300th Rifle Division (Soviet Union)

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300th Rifle Division (10 July 1941 - 16 April 1943)
300th Rifle Division (9 August 1943 - 14 April 1946)
Active1941–1946
CountryFlag of the USSR (1936-1955).svg  Soviet Union
Branch Red Army flag.svg Red Army
TypeDivision
RoleInfantry
Engagements Operation Barbarossa
Battle of Kiev (1941)
First Battle of Kharkov
Second Battle of Kharkov
Operation Blue
Battle of Stalingrad
Operation Uranus
Operation Little Saturn
Battle of Rostov (1943)
Soviet invasion of Manchuria
Battle honours Harbin (2nd Formation)
Commanders
Notable
commanders
  • Col. Pavel Ionovich Kuznetsov
  • Col. Serafim Petrovich Merkulov
  • Col. Ivan Mikhailovich Afonin
  • Maj. Gen. Andrei Pavlovich Karnov
  • Maj. Gen. Kornily Cherepanov

The 300th Rifle Division began service as a standard Red Army rifle division shortly after the German invasion, and fought in the southwestern part of the Soviet-German front for nearly two years following. It was able to escape the encirclement east of Kiev in September 1941, and then fought to defend, and later to try to liberate, the city of Kharkov during 1941-42. After falling back under the weight of the German 1942 summer offensive, the division began distinguish itself during Operation Uranus in late 1942, when it helped defeat the German attempt to relieve Sixth Army and later in the pursuit of the defeated Axis forces and the second liberation of Rostov-na-Donu. In recognition of these successes it was raised to Guards status as the 87th Guards Rifle Division. A second 300th Rifle Division was raised a few months later and fought briefly but very successfully against the Japanese in Manchuria in August 1945. The second formation became the 3rd Tank Division in the Far East postwar and was redesignated as the 46th Tank Division in 1957 before disbanding in 1959.

Contents

1st Formation

The division began forming on 10 July 1941 at Krasnograd in the Kharkov Military District. [1] Its order of battle was as follows:

Col. Pavel Ionovich Kuznetzov was appointed to command of the division on the day it began assembling.

Just a month after forming, the 300th was assigned to 38th Army of Southwestern Front, just as that Army was itself forming up. [3] It first began to reach the front on 12 August and remained in that Army and that Front until May 1942. On 1 September it was helping to contain the 1st Panzer Army's bridgehead across the Dniepr River at Kremenchug. As the German attack penetrated the Soviet lines, most of the division fell back to the east, and so avoided being encircled in the Kiev pocket. [4]

Battles for Kharkov

On 2 October, Col. Serafim Petrovich Merkulov took over command of the division from Colonel