Poddubny is a rural type settlement in the Uzlovsky district of the Tula region . Part of the territory of the municipality Guerrilla. The status of the municipality is a rural settlement (Article 1 of the Charter of the Partizanskoe Defense Ministry of April 26, 2006). Located 5.5 km south-west of the district center of the city Uzlovaya.
| Rural village | |
| Poddubny | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Subject of the federation | Tula region |
| Municipal district | Uzlovsky |
| Rural settlement | Guerrilla |
| History and geography | |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Katoykonim | poddubovchanin, poddubovchanka poddubovchane |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Postcode | 301632 |
| OKATO code | 70244844003 |
| OKTMO code | |
The name probably originated from the nearby urban-type settlement Dubovka. The settlement was founded in the 1958s as a mining settlement based on the union of closed coal mines No. 6, 7, 7 bis of OAO Tulaugol. Also on the basis of mines number 6, 7, 8 in 1938, the village "Dubovka" was built.
The area of the village Poddubny is directly related to the development of coal in the Moscow coal basin . Coal was found here under Peter the Great. Not far from Poddubny there is a "Tatar" cemetery.
Content
History
19th century settlement
Mines number 6, 7, 7 bis were opened on land near the village of Ilyinka. The village of Ilyinka is located on the right elevated bank of the r. Shivoron, tributary Upa. Until 1887 Ilyinka was a village; its occurrence relates to the 50 years of the XIX century. The first settlers were evicted from the village. Dedilovo, to be closer to its allotment land, defended from Dedilovo, with the remoteness of this village, 10 - 15 versts (~ 11 - 16 km). The villages of the Ilyinsky parish Akimovka, Cheremukhovka and Dubovka were formed in the same way. [one]
Settlement in the 20th Century
Human settlements on the territory of Poddubny settlement started in the 40s of the 20th century with the development of coal in the coal basin situated near Moscow. Mines in these places began to build before the war. In 1938 the construction of coal mines number 6, 7, 7 bis marked the beginning of the settlement at these mines. The settlement was built quickly. Dozens of workers came to a new place from different parts of our country. Miner's work brought together people from Kursk, Ryazan, Bryansk, Tambov regions. The peasants of the surrounding villages also came to work: Gudalovka, Dubo`vka, Akimivka, Cheremukhovka, Vysotsky and others. So from the people of different professions, different nationalities formed settlements at the mines number 6, 7, 7-bis, which for many immigrants have become, as it were, the second homeland. [2]
Chronology of important events of the village
In 1948, many trees and shrubs were planted. In the same year, a dam was laid near a small stream near mine number 7 bis, where it was decided to arrange a reservoir with a beach, a tower and a boat station. In the 1950s work began on lighting the streets, radio stations earned, they operated on each mine. [2]
On May 23, 1954, the Dubovskiy Motor Transport Company entered into operation. From this point on, the route of bus number 152 was opened, which oversaw between the village of Dubovka and mines number 6.7. In 1958, the mines 6, 7, 7 bis were merged into one settlement, which became known as p. Poddubny.
In 1986, the territory of the village Poddubny, like a number of other territories of the Tula region, was subjected to serious radioactive contamination as a result of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant disaster, which resulted in a significant overexposure of the population. Until 1998, the territory of the settlement had the status of a “zone with the right to resettlement”. Since 1998, the village belongs to the "territory with a favorable socio-economic status."
With the allocation of funds for the Chernobyl program in 1991, N.I. Kuznetsova, together with the head of the administration V.G. Proshchalykin, managed to achieve for the residents of Poddubny the fulfillment of the design and estimate documentation for the gasification of the settlement.
In 2007, through hard struggle, we managed to get the Administration to carry out a gasification project again. But the means to perform construction and installation work again was not possible.
By the intervention of the deputy. A.V. Agapov, the governor of the Tula region, and N. N. Weber, the director of the construction department of the ministry of construction and housing and communal services of the Tula region, N. Kuznetsova was given assistance and the case moved.
Settlement in the 21st Century
May 10, 2012 began the gasification of housing. In the village Poddubny gas comes under the program "Social development of the village." The estimated cost of work is 10 million rubles. The length of the gas networks was 9.5 kilometers. "Blue" fuel came to homes on November 29, 2012. At the same time, the village as it received a rebirth. Began to rise after the devastation of the 90s.
For nearly a quarter of a century, residents of the village Poddubny MO Partizanskoe, a settlement with its social sphere, were waiting for gasification, because of the lack of prospects, it gradually fell into decay. The head of the Moscow region Partizanskoe M. O. Rayman supported the initiative inhabitants, found understanding and assistance in the district administration. Thanks to one of the regional programs, gas came to the village, which means there is hope for a revival, because the places here are very beautiful. The head of the district administration, Aleksey Berezin, visited the village and lit gas burners on the stove in one of the houses, and there are 129 in total. It is expected that the countrymen will meet the New Year not only at the blue screens, but also with a real blue light.
In August 2012, residents of sh. No. 7 restored the water supply of their homes.
Now there is about 225 families in Poddubny.
Historical background
Mine number 6 "Dubovskaya". Former coal mine number 6 is located in the center of the quadrangle: pos. Dubovka - mine 5 "bis" - pos. Partizan - der. Dubovka. Directly next to it is the mine number 7, and slightly further number 7 "bis".
At the place of formation of mine number 6 with the village, there was originally a small village in several houses (apparently Maslovka, judging by the old map).
The mines are shallow, 60 to 65 meters, a layer of coal with a capacity of 1.5 to 2.5 meters. The mines are wet, mine number 6 is not very good, but there are few of them. There are gases, but explosions are rare, as they said, “you won't die, only your head will be sick”. Mine number 6 [3] was commissioned in 1943 with a design capacity of 700 tons per day. It was completed during the war Moscow metrostroiteli. Located two kilometers from the village of Dubovka. The mine field is set aside for a short time, the pile driver is wooden. In the first years of work, the coal was cleared in the lavas by means of an explosive method with a preliminary hemming of the formation with a cutter. Cargo haulage by excavation drifts was carried out by core winches, by the main haulage roadway - by ring cableway.
Personnel were formed from the camps of the Volga Germans and repatriated Soviet prisoners of war, who were filtered in the camp in Dubovka. At the beginning, a small village was built at the mine for the location of the German camp, the accommodation of groups of workers on call and the site managers. The service life of local mines did not exceed 20 years, and by the 60s they began to be developed. The mine worked for 19 years until 1962, providing the country's economy with coal in the amount of 4 million 700 thousand tons. In 1959, by order of the Tulaugol combine, in order to reduce management costs and increase production concentration, three mines - No. 6,7,7-bis - were administratively combined into one mine management, mine No. 6/7. After working off the industrial reserves of these mines, the Guerrilla mine became their successor.
Notes
- ↑ History of the village of Ilinka
- ↑ 1 2 Construction of coal mines No. 6,7,7-bis
- ↑ I.Harlamov, P.Len. Miner's Hub. Tula 2010
Literature
- Zverinsky V.V. A material for historical and topographical research on Orthodox monasteries. SPb. 1892.
- I.Harlamov, P.Len. Miner's Hub. Tula 2010.
- Khorev, A.V. Nodal, scorched by war. Tula 2008 100 s.