Ivan Nikitich Utkin (pseudonym Stanko; 1884 , Ivankovo - 1910 , Vladimir ) is a Russian revolutionary and militant. Member of the Ivanovo-Ascension Council of Workers' Deputies. Member of the RSDLP . Head of the workers 'militia of the Ivanovo-Ascension Council of Workers' Deputies
| Ivan Nikitich Utkin | |
|---|---|
| Date of Birth | May 23, 1884 |
| Place of Birth | |
| Date of death | April 30, 1910 (25 years old) |
| A place of death | Vladimir |
| Citizenship | |
| Occupation | revolutionary , action movie |
| The consignment | |
Content
- 1 Biography
- 2 memory
- 3 Sources
- 4 Literature
Biography
Born in the village of Ivankovo, Vladimir Province (now Selivanovsky District, Vladimir Region). At the age of 12, he went on foot to Ivanovo-Voznesensk (now Ivanovo ) and got a job at the chemical laboratory of the Gryaznov factory, and then at the Zubkov sieve factory. In 1902, Ivan Nikitich joined the RSDLP and chose the pseudonym "Stanko" (borrowed from the then-popular novel by Theodore Hedgehog " At Dawn ").
In the summer of 1904, the Ivanovo revolutionaries ordered Ivan to create a fighting squad. He trained members of the squad of shooting and supplied them with weapons.
At the beginning of 1905, about 60 people were in the squad. Utkin was arrested after a strike on January 17, 1905, against the execution of St. Petersburg workers, in the organization of which he took part. After his release, he lived for some time at the same address with Frunze , which had a significant influence on Stanko's beliefs in the struggle against the autocracy. In the summer of the same year, workers at Polushin’s factories elected Stanko a deputy in the city council (the first in Russia), who later appointed him head of the city labor police. He often visited Shuya , where Frunze lived, and there he also organized a fighting squad. In the same year, Stanko traveled with his military detachments to Yaroslavl and Nizhny Novgorod with the aim of military support for the workers; he, Frunze and members of the squad participated in the December uprising in Moscow.
On July 19, 1907, police arrested Stanko in Kokhma . He was held in Shuisk and Vladimir prisons, sentenced to hard labor.
Ivan Nikitich Utkin (Stanko) died in the spring of 1910 in the prison hospital of Vladimir Central .
He was buried in a mass grave at the Prince Vladimir Cemetery [1] .
Memory
The name of Ivan Nikitich Utkin (Stanko) in Ivanovo is named Stanko Street . In Soviet times, the square in Ivanovo near the printing house was named after him. The sanatorium in the Kineshem district near Navolok is still called "Stanko" to this day. A granite bust was installed at the Talka Memorial .
In the village of Krasnaya Gorbatka, Vladimir Region, a white stone stele was installed and the street was named after Stanko.
Sources
Literature
- V.A. Balukov, L.V. Levkovich, L.D. Solonitsyna, V.P. Terentyev. Deputies of the first council. - M: Owls. Russia, 1980 .-- 296 p.