Silver ponds - the abolished settlement on the territory of the modern Frolovsky district of the Volgograd region of Russia. Since the creation of the district, a sanatorium has been located on the territory of the settlement, later - a health camp for children.
| Former locality | |
| Silver Ponds | |
|---|---|
| State affiliation | |
| Coordinates | |
| Date of destruction | July 8, 1974 (excluded from credentials as non-existent) |
| Founder name | A.M. Stallions |
| State of the art | Children's Health Camp |
| Modern location | Frolovsky District , Volgograd Region , Russia |
Content
Administrative divisions
On January 1, 1936 the sanatorium "Silver Ponds" was part of the Veshensky village council of the Frolovsky district of the Volgograd region [1] .
According to the data of the regional statistical office for 1949, the Frolovsky district included the farm Silver Ponds [2] .
On the basis of the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR of June 18, 1954 No. 744/83 “On the Unification of Rural Soviets of the Stalingrad Region”, by the decision of the Executive Committee of the Stalingrad Regional Council of Workers' Deputies of June 24, 1954 No. 15/801, the Veshensky and Rubezhensky Village Councils of the Frolovsky District were united in one Archedinsky village council , where the settlement of the sanatorium "Silver Ponds" entered [3] .
By the decision of the executive committee of the Volgograd Regional Council of Workers' Deputies of July 8, 1974 No. 19/784 “On exclusion from registration data of some settlements of the region” was excluded from the registration data as a virtually non-existent village Silver Ponds of the Archedinskaya Village Council (residents moved to Obrazts settlement) [ 4] .
History
The settlement is associated with the name of a local landowner and ameliorator Alexander Mikhailovich Zherebtsov . Ponds are part of the irrigation system created by him at the end of the 19th century. His wooden manor, which is used as one of the buildings of the children's camp, has also been preserved [5] .
In 1941, the next shift of the Artek pioneer camp was evacuated from the Crimea. From May to September 1942, the shift was in the sanatorium "Silver Ponds" [6] . The nature and life of the pioneers are described in the book of one of the Artekites [7] .
Attractions
The camp site houses an object of cultural heritage of the category “a monument to the history of regional significance” [8] - Sergey Timofeyevich Timofeev’s Grave, who died during the Battle of Stalingrad on September 6, 1942 (1942, 1960) [9] .
Notes
- ↑ Districts and settlements of the Stalingrad region. Directory. - Stalingrad, 1936. - p. 246-249.
- ↑Gavo . F. P - 686. Op. 11. Ed. xp 252. L. 248, 248 vol.
- ↑ GAVO. F. P - 2115. Op. 13. Ed. xp 4. L. 32-55.
- ↑ GAVO. F. P - 2115. Op. 11. Ed. xp 768. L. 33-34.
- ↑ The house of the landowner Zherebtsov requires restoration . Volgograd-TRV (08/06/2013). The appeal date is July 21, 2019.
- ↑ Artek's longest shift: Pioneers wrote letters to watermelons to parents Uncoupled . Komsomolskaya Pravda (06/19/2014). The appeal date is July 21, 2019.
- ↑ Dibrova Alexey. Artek temper.
- List of cultural heritage sites located on the territory of the Volgograd region subject to state protection as historical and cultural monuments of regional significance (approved by the Resolution of the Volgograd Regional Duma No. 62/706 of July 05, 1997 " On the State Protection of the Historical and Cultural Monuments of the Volgograd Region "); No. 2535.
- ↑ Object of Cultural Heritage No. 3400979000 // Register of Objects of Cultural Heritage of Wikigid. Checked 2019-07-22
Links
- 2.62. Frolovsky // History of the administrative-territorial division of the Volgograd (Stalingrad) region. 1936−2007: Handbook. in 3 t. / Comp.: D. V. Buyanov, T. I. Zhdankina, V. M. Kadashova, S. A. Noritsyna. - Volgograd : Change, 2009. - Vol. 3. - ISBN 978-5-9846166-8-3 .