Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

37th Guards Rifle Division

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from27th Guards Mechanized Division)
Soviet Red Army formation
37th Guards Rifle Division
Active1942–1945
Country Soviet Union
BranchRed Army
TypeInfantry
SizeDivision
EngagementsWorld War II
Decorations
Battle honoursRechitsa
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Military unit

The37th Guards Rechitsa, twice Red Banner, Orders of Suvorov, Kutuzov, and Bogdan Khmelnitsky Rifle Division (Russian:37-я гвардейская стрелковая Речицкая дважды Краснознамённая орденов Суворова, Кутузова и Богдана Хмельницкого дивизия) was an infantry division of theRed Army which fought duringWorld War II.[1]

The division was formed on 2 August 1942 from the1st Airborne Corps inLyubertsy, nearMoscow.[2] Its most famous action was the defense of theStalingrad Tractor Factory during theBattle of Stalingrad.[3] The division was highly decorated, receiving twoOrders of the Red Banner, theOrder of Suvorov 1st class, theOrder of Kutuzov 1st class and theOrder of Bogdan Khmelnitsky. It became the 27th Guards Mechanised Division in December 1945 and on 20 April 1957 the 39th Guards Tank Division atPolotsk (Borovukha),Vitebsk Oblast,Belorussian Military District.[4] On 1 January 1965 it became the 37th Guards Tank Division, staying within7th Tank Army for the duration. In 1992 it became part of theBelarus Ground Forces.[4] The tank division was converted to the 37th Separate Guards Mechanized Brigade, which was disbanded in fall 2011.[5] The division's successor, with an unbroken lineage, is the 37th Weapons and Equipment Storage Base of theNorth Western Operational Command at Polotsk.[6]

History

[edit]

The 37th Guards Rifle Division was formed on the basis of the personnel of the1st Airborne Corps[7] at Lyubertsy on 2 August 1942. The 1st Airborne Brigade became the 109th Guards Rifle Regiment, the 204th Airborne Brigade became the 114th Guards Rifle Regiment and the 211th Airborne Brigade became the 118th Guards Rifle Regiment.

Stalingrad

[edit]
Sappers of the division's 39th Separate Guards Sapper Battalion building a crossing in the vicinity of Stalingrad, 25 September 1942
Soldiers of Lieutenant Yevgeny Aleksandrovich Ondrin's platoon of the 109th Guards Rifle Regiment crossing the Don, 25 September 1942

The division was sent to theStalingrad Front and became part of the4th Tank Army on 10 August. On the night of 14 August, the division was unloaded from trains atIlovlya station, with the task to take defensive positions in a small bend in theDon near the village and hamlets of Trehostrovskoy and Zimoveysky, but did not have time to gain a bridgehead. Instead, the division went directly to the right bank of the river and defended that area, disrupting German attempts to cross the Don. On 18 September, elements of the division crossed the Don and established a bridgehead. The division handed over the defense of the area to the22nd Motorized Rifle Brigade and crossed theVolga River 40 km north of Stalingrad on 28 September.[2]

8-00: The Germans opened artillery fire, bombed our leading troops9-00: At the walls of theStalingrad Tractor Factory (STZ) burn 10 enemy tanks10-00: 109th Guards crushed by tanks and infantry10-00: Communication with the 114th Guards Regiment interrupted11–15: The enemy seized the stadium STZ. Our surrounded elements (118 Regiment) are fighting in the encirclement.12–20: From the village of STZ received a radiogram from troops of the 37th: "Surrounded. Ammunition and water there. Do not give up."12–30: The command post of the 37th bombed. General Zholudev swamped in the dugout. Air is supplied through the pipes.15–25: Security Headquarters of the 62nd Army clashed with broken-through enemy gunners16–30: About 100 tanks penetrated into the territory of STZ over the positions of the 118th Guards16–35: A radio message from the 114th Regiment commander asks for artillery fire on his own positions21-00: A group of guardsmen of the 37th continue to fight in the shops of the plant, radioing: "Do not give up. Die For the Motherland!"

