted in operations. In the first operation I assisted in I had until that point never even seen a naked man in my life. I ran out of the room and vomited!
Yes, things did become more difficult as the war continued. Now I assisted in operations. In the first operation I assisted in I had until that point never even seen a naked man in my life. I ran out of the room and vomited!
In another operation, I was attempting to distract my thoughts, trying not to watch
what they were doing. We had no anesthetics, so they had to give the injured solider liquor as they removed his leg! Imagine
no anesthetics at all! There was a terrible shortage. And the poor man was screaming his head off. I just stood there trying in vain not to concentrate on what was going
on and then suddenly I looked down and I had this unattached leg in my arms! I fainted. But, eventually, in other operations I became less squeamish. What choice did I have? It couldn't be helped! Things were far worse in St. Petersburg, I mean Petrograd...
Countess Olga de Chrapovitsky served as a nurse during Word War One |
Morgan: Yes, but of course we had one
thing that was very difficult. My mother, first of all, her name was der
Felden [Derfelden], which was a German name, and secondly she had a terrible accent; she
spoke very poor Russian, so many people thought that she was German. She would
go into a shop and give her name and the salesperson would look at her and say
"Oh, Nemetskii, German!" So she had a very difficult time.
RP: This takes you, then, through 1916,
when things were getting increasingly difficult. Was the assassination of
Rasputin looked upon as a patriotic act, or as an aberration?
Morgan: Oh, it was considered very patriotic,
very much so. Because everybody hated Rasputin; they felt that he had a terrible
influence on the Empress, and through her on the Emperor.
RP: But a great deal of this was
exaggerated, was it not? Evidently, though, he did have a hypnotic power.
Morgan: Because he was able to cure
the young Tsarevich. And now I have read some books about the medicines in
Siberia. And there are really some very interesting herbs and things that
people still use.
Or he might have been just lucky. Or
he might have been just lucky. He was really a horrid man; everybody who knew
him thought that he was a terrible creature.
RP: Except for those in his own circle.
Morgan: Yes, his own circle. Madame Vyrubova,
who introduced him to the Empress, thinking that he might help the boy, and he
did help him, there is no denying it, but it really was one of the reasons that
there were less and less people willing to take the side of the Tsar.
But we were very far away from all
that, because you see my stepfather had already died, thank God, and we were
living in the country; we had moved out of St. Petersburg, so we had very
little contact with people there. Before that, mother had lots of friends who
lived in St. Petersburg, and she was seeing them all the time, but when we
moved out into the country we had very few people. There was the Grand Duke
Michael, who used to come to see us all the time, who never talked of politics,
obviously. And a few of the grand dukes who lived in Gatchina at that time. And
the Dowager Empress used to come and live in Gatchina at that time. We used to
see them quite a lot. And I used to play with Prince Vasilii Romanov and the
children in the palace; they had slides, indoor slides, and used to enjoy that
very much. But otherwise I think mother was very much out of touch with the
world, so when the revolution came it was quite a shock.
RP: What do you recall of February 1917? Was
the Revolution quite evident?
This picture of the Dowager Empress Marie was give to Olga C. Morgan's mother, Baroness Derfelden |
Morgan: No, not too evident at first except
that the servants got a little bit disagreeable and mother put red [Soviet] armbands
on our arms, so that nobody would stop us on the street.
Things got to be sticky, but we didn't
realize it too much until finally one night we were all awakened, and soldiers
came to the door and said "We want to see what you have in the
house!"
We had a great marvelous collection of
antiques and different kinds of firearms which my father and then my stepfather
both had collected, and they took every one of them.
RP: When did that occur?
Morgan: At the beginning of the revolution. I
can't give you the date because I don't know, but it was very, very frightening. First the knocking on the
door, and then they came in. Soon they came knocking on the door again, another
night; they wanted something else, and then suddenly mother said, "This is
going to end very badly, because everybody knows that we have a great cellar of
wines!"
So then she had a file of servants
stand, and take the bottles out of the cellar and pass from one to another.
Then at a deep ditch by the street the neck of each bottle was knocked off and
the street was running with wine for miles. After that they lost interest in
coming.
She was afraid they would come to the
house, get drunk, and rape the girls. I thought that was a very clever move.
Everybody said "She's crazy; that foreign woman is crazy, what she did,
she poured all the wine on the street, all the good wine!"
I think we saved two bottles of
Napoleon brandy, which we buried. It was very hard to do, so it must have still
been February or March, the ground was not thawed yet, because we had a very
difficult time burying those two bottles. I know where they are, but I don't
think I'll ever be able to find them!
RP: So this was probably at the outset,
in February or March?
Morgan: Yes. The Americans had already
congratulated the Russians on how clever they were to depose the Tsar and
start a new democratic life. We were absolutely infuriated by that. It was some
time after that. Before that they couldn't come knocking at your door and
coming in at night. Then there were police, but later you were on your own.
We didn't feel it in the country that
much, but then the governess was sent to St. Petersburg to feel things out, and
see what it was like, and she used to come back with lurid tales about what was
going on, so we felt we had to get out. Our name, der Felden, was a German
name, and mother spoke Russian with a very bad accent, so that everybody took
her for a German, and then all the grand dukes had visited us all the time, so
we were definitely in danger.
RW: You were in grave danger. Your mother must have been quite concerned.
Morgan: Absolutely. We were very frightened by this point. So mother went to the American embassy and asked them to help her get us all out of the country. They did so even though she had given up her
citizenship. They restored her citizenship and we were safe to leave. That is if we departed soon. The situation was deteriorating fast.
So we got on the train and went across
Siberia. We left just before the Provisional Government was ousted and the
Soviets took over on November 7, 1917. We left just before that, and not a moment too late.
It was the last train before the line was cut, Elihu Root, the last scheduled trains to cross Siberia!
The journey took two weeks.
The train was full of soldiers, who were all running away from the front, who
didn't want to fight anymore. The whole country was in disarray! We were just
very lucky to get out.