Sadovaya St., 37A, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031
Fyodor Dostoevsky spent two days under arrest in the guardhouse at 37 Sadovaya Street, from March 21 to 23, 1874, by the verdict of the St. Petersburg District Court dated June 11, 1873, for violating the censorship regulations as the editor of the weekly magazine "Grazhdanin" ("The Citizen"). The execution of the sentence was postponed thanks to the assistance of the prosecutor of the St. Petersburg District Court, A.F. Koni.
Anna Dostoevskaya recalls: "…my husband came to an agreement with A.F. Koni, and the arrest was scheduled for the second half of March, on the 21st, in the morning. A police officer came to us; Fyodor Mikhailovich was already expecting him, and they first went to the district court. I was supposed to go to the station two hours later to find out in which institution my husband would be placed. It turned out that he was placed in the guardhouse on Sennaya (now the city laboratory). In the evening, after putting the children to bed, I couldn’t resist and went to see my husband again, but because of the late hour, they did not let me in. I stood under the window of the guardhouse (the last one from Spassky Lane) and saw my husband sitting at a table reading a book. Fyodor Mikhailovich returned from under arrest very cheerful and said he had spent two excellent days."
The conditions in which Dostoevsky was held in the guardhouse were described by Solovyov, who visited him during those days: "…I went to the well-known corner of Sennaya Square. I was immediately admitted. I found Fyodor Mikhailovich in a spacious and fairly clean room, where, besides him, in another corner, there was a young man, poorly dressed and with the most colorless face. Fyodor Mikhailovich was sitting at a small simple table, drinking tea, smoking his cigarettes, and holding a book in his hands." The assertion by Antsiferov that "Dostoevsky was held under arrest in the very same guardhouse where Turgenev sat in 1852, arrested for publishing an article on Gogol’s death" is erroneous. As is known, on April 16, 1852, Turgenev was arrested in his apartment on Malaya Morskaya Street and escorted under guard to the lodging house of the 2nd Admiralty district, which was located at the corner of Mariinsky Lane and Officers’ Street (now Dekabristov Street, No. 28). After serving a month’s imprisonment, Turgenev was released and on May 18, 1852, was exiled from Petersburg to Spasskoye-Lutovinovo.
The Dostoevskys decided to spend the winter of 1874/75 in Staraya Russa, so after leaving the Slivchansky house in May 1874, they had no residence of their own in Petersburg until September 1875, and Fyodor Mikhailovich, traveling to the capital on business, stayed in hotels.
Sources:
Boris Nikolaevich Tikhomirov: ADDRESSES OF DOSTOEVSKY IN PETERSBURG: CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF SOURCES AND EXPERTISE OF LOCAL HISTORY PUBLICATIONS
Fontanka River Embankment, 2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191187
Moskovsky Ave., 22, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190013
Ligovsky Ave., 65, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191040
Karavannaya St., 16, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191023
Grafsky Lane, 10, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191002
Kuznechny Lane, 5/2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191002
Rubinstein St, 32, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191002
Kazan Street, 2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186
Bolshoy Prospekt Vasilievsky Island, 4a, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 199034
6 Voznesensky Ave, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190000
Bolshaya Podyacheskaya St., 5, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068
Nevsky Ave., 18, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186
Territory. Peter and Paul Fortress, 14, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197198
Pushkinskaya, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191180
3rd Krasnoarmeyskaya St., 8b, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190005
litera A, Kaznacheyskaya St., 4/16, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031
Malaya Podyacheskaya St., 2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068
Stolyarny Lane, 16, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031
27 Voznesensky Ave., Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068
Bolshaya Konyushennaya St., 27, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186
3 Rimsky-Korsakov Avenue, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068
Serpukhovskaya St., 11, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190013
3rd Krasnoarmeyskaya St., 11, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190005
per. Ulyany Gromovoy, 8, apt. 36, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191036
Dostoevsky St., 2/5, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191002
Grazhdanskaya St., 19/5, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031
Griboedov Canal Embankment, 104d, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068
Tikhvin Cemetery, Alexander Nevsky Square, 1, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191167
Gorokhovaya St., 41, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031
Mikhailovskaya St., 1/7, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186