62nd Army records, 14 October 1942 (translated)
Aerial view of the Stalingrad Tractor Factory

On the night of 2 October, the division crossed back to the right bank of the Volga in Stalingrad and reached the Mokraya Mechyotka river, immediately going into combat. On 2-3 October it was recorded as having 7,000 personnel on hand (66% ofshtat, establishment strength (10,670)).[8] The intensity of the fighting can be gauged from the memoirs of a surgeon in the division, M.F. Gulyakin. Gulyakin reports that rarely were there less than 200 wounded troops per day.[9] By 14 October the remnants of the division were surrounded in the workshops of theStalingrad Tractor Factory.[10] Strength was recorded on 15 October as 250, having lost roughly 6,750 soldiers in less than two weeks.[11] The14th Panzer Division broke through parts of the division's lines and reached theVolga.[12] During the night of 16–17 October it was relieved by the 138th Rifle Division and sent to theBarrikady Factory, where the division set up strongpoints.[13] In the middle of November, the division transferred to the left bank of the Volga, leaving in Stalingrad a combined unit based on the 118th Guards Rifle Regiment, subordinated to the138th Rifle Division. After a few days, the combined unit was withdrawn due to heavy losses. The division was almost completely destroyed in the fighting for the Stalingrad Tractor Factory. Losses amounted to 95% of division personnel.

Sevsk Offensive

[edit]

A Stavka directive ordered the division to withdraw from theStalingrad Front reserves on 27 December. It was meant to board trains at the station of Zaplavnaya at 1800 on 25 December and sent toBalashov, but only departed on 31 December. On 6 February 1943, it was directed that the division be sent to theCentral Front after being rebuilt to fight in the Sevsk offensive.[1] On 17 February, the division unloaded atYelets station. The division reportedly advanced 260 kilometers in eight days. It joined battle with German troops at Gladkoye and Veretenino. They met resistance from elements of the137th Infantry Division but continued to advance. On the line of Chernevka, Gladkoye and Koshkino, the 137th, reinforced by theSS tanks, attempted to hold back the advance. The division captured Gladkoye, Koshkino and Studensky. During the capture of Koshkino, the 3rd Battalion of the 114th Guards Rifle Regiment was particularly distinguished. The division continued to advance and stopped at the villages of Nevar, Prudnoye and Khlebtovo. On 28 April, the division was awarded theOrder of the Red Banner for its performance at Stalingrad.[2]

Operation Kutuzov and the Dnieper

[edit]
Lieutenant Ida Nukhimovna Segal, deputy company commander for political affairs of the 38th Separate Guards Medical-Sanitary Battalion, awarded the Order of the Red Star for her efforts in evacuating wounded during the Battle of Stalingrad and Sevsk offensive

The division fought inOperation Kutuzov in August as part of the 65th Army's 18th Rifle Corps.[14][15] On 12 August, the division helped capturedDmitrovsk in cooperation with other units. The division then crossed theDesna River and theSozh River in September, fighting in theChernigov-Pripyat Offensive. It fought to expand the Sozh bridgehead until mid-October. During the offensive, telephonist Vasily Bantsekin distinguished himself, for which Bantsekin was posthumously awarded the titleHero of the Soviet Union on 15 January 1944.[16] Machine gun company privateIvan Mokrousov also distinguished himself and was awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union.[17] On 20 October, the division was transferred to cross theDnieper northwest ofLoyew. 118th Guards Rifle Regiment company commander LieutenantVladimir Vladimirov distinguished himself during the Dnieper crossing, for which he was awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union posthumously.[18] 109th Guards Rifle Regiment company commander Senior LieutenantNikolay Shchetinin also distinguished himself and was awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union on 15 January 1944.[19] During November, it fought in theGomel-Rechitsa Offensive.[1] The division was awarded the title "Rechitsa" on 18 November for its actions during the capture ofRechitsa in conjunction with the162nd Rifle Division.[20] During December 1943 and January 1944, the division fought to capture southeastern Belarus. It reportedly distinguished itself in the battles nearKalinkovichi andMazyr, for which it was awarded theOrder of Suvorov 2nd class on 15 January.[2]

Operation Bagration and the Narew Bridgehead

[edit]

DuringOperation Bagration in the summer,[21] the division broke through German defenses atBabruysk and helped captureOsipovichi on 28 June. The division was awarded a secondOrder of the Red Banner on 2 July for its actions at Babruysk. It then capturedBaranovichi on 8 July andSlonim on 10 July. The division was awarded theOrder of Kutuzov 1st class for its actions during the capture of Baranovichi. After the capture of Belarus, the division entered Polish territory and reached theNarew at the beginning of September. The division crossed the Narew south ofPułtusk and until January fought to hold the bridgehead.[2]

East Pomeranian Offensive and the Berlin Offensive

[edit]

