Steppe March Explained

Conflict:Steppe March
Partof:the Southern Front of the Russian Civil War
Date:February 25, 1918 – May 18, 1918
Place:Don Host Oblast, Southern Russia
Result:Survival of the Don Army
Combatant1: Don Army
Combatant2: Red Army
Commander1: Piotr Popov
Ivan Popov
Commander2: Boris Dumenko
Fedor Podtieklov
Strength1:1,727
Strength2:unknown
Casualties1:81 men
Casualties2:unknown

The Steppe March (Russian: Степной поход) was a successful military withdrawal by the Don Cossacks in Spring 1918, towards the steppe around the Sal River, to ensure their survival under attack from the Red Army.

In January–February 1918, the Red Army had conducted the successful Donbass-Don Operation in which Rostov-on-Don was occupied on February 23, and the Cossack capital Novocherkassk on February 25. The Don Cossack Ataman Alexei Kaledin committed suicide on 11 February 1918.

The Volunteer Army under the command of Generals Mikhail Alekseev and General Lavr Kornilov retreated during the Ice March to the Kuban. Field Ataman Popov's Don Cossacks didn't want to leave the Don and instead departed toward the river Sal on 26 February. Popov's force included 1500 Cossacks, five guns, and 40 machine guns. On 23 April, Popov's force, now diminished to 1000, linked up with K. S. Poliakov's Zaplavskaia army at Konstantinovskaia. From the combined force, Popov organized Southern, Northern and Trans-Don army groups, under S. V. Denisov, Semiletov, and Semenov respectively. On 6 May, the Southern group helped capture Novocherkassk, which coincided with the German advance, and the arrival of Mikhail Drozdovsky's men from Romania.[1] [2]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Kenez . Peter . Red Attack, White Resistance; Civil War in South Russia 1918 . 2004 . New Academia Publishing . Washington, DC . 9780974493442 . 95,101,124,131.
  2. Book: Chamberlin . William . The Russian Revolution, 1917-1921 . 1935 . The Macmillan Company . New York . 386-387.