Anton Klementyevich Monnerot du Mans (1869-1924) - military mechanical engineer, participant in the First World War , major general .
| Anton Klementyevich Monnerot du mans | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Date of Birth | April 15, 1869 | ||||
| Place of Birth | Smolensk , Russia | ||||
| Date of death | June 18, 1924 (55 years old) | ||||
| A place of death | Kharkov | ||||
| Affiliation | |||||
| Type of army | |||||
| Rank | major general | ||||
| Awards and prizes | |||||
Content
Biography
Anton Klementyevich Monnerot du Maine was born on April 15, 1869 in Smolensk . From the nobles of Smolensk province .
In 1887 he entered the mechanical department of the Technical School of the Maritime Department in Kronstadt .
In 1890, after graduating from college, he was promoted to junior mechanical engineer .
From 1891 to 1894 he served as a mechanical engineer on the cruiser " Zabiyaka ".
May 14, 1896 promoted to assistant senior mechanical engineer .
From 1896 to 1901 he served as a ship mechanic on the squadron battleship Sisoy the Great and was a member of the Chinese campaign of 1900-1901 .
From 1901 he served as a ship mechanic on the Plastun rank 2 cruiser as part of the Baltic Sea Practical Squadron , from 1902 to 1904 on the Voevoda mine cruiser.
In 1904 he was promoted to senior mechanical engineer (in 1905 he was renamed Lieutenant Colonel of the Corps of Marine Engineers ).
From 1905 to 1907 he served on the cruiser Admiral Kornilov , from 1907 to 1908 on the cruiser Askold .
In 1910 he was promoted to colonel of the Corps of Mechanical Engineers of the Navy.
From September 22, 1910 to 1915 he served as a senior ship mechanic of the battleship " Andrew the First Called " and on which he participated in the First World War.
March 28, 1913 renamed the title of Mechanical Engineer captain 1st rank .
On December 30, 1915, he was appointed the flagship mechanical engineer of the headquarters of the chief of the 2nd Baltic Sea battleship brigade.
In 1917 he was promoted to major general .
After the October Revolution, he served until 1919 as the chief mechanical engineer at the naval base.
From 1919 to 1920 he served as chief mechanical engineer at the headquarters of the Black-Azov fleet.
From 1920 to 1921 - Head of the Central Administration of the Naval Industry of Ukraine.
Since March 1, 1921 - Head of the Naval Department of the Council of the Military Industry of Ukraine.
Since December 1, 1921, the head of the naval subdivision of the Office of the Military Industry of Ukraine.
Since June 17, 1922, an engineer for the orders of Promvoevukra. Dismissed by layoff January 25, 1923.
Since February 21, 1923, a statistical engineer on the board of the Southern Machine-Building Trust.
He died on June 18, 1924 from a βsudden cardiac arrestβ in Kharkov .
Rewards
- Order of St. Stanislav 3 degrees (12/6/1901)
- Order of St. Stanislav 2 degrees (1912)
- Order of St. Vladimir 4 degrees with bows for 20 companies (22.9.13)
- Order of St. Anne 2 degrees (08.26.15)
Family
- Father - Clement Ivanovich Monnerot-du-Mans, college secretary .
- Mother - Antonina Monnerot-du-Mans (nee Novitskaya).
- Brother - Klementy Klementyevich Monnerot-du-Mans (1868-1930), local historian , one of the founders of the museum "For good education" in Kaluga . [one]
- Wife (1 marriage) - Elena Iosifovna, widow of the lieutenant of the 9th East Siberian Line Battalion Deonisiy Sakhonsky. (The marriage was dissolved by decree of the Synod of 08/19/1911).
- Daughter - Vera (12/27/1895 - until 1907)
- Son - George (born 01.31.1897)
- Wife (2nd marriage) - Alexandra Grigoryevna (nee Lapshina), in her first marriage Milinarskaya, daughter of archpriest. She had daughters from her first marriage - Natalia (born in 1895) and Elena (born on 02.22.1897).
- Daughter - Olga Antonovna Monnero (born 16.10.1914) - became a meteorologist , worked throughout the war in the Leningrad Hydrometeorological Office; after the war - in the Arctic and Hydrometeorological institutes.
Notes
- β Old Kaluga.
Literature
- R. M. Melnikov. The battleship "Andrew the First-Called" (1906 - 1925). - SPb.