On 13 January, the division attacked out of its bridgehead. By the end of January, the division had reachedGraudenz and besieged the city. It was transferred to the 2nd Shock Army on 14 February.[22] On 16 February, it attacked the city again but was unable to capture the city itself. On the night of 18 February, the division attacked again but was forced to retreat due to strong German resistance. However, these attacks had worn down the German troops to allow elements of the142nd Rifle Division to capture the city. It returned to the control of the65th Army on 2 March and fought in theEast Pomeranian Offensive. It then advanced onDanzig and fought in the street fighting in the city. During the fight, division commanderSobir Rakhimov was killed on 26 March by a direct hit on his observation post.[22][23] Major generalKuzma Grebennik took command on 30 March,[24] replacing Colonel Nikolai Onoprienko. The division transferred westward to fight in theBerlin Offensive on 28 March. The division crossed theOder[25] and fought nearStettin. During the Oder crossing, 118th Guards Rifle Regiment deputy battalion commander CaptainAlexey Nemkov distinguished himself and was awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union and the Order of Lenin on 29 June.[26] A company commander from the same regiment, Senior lieutenantAlexander Nikolayev, was awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union and the Order of Lenin on the same day as Nemkov for distinguishing himself during the Oder crossing.[27] By 10 May 1945 the division was part of18th Rifle Corps, 65th Army. By the end of the war, the division had reachedRostock. On 4 June, the division was awarded theOrder of Bogdan Khmelnitsky 2nd class for its actions during the Berlin offensive.[2] In total, seventeen soldiers of the division received the titleHero of the Soviet Union during the war.[28]

Postwar

[edit]
Patch of the 37th Guards Weapons and Equipment Storage Base

On 1 December 1945, the division was converted into the 27th Guards Mechanized Division in the area ofStrzegom andŚwiebodzice as part of the7th Mechanized Army. It was reduced to a regiment on 1 December 1946 when the army was downsized to a cadre division and in 1948 relocated toPolotsk.[28] The 27th Guards became a division again on 30 October 1949 when the army was restored to its former strength. On 20 May 1957, it was converted to the 39th Guards Tank Division.[29] On 11 January 1965, it was renamed the 37th Guards Tank Division. Between September and November 1964, the division conducted trials on Objet 432 initial production models of theT-64 tank.[30] During the Cold War, the division was maintained at 25% strength. The division participated in theZapad-81 exercise, and was involved in trials of the newT-72 tank and the Manevr, the first Soviet automated command and control system. Personnel of the division's four tank battalions fought in theSoviet–Afghan War, in which 28 were killed.[28] The 261st Tank Regiment was replaced by the 38th Guards Tank Regiment of the34th Tank Division and the 936th Anti-Aircraft Missile Regiment was replaced by the 740th from the3rd Guards Tank Division in November 1989.[4] In March 1992, the division was taken over by Belarus.[4] It was downsized and became a weapons and equipment storage base in April 1993,[31] then the 37th Separate Guards Mechanized Brigade by 2005, when the30th Separate Mechanized Battalion joined the brigade.[32] The 37th Brigade was disbanded in the fall of 2011, and the 30th Battalion transferred to the19th Guards Mechanized Brigade.[5] The brigade became the 37th Weapons and Equipment Storage Base, part of the Belorussian Northwestern Operational Command.[6]

Commanders

[edit]

Division commanders included:[1]

  • Major GeneralViktor Zholudev (6 August 1942 – 8 April 1943)
  • Colonel Timofey Naumovich Wisniewski (9 April – 7 June 1943)
  • Colonel (promoted to Major General 25 September 1943) Evgeny Grigoryevich Ushakov (8 June 1943 – 29 April 1944)
  • ColonelIvan Brushko (November 1943)
  • Major GeneralJosef Sankowski (November 1943)
  • Colonel (promoted to Major General 2 November 1944)Vasily Lavrentyevich Morozov (30 April – 15 November 1944)
  • Major GeneralSobir Rakhimov (16 November 1944 – 26 March 1945) KIA
  • ColonelNikolai Onoprienko (28–29 March 1945)
  • Major GeneralKuzma Grebennik (30 March – April 1947)
  • Colonel Vladimir Iosifovich Yevsyukov (November 1957–July 1960)[33]
  • Colonel Fyodor Andreyevich Rudskoy (March 1963–June 1967)[34]
  • Anatoly Vasilyevich Sedykh (1970–1973)[35]
  • Mikhail Moiseyevich Loveykin (April 1992–August 1993)[31][36]

Composition

[edit]

The 37th Guards Rifle Division was composed of the following units.

