10th Guards Motor Rifle Division explained

Unit Name:52nd Rifle Division (1935 – Dec. 1941)
10th Guards Rifle Division (Dec. 1941 – 1946)
10th Guards Mountain Division (1946–1962)
10th Guards Motor Rifle Division (1962–1991)
Dates:1941–1991
Branch: Red Army, Soviet Ground Forces
Type:Division
Role:Infantry
Command Structure:Karelian Front
2nd Belorussian Front
Transcaucasus Military District
Nickname:Honorary title = "Pechengskii"
Battles:1939: Battle of Petsamo
1941–1944: Arctic Defensive
1944: Petsamo-Kirkenes Operation
1945: East Pomeranian Offensive
Konitz-Köslin Offensive Operation

The 10th Guards Motor Rifle Division was a division of the Soviet Ground Forces. The full name of its predecessor division was the 10th Guards Rifle Pechengskii, Twice Order of the Red Banner, Order of Alexander Nevsky, Order of the Red Star Division. (Russian: 10ая гвардейская стрелковая Печенгский, дважды орденом Красного Знамени, орденом Александра Невского, орденом Красной звезда дивизия.) The 10th Guards Rifle Division was formed from the 52nd Rifle Division in late 1941.

History

In 1939 the 52nd Rifle Division took part in the Soviet invasion of Poland, then during the Winter War in the Battle of Petsamo.

At the outbreak of Operation Barbarossa the division was still in the far north, near Murmansk. As part of 14th Army it defended against the German Mountain Corps Norway's assault towards the port which began on 19 June 1941, and was finally brought to a halt along the Litsa River line on 21 Sept. In recognition of its role in the successful defense of Murmansk, the division was renamed and reorganized as the 10th Guards Rifle Division on 26 Dec, with the following order of battle:

It was one of the few Guards formations formed or deployed by the Red Army in the Arctic during the war.

During the defense the 10th Guards was engaged in 150 fights of local importance. At the end of April 1942, it began a counterattack which was unsuccessful. The counterattack failed due to severe weather conditions and a strong snowstorm on the previous day. Along with most units of the static Karelian Front, during the next two years the division operated at minimal strength in its rifle units in order to conserve manpower for the main front to the south; however it also formed a divisional ski battalion for rear area security.[2]

In Sept. – Oct. 1944 the division was subordinated to 131st Rifle Corps, itself reporting to 14th Army. Beginning on 7 October 1944, it participated in the Petsamo-Kirkenes Operation and was in the first echelon advancing to the building on Mount Small Karikvayvish and seized a bridgehead on the west bank of the Titovka River on 8 Oct. After four days of fighting for the Luostari on 14 Oct 10 Guards crossed the Pechenga River west of Kakkuri and participated in the liberation of Pechenga. After the liberation of Pechenga the division attacked Kirkenes, supported by the 378th Guards Heavy Self-Propelled Artillery Regiment. Once the Germans had been forced back into Norway the offensive came to a halt and Karelian Front went into STAVKA reserve.[3]

In December the division was reassigned to 19th Army, which in turn was assigned to Gen. K.K. Rokossovski's 2nd Belorussian Front.[4] It crossed Poland and was positioned in Ostrow-Mazowiecki in January 1945. On 26 February, during the East Pomeranian Offensive, the division moved from Baldenberg and turned northeast to Rummelsburg and on 3 March captured Rummelsburg. On 21 March, 10th Guards was relocated to the right flank of the army – 30 km southwest of and then advanced towards Pustkovits-Gdynia.

After helping to take Gdynia on 31 March the division joined forces with 1st Polish Tank Brigade and attacked Zagorje, east of Janowo, located on the peninsula formed by the Gulf Puttsger Vic and the river Rod. By the end of April, the 10th Guards was positioned in the forests northeast of Treptow and covered the coast of Baltic Sea from Kohlberg to Valddivinov. The division mopped-up the forests, eliminating small scattered groups of German troops. In the last days of the war, the division crossed the delta of the river Oder at Swinemünde and was engaged in fighting on the island of Usedom before the German surrender.

Postwar Service

In the postwar period it moved to Akhaltsikhe in the Georgian SSR, joining the Transcaucasus Military District. It was active there by 1 January 1947, being converted into a mountain rifle division in 1949.[5] In 1962 it became the 10th Guards Motor Rifle Division, part of 31st Army Corps.[6] The division was disbanded in March 1992, with its lineage, honours and awards transferred to the 67th Motor Rifle Division in the Far East, which was redesignated as the 115th Guards Motor Rifle Division.[7]

Subordination September 1944 – May 1945

DateFront (District)ArmyCorps
Karelian Front14th Army
Karelian Front14th Army131st Rifle Corps
Karelian Front14th Army99th Rifle Corps
Reserve Stavka19th Army99th Rifle Corps
Reserve Stavka19th Army40th Guards Rifle Corps
2nd Belorussian Front19th Army40th Guards Rifle Corps
2nd Belorussian Front19th Army40th Guards Rifle Corps
2nd Belorussian Front19th Army40th Guards Rifle Corps
2nd Belorussian Front19th Army134th Rifle Corps

Order of battle

Commanders

Awards and name

Award (name)DateFor that received
Order of the Red Banner?
PechengskiiFor the exemplary performance of tasks of command in the battles against the German invaders, for winning the city Petsamo (Pechenga) and for displaying valor and courage
Order of the Red Banner?
Order of Alexander NevskyFor the fulfillment of the command in the battles against the Nazi invaders in the capture of cities Laudenburg, Kartuzy (Karthauz) and for displaying valor and courage
The Order of the Red Star?

Heroes of the Soviet Union

AwardNamePositionTitleDate awardNotes
Aliyev, Said DavidovichSniper 35th Guards Rifle RegimentGuards Sergeant22 February 1943
Borodulin, IvanCommander Branch 28th Guards Rifle RegimentGuards Sergeant?
Generalov, Alexei PetrovichMortar company commander of 28th Guards Rifle RegimentGuards Captain2 November 1943Posthumously
Zhulega, Gregory ProkhorovichAssistant platoon leader Reconnaissance Btn. 35 Guards Rifle RegimentGuards Sergeant18 June 1944
24 November 1944
29 June 1945
Zimakov, IvanBattalion commander 29th Guards Artillery RegimentGuards Major24 March 1945Posthumously: called artillery fire on his own position
Ivchenko, Michael Lavrent'evichSniper 28th Guards Rifle RegimentGuards Lance Corporal2 November 1944Posthumously: blocked machine gun embrasure with his own body
Kvasnikov, Michael SavelievichMortarman 28th Guards Rifle RegimentGuards Lance Corporal24 March 1945Posthumously: blocked machine gun embrasure with his own body
Streltsov, Pavel28th Guards Rifle RegimentGuards ordinary2 November 194426 October 1944 Died of wounds
Frolov, Andrei D.Company commanderGuards Lieutenant2 November 1944

Memory

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Charles C. Sharp, Red Guards: Soviet Guards Rifle and Airborne Units 1941 to 1945, Soviet Order of Battle World War II Vol. IV, Nafziger, 1995, p 46
  2. Sharp, Red Guards, p 46
  3. Sharp, Red Guards, p 46
  4. Sharp, Red Guards, p 46
  5. Web site: 31st Army Corps. www.ww2.dk. 2016-03-06.
  6. Feskov et al 2013, p. 162
  7. Michael Holm/V.I. Feskov et al, 10th Guards Motorised Rifle Division, 2015.