Proletarskaya street - a street in Orenburg . She had many names. Within the fortress, its first name since 1744 is Komis, which means that the city was laid by the Orenburg Commission even before the formation of the province. Since the 70s of the XVIII century, it began to be called Postal Street in honor of the post office, located on it between the modern streets of Pushkinskaya and Leninskaya (currently this place is part of the street). In 1878, it received the name Perovskaya in memory of Vasily Alekseevich Perovsky , the Orenburg military governor (1833–1843) and the governor general (1851–1857), who invested in the development of the city and province. In the 1940s, the section from Postnikova Street to Nevelskaya Street was called Voskresenskaya; in 1879, the section from Orska Street to Shevchenko Street was named Berdinskaya. The street got its modern name in 1926.
| Street | |
| Proletarian | |
|---|---|
| general information | |
| A country | Russia |
| City | Orenburg |
| Area | Central |
| Length | 6.3 km |
| Former names | Komis, Postal, Perovskaya, Voskresenskaya, Byrdinskaya |
Location
It has a direction mainly from south to north, it starts not far from Maxim Gorky Street and ends at the intersection with Sakhalinskaya and Noyabrskaya Streets. The length is about 6.3 km.