The name of Bublikov Alexander Alexandrovich is associated with the February Russian revolution. He was a member of the State Duma, a communications engineer, and a publicist.
Bagels Alexander Alexandrovich was an engineer of communications, a member of the State Duma. On his account there are many printed works on the main specialty, as well as a work called "Russian Revolution".
Biography
Alexander was born in a new style on May 4, 1875 in St. Petersburg. His father was an official of the Ministry of Railways, so it is not surprising that, after graduating from school, the young man also chose a specialty related to the railway, and received a profile education.
Alexander Alexandrovich was a progressive person. He supported the development of the country. For example, in 1912, Bagels donated a large sum to the Mining Institute of Yekaterinburg in order to support mineral exploration in the Urals. It is not surprising that Alexander Alexandrovich was elected an honorary citizen of this city.
Career
In 1912, Bagels became a member of the State Duma of the 4th convocation. Here he ran for Perm province.
During the February Revolution, engineers were chosen as the commissioner of the interim committee. With the help of the railway telegraph, he notified all the station managers that the power now belongs to the State Duma.
But by that time, Tsar Nicholas II and his brother Michael had not yet abdicated. Therefore, contemporaries believed that it was Bagels who got ahead of reality and predicted the inevitable.
Public performance
Having become famous, the engineer of communications began an active revolutionary activity. In February 1917, he ordered the train that the king was traveling to stop, then, together with other military men, he arrested the emperor.
The engineer opposed the law adopted by the Provisional Government, which said the increase in the percentage of tax for citizens and enterprises. That was June 12, 1917. And in August of the same year, Alexander Alexandrovich, defending entrepreneurs at the State Conference, said that they would soon stand next to representatives of the industrial class and would also work to renew Russia so that it was free and prosperous.
At the end of this speech, the speaker was applauded and shouted: "Bravo!" The meeting ended with the handshake of Bublikov and Irakli Georgievich Tsereteli, whom the communications engineer also defended during the speech.