Vasily Yakovenko Explained

Vasily Yakovenko
Native Name Lang:ru
Office:4th People's Commissar of Agriculture of the Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic
Term Start:January 9, 1922
Term End:July 7, 1923
Primeminister:Vladimir Lenin
Predecessor:Valerian Obolensky (Deputy People's Commissar)
Semyon Sereda
Successor:Alexander Smirnov
Office2:2nd People's Commissar of Social Security of the Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic
Term Start2:July 7, 1923
Term End2:May 10, 1926
Primeminister2:Alexey Rykov
Predecessor2:Alexander Vinokurov
Successor2:Iosif Nagovitsyn
Birth Date:March 15, 1889
Birth Place:Taseevo Village, Kansk District, Yenisei Governorate, Russian Empire
Death Date:July 29, 1937 (aged 48)
Death Place:Moscow, Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, Soviet Union
Party:Communist Party of the Soviet Union
Spouse:Raisa Abramovna Yakovenko
Awards:George Cross

Vasily Grigoryevich Yakovenko (March 15, 1889 – July 29, 1937) was the organizer of the partisan movement in Siberia during the Russian Civil War, a Soviet statesman, People's Commissar of Agriculture of the Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic (1922–1923), People's Commissar of Social Security of the Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic (1923–1926).

Biography

From a peasant family, at the age of 9, he was left an orphan. He worked as a laborer. In 1910, he was drafted into the army and served in the engineering units for 4 years. Since 1914, he participated in the First World War, the non–commissioned officer, according to his own recollections, was awarded the Saint George Cross three times, but this fact has no documentary evidence. In July 1917, he joined the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party (Bolsheviks). Returning to Taseevo, at the end of the same year, he became chairman of the Taseevsky Volost District.[1] [2]

After the Czechoslovak Revolt, which overthrew the Soviet regime in the region, he went underground. In December 1918, he led the uprising in Taseevo and organized a partisan struggle against the Kolchak Troops. He became one of the founders of the partisan army, which numbered up to 15 thousand people. Chairman of the Council of the North Kansk Partisan Front, led the fight against the Kolchak regime until the end of January 1920.[2]

From 1920 to 1922, he was chairman of the Kansk Revolutionary Committee and the county executive committee. At the beginning of 1922, he was appointed Deputy Chairman of the Krasnoyarsk Provincial Executive Committee, but was soon summoned to Moscow. On the recommendation of Ivan Teodorovich, who personally knew him, on January 9, 1922, he was appointed People's Commissar of Agriculture of the Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic. He is listed as an ardent supporter of the New Economic Policy.[2] [3]

From 1923 to 1926, People's Commissar of Social Security of the Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic. Delegate of the 12th13th Congresses of the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks), in 1924–1925 – member of the Central Control Commission of the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks). He was a member of the All–Russian Central Executive Committee. Since 1928, he worked in the reception room of the chairman of the Central Executive Committee, Mikhail Kalinin, as chairman of the land and election commission. From 1932 to 1935 – in the State Planning Commission of the Soviet Union, he was a member of the presidium and chairman of the national bureau. Since 1935, he was first a member of the board of the Research Institute of New Bast Crops under the People's Commissariat for Agriculture of the Soviet Union in Moscow, and then the director of this institute.[1]

Arrested on February 9, 1937, sentenced on July 29, 1937, by the Military Collegium of the Supreme Court of the Soviet Union to capital punishment and shot on the same day, buried in the cemetery of the Donskoy Monastery. Rehabilitated on June 30, 1956, by the Military Collegium of the Supreme Court of the Soviet Union.[4]

Family

First wife – Maria Alexandrovna Mullova. The second wife, Raisa Abramovna Yakovenko, was repressed as the wife of an "enemy of the people", spent 19 years in camps and exile, then lived in Moscow.[5]

Awards

The Notes of a Partisan mentions the awarding of Vasily Grigorievich with three Saint George Crosses, however, there is no data on these awards in the consolidated lists of holders of the Saint George Cross.

Bibliography

Remembrance

In 2013, a monument to Vasily Grigorievich Yakovenko was erected in the village of Taseevo.

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Vasily Yakovenko // Great Soviet Encyclopedia (3rd Edition)
  2. Vasily Yakovenko // Big Biographical Encyclopedia. 2009
  3. http://www.whoiswho.ru/old_site/russian/Password/journals/21998/chernoivr.htm Vyacheslav Chernoivanov. The Bitter Bread of Twenty People's Commissars and Ministers
  4. http://www.memorial.krsk.ru/martirol/yako.htm Martyrology
  5. https://web.archive.org/web/20091231023235/http://www.memorial.krsk.ru/Public/80/890315.htm Memories of Vasily Yakovenko