  • 109th Guards Rifle Regiment
  • 114th Guards Rifle Regiment
  • 118th Guards Rifle Regiment
  • 86th Guards Artillery Regiment
  • 42nd Guards Separate Antitank Battalion
  • 50th Guards Antiaircraft Battery (up to 15 April 1943)
  • 40th Guards Separate Reconnaissance Company
  • 39th Guards Sapper Battalion

In 1988, the 37th Guards Tank Division included the following units.[4]

  • 252nd Tank Regiment
  • 261st Tank Regiment
  • 263rd Guards Tank Regiment
  • 298th Guards Motorized Rifle Regiment
  • 854th Guards Artillery Regiment
  • 936th Antiaircraft Missile Regiment
  • 199th Separate Missile Battalion
  • 55th Separate Reconnaissance Battalion
  • 359th Separate Guards Engineer-Sapper Battalion
  • 63rd Separate Guards Communications Battalion
  • Separate Chemical Defence Company
  • Separate Medical Battalion
  • 1020th Separate Material Supply Battalion

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^abcd"37-я гв. Речицкая стрелковая дивизия" [37th Guards Rifle Division].samsv.narod.ru (in Russian). Retrieved2015-12-09.
  2. ^abcdef"Гвардейские стрелковые 31–45" [Guards Rifle Divisions 31–45].myfront.in.ua (in Russian). Retrieved2015-12-09.
  3. ^Volostnov, Nikolay (1983).На огненных рубежах [On the borders of fire] (in Russian). Moscow: Voenizdat.
  4. ^abcdeHolm, Michael."37th Guards Tank Division".www.ww2.dk. Retrieved2015-12-09.
  5. ^ab"Иркутско-Пинская дивизия" [Irkutsk-Pinsk Division].Irkipedia.ru (in Russian). Retrieved2015-12-23.
  6. ^ab"Севоро-Западное оперативное командование" [North-Western Operational Command].belarmy.by (in Russian). Retrieved2015-12-23.
  7. ^Glantz, David M. (1994).The History of Soviet Airborne Forces. Ilford, Essex: Frank Cass. p. 64.ISBN 9780714641201.
  8. ^Glantz, "Colossus Reborn," Table 6.7, 208.
  9. ^Gulyakin, Mikhail Filippovich (1985).Будет жить!. [It will Live!]. Moscow: Voenizdat.
  10. ^Glantz, David M.; House, Jonathan Mallory (2009-01-01).Armageddon in Stalingrad: September–November 1942. University Press of Kansas.ISBN 9780700616640.
  11. ^Glantz, "Colossus Reborn," Table 6.7, 209.
  12. ^Antill, Peter D. (2007-01-01).Stalingrad 1942. Osprey Publishing.ISBN 9781846030284.
  13. ^Wijers, Hans (2012-01-01).Winter Storm: The Battle for Stalingrad and the Operation to Rescue the 6th Army. Stackpole Books.ISBN 9780811745871.
  14. ^Forczyk, Robert; Noon, Steve (2014-09-20).Kursk 1943: The Northern Front. Osprey Publishing.ISBN 9781782008217.
  15. ^Clark, Lloyd (2011-11-04).The Battle of the Tanks: Kursk, 1943. Grove/Atlantic, Inc.ISBN 9780802195104.
  16. ^"Банцекин Василий Николаевич" [Bantsekin Vasily Nikolayevich].www.warheroes.ru (in Russian). Retrieved2015-12-30.
  17. ^"Мокроусов Иван Тимофеевич" [Mokrousov Ivan Timofeyevich].www.warheroes.ru (in Russian). Retrieved2016-01-01.
  18. ^"Владимир Фёдорович Владимиров" [Vladimirov Vladimir Fedorovich].www.warheroes.ru (in Russian).
  19. ^"Щетинин Николай Иванович" [Shchetinin Nikolay Ivanovich].www.warheroes.ru (in Russian). Retrieved2016-01-08.
  20. ^Batov, Pavel Ivanovich (1974).В походах и боях [In the Campaigns and Battles] (3rd ed.). Moscow: Voenizdat. p. 384.
  21. ^Glantz, David (2004-08-02).Belorussia 1944: The Soviet General Staff Study. Routledge.ISBN 9781134266746.
  22. ^abButtar, Prit (2012-02-20).Battleground Prussia: The Assault on Germany's Eastern Front 1944–45. Osprey Publishing.ISBN 9781780964652.
  23. ^Maslov, Aleksander A.; Glantz, David M. (1998-01-01).Fallen Soviet Generals: Soviet General Officers Killed in Battle, 1941–1945. Psychology Press.ISBN 9780714647906.
  24. ^"Гребенник Кузьма Евдокимович" [Grebennik Kuzma Evdokimovich].www.warheroes.ru (in Russian). Retrieved2015-12-23.
  25. ^Erickson, John (1999-01-01).Stalin's War with Germany: The road to Berlin. Yale University Press.ISBN 0300078137.
  26. ^"Немков Алексей Владимирович" [Nemkov Alexey Vladimirovich].www.warheroes.ru (in Russian). Retrieved2016-01-03.
  27. ^"Николаев Александр Петрович" [Nikolayev Alexander Petrovich].www.warheroes.ru (in Russian). Retrieved2016-01-07.
  28. ^abcKolosova, Alyona (9 August 2022)."В Полоцке отпраздновали 80-летие 37-й гвардейской стрелковой Речицкой, дважды Краснознаменной, орденов Суворова, Кутузова и Богдана Хмельницкого дивизии" [80th anniversary of the 37th Guards Rechitsa Twice Red Banner Orders of Suvorov, Kutuzov, and Bogdan Khmelnitsky Rifle Division celebrated in Vitebsk].Vitebsk News (in Russian).
  29. ^Drogovoz, Igor (2001).Танковый меч страны советов [Soviet tank sword]. Moscow: ACT. pp. 81–83.ISBN 9851311332.
  30. ^Zaloga, Steven J.; Palmer, Ian (2015).T-64 Battle Tank: The Cold War's Most Secret Tank. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. p. 17.ISBN 9781472806307.
  31. ^ab"Законодательство Беларуси - Об освобождении М.М.Ловейкина от занимаемой должности. Под общей редакцией Валерия Левоневского".by-law.narod.ru. Retrieved2024-07-25.
  32. ^Miranovich, Gennady; Knyazhkov, Sergey (20 December 2008)."ТРИДЦАТЫЙ НАШ ОТДЕЛЬНЫЙ БАТАЛЬОН" [Our 30th Separate Battalion].Krasnaya Zvezda (in Russian). Retrieved11 May 2017.
  33. ^"Евсюков Владимир Иосифович".tankfront.ru. Retrieved2024-07-25.
  34. ^"Генерал-майор Рудской Федор Андреевич" (in Russian). Alumni of the Minsk Suvorov Military School. 13 October 2019.
  35. ^"Седых, Анатолий Васильевич (род. 1927)".unicat.nlb.by. Retrieved2024-07-25.
  36. ^"О назначении В.Н.Усхопчика, О.К.Максимчика, И.И.Комарова, С.П.Гурулева, М.М.Ловейкина на должности, замещаемые лицами высшего офицерского состава, и об освобождении С.С.Румянцева, В.К.Крюкова и А.С.Рукшина от занимаемых должностей Архив 2007".www.levonevski.net. Retrieved2024-07-25.

