Alexander Nikolayevich Ilyinsky - head and military commissar of the Tula arms and technical school named after the Tula proletariat (1932-1938), military commissar of the 150th rifle division (1941-1942), brigade commissar.
| Alexander Nikolaevich Ilyinsky | |||
|---|---|---|---|
Alexander Nikolaevich Ilyinsky, 1935 | |||
| Date of Birth | 1901 | ||
| Place of Birth | Nizhny Novgorod | ||
| Date of death | 1942 | ||
| A place of death | Lozova , Kharkov region | ||
| Affiliation | |||
| Type of army | Military-political composition of the ground forces | ||
| Years of service | 1919-1920, 1925-1942 | ||
| Rank | |||
| Commanded | Tula arms-technical school | ||
| Battles / wars | Civil war in Russia , The Great Patriotic War | ||
| Awards and prizes | |||
Content
- 1 Biography
- 2 memory
- 3 notes
- 4 Literature
- 5 Links
Biography
Alexander Nikolaevich Ilyinsky was born in 1901 in Nizhny Novgorod. He graduated from a four-year public school. In 1918 he was elected to the Nizhny Novgorod sponge of the Union of Workers' Youth III International ”(Nizhny Novgorod provincial organization of the Komsomol). In 1919 he joined the RCP (b) and in the same year was called up to the Red Army. Between 1920 and 1925 he was in party and Soviet positions in the party and executive bodies of power of the Nizhny Novgorod province, in particular, in the Kanavinsky and Vyksa district Soviets of workers, peasants and Red Army deputies; Nizhny Novgorod Provincial Committee of the RCP (B.); Nizhny Novgorod Provincial Military Commissariat. Repeatedly delegated to the provincial conferences of the RCP (b). For a short time he worked as an editor of the newspaper Vyksunskaya Pravda in 1922. In 1925 he was an employee of the political department of the 17th Nizhny Novgorod Rifle Division of the NKVD. In the same year he entered the Military-Political Academy under the Political Administration of the Workers 'and Peasants' Red Army [2] [3] .
In 1927, A. N. Ilyinsky was appointed to the post of military commissar of the Tula Arms and Technology School (TOTSH). He stayed in this position until 1932. In 1932 he was appointed head of the TOTS. Moreover, after the introduction of one-man management in the Red Army, he remained the military commissar of the school [2] . In 1935, by Decree of the People's Commissariat of Defense of the USSR No. 2484 of November 26, 1935, he was awarded the personal military rank of brigade commissar [4] . On September 2, 1938, he issued his last order “On the secondary verification of the state of the school’s economy from September 15 to September 25, 1938” (in 1937 all military schools of the USSR were renamed into schools). On the same day he was arrested. By a resolution of the military prosecutor of the Moscow military district of May 29, 1939, the case on his charge was dismissed [5] . In the same year he was seconded to the head of the Main Political Directorate of the Red Army [2] .
In November 1941, A. N. Ilyinsky was appointed military commissar of the 150th Infantry Division and in May 1942 he went missing [6] in battles during the Kharkov operation .
Memory
The name of Alexander Nikolaevich Ilyinsky is inscribed on a commemorative stele installed on the territory of the Tula Artillery Engineering Institute, in memory of the officers and graduates of the institute who died on the fronts of World War II [7] .
Notes
- ↑ Awarding of commanders, political workers, engineers, technicians, and military doctors of the Workers 'and Peasants' Red Army.
- ↑ 1 2 3 Article “Ilyinsky Alexander Nikolaevich” on the official website of the Tula Artillery Engineering Institute
- ↑ V.V. Osokin. Nizhny Novgorod
- ↑ List of conferring the highest officer ranks of the Army, Navy and NKVD 1935-1942
- ↑ Nikolai Cherushev. From the Gulag to battle
- ↑ Extract from the order of the GUK NPO of April 8, 1944
- ↑ Memorial stele with the names of officers and graduates of the Tula Artillery Engineering Institute who died during the Great Patriotic War
Literature
- P.O. Lyubashevsky. Tula Artillery Engineering Institute. 1919-2002. - Tula: Lefty, 2004 .-- 288 p. - ISBN 5-86269-215-0 .
- V. G. Tizhanin. From a gunsmith to an artillery engineer. - Tula: Printing house of the Tula Higher Artillery Engineering School, 1979. - 80 p.