Sergey Dmitrievich Evreinov ( October 10, 1869 , Tula Province - 1931 , Moscow ) - Samara and Yaroslavl Governor.
| Sergey Dmitrievich Evreinov | |||||||
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| Predecessor | Vladimir Vasilyevich Yakunin | ||||||
| Successor | Andrey Afanasyevich Stankevich | ||||||
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| Predecessor | Dmitry Nikolaevich Tatishchev | ||||||
| Successor | Nikolai Leonidovich Obolensky | ||||||
| Birth | October 10, 1869 Tula Province | ||||||
| Death | 1931 Moscow | ||||||
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Content
Biography
Born October 10, 1869 in an old noble family . Sergey's childhood passed in the mother's family estate, which was located in the Bogoroditsk district of the Tula province (250 dessiatinas ).
In 1889 he entered the St. Petersburg Theological Academy and graduated in 1893 with the title of a real student.
Service
January 14, 1893 entered the service of the State Chancellery with the rank of provincial secretary, with assignment to the department of civil and spiritual affairs. March 10 of the same year was appointed to participate in the work of the commission to collect materials covering the history of the State Chancellery for the years 1820-1892.
Sergey Dmitrievich’s career as an official in the State Chancellery began with the filling of the position of librarian on the occasion of his absence from the office since September 17, 1893. February 1, 1894 he was appointed assistant clerk of the 1st Department of the Office. On February 13, 1896, for longevity, Evreinov received the rank of collegiate secretary at the same time with a silver medal in memory of Emperor Alexander III .
On April 8, 1896, he was sent to the temporary branch of the Ministry of Justice , formed in Moscow on the occasion of the coronation of Nicholas II and Alexandra Feodorovna . For this work, he was awarded a commemorative medal.
On July 8, 1896, Evreinov was allowed to accept and wear the Order of Bukhara Gold Star of the 3rd degree.
On June 1, 1897, he received an appointment to serve as a junior clerk of the office of the Warsaw Governor-General and 600 rubles to relocate. April 2, 1899 "for long service" was promoted to titular adviser . From October 1, 1899, Evreinov became an officer without maintenance (but with official rights and attached to the 1st office work office) under the Warsaw Governor-General.
In 1898, Evreinov was awarded the Order of St.. Stanislav 3rd degree.
In 1900, he married Ekaterina Ivanovna Unkovskaya (1873–1935) and was the daughter of an admiral . Her father's condition allowed her to buy a small estate in the Tarusa district of the Kaluga province of 400 acres.
Having received the rank of collegiate assessor on "service life" on April 1, 1902, he retired from the Warsaw Governor-General and on June 17, 1902 was appointed a candidate to the district chief at the Tarusa district convention of the Kaluga province.
July 1, 1904, Sergey Dmitrievich was left “behind the staff” and lived on his estate, and since January 22 he was counted among the Ministry of the Interior.
April 22, 1906 "for long service" was promoted to court councilors . From February 5 to May 7, 1908, he was in the Moscow branch of the Peasant Land Bank with membership in the Ministry of Finance.
Due to the approval of Evreinov on February 8, 1908 as Kaluga governor in the position of county leader of the nobility , he resigned from the bank.
December 6, 1909 Sergey Dmitrievich received the Order of St.. Vladimir 4th degree.
On November 10, 1911, by the decision of the district Tarusa nobility, the term of Yevreinov’s tenure as a district leader of the nobility was extended for three years. In this post, he was awarded light-bronze medals in honor of the 100th anniversary of the Patriotic War of 1812, as well as in honor of the 300th anniversary of the House of Romanov , which he received on February 21, 1913.
January 9, 1914 appointed Bessarabian Vice Governor . In this post he put a lot of work on the construction of a monument to Emperor Alexander I in Chisinau . For this monument he received the highest favor on June 3, 1914 and at the same time was awarded the court title of the chamber junker . He became a collegiate advisor on June 16, 1914.
With the beginning of the First World War, on August 30, 1914, he was seconded by the Bessarabian Governor to the commander-in-chief of the armies of the South-Western Front and the military governor-general. Serious cares were placed on Sergei Dmitrievich’s shoulders to ensure the army, mobilization and evacuation of residents.
Governor
In the years 1914-1915, Evreinov served as the Chernivtsi and Peremyshl governor in the Austro-Hungarian territory occupied by Russian troops during the offensive. Perfectly coping with such difficult assignments, Evreinov was fired on January 1, 1915 "for distinction" as a state councilor.
On February 12, 1915, Evreinov was awarded a light bronze medal for successful work on mobilization in 1914.
On July 6, 1915, Sergey Dmitrievich was appointed to the post of "rectifying post" of the Samara governor . Until he received the rank of state councilor, he could only act as governor, without being officially considered as such. In this position, Evreinov was approved by the Minister of Internal Affairs, N. G. Shcherbatov . The new Samara governor arrived on August 16 in Samara by the steamboat of the Samolet joint-stock company (one of the three largest on the Volga ).
In Samara, he did not have time to do anything special, as he was the governor for only 2 months. Evreinov’s departure from office was motivated by a serious illness. He left for October 19, 1915 in St. Petersburg and never returned to Samara. What, in fact, caused the removal from Samara, is unknown. On October 20, as the Russkoye Slovo newspaper reported, he, having arrived in Petrograd, asked the Minister of Internal Affairs A.N. Khvostov about a “long vacation”. Soon, however, by order of November 13, 1915, Evreinov was appointed to the position of executing the case of the Yaroslavl governor , which he held until October 16, 1916.
Recent years
Being by conviction was a monarchist, he met the revolution without enthusiasm. He had to emigrate, like his brother and two sisters, but for some reason he lingered and remained in the army until the October Revolution . As a former officer and also the governor, he was arrested and should have been tried. Sitting in the Butyrskaya prison in 1918, he suffered a stroke , as a result of which he became completely disabled. He was tried, but for health reasons he was released and released. His wife, Ekaterina Ivanovna, at that time already lived with her grandmother, in Maliy Uspensky Lane, where Sergey Dmitrievich also moved from Butyrok.
He died in 1931 at the age of sixty-three.
Literature
- Aleksushin G.V. Samara governors. - Samara: Samara Printing House, 1996 - 320 p., Il.
- Volga business. November 7, 1915.
- Volga business. December 3, 1915.