References

[edit]
  • Volostnov, Nikolay.На огненных рубежах (On the borders of fire) (3rd edition). Moscow: Voenizdat, 1983

Further reading

[edit]
  • Dorokhov, Alexander Mikhailovich.Прошу слова... (Request to Speak). Moscow: INES, 2007
  • Gulyakin, Mikhail Filippovich. «Будет жить!..» (It will live!). Moscow: Voenizdat, 1985
  • Volostnov, N.I., "Гвардия в огне" (roughly 'Guards in the Fire'), 3rd Edition,Gorki, 1979.
Airborne
Cavalry
Rifle
Mountain
Reserve
Guards
Motorized
Tank
Motor Rifle
Other
Divisions of the Soviet Union 1945–1957
Airborne
Artillery
Gun
Antiaircraft
Machine Gun
Cavalry
Rifle
Guards
Mechanised
Tank
Other
Guards units marked inbold.
Divisions of the Soviet Union 1957–1989
Airborne
Artillery
Aviation
Motor
Rifle
Guards
1st – 18th
20th – 39th
42nd – 66th
70th – 97th
109th – 144th
Training
4th – 27th
32nd – 49th
52nd – 69th
71st – 99th
100th – 119th
121st – 135th
145th – 199th
201st – 295th
Training
Rocket
Tank
Other
Guards units marked inbold unless they are in a Guards section.
Headquarters
medal
medal
109th Guards Rifle Regiment
114th Guards Rifle Regiment
118th Guards Rifle Regiment
39th Guards Sapper Battalion
 Nazi Germany
 Soviet Union
Army groups
andfronts
Nazi Germany
Soviet Union
Armies
Axis
Soviet Union
Corps
Nazi Germany
Soviet Union
Tank
others
Divisions
Nazi Germany
Panzer
Infantry
others
Soviet Union
Guards Rifle
Rifle
others
Notable participants
Nazi Germany Nazi Germany
Kingdom of RomaniaRomania
OtherAxis members
Soviet Union Soviet Union
Significant locations
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=37th_Guards_Rifle_Division&oldid=1259840284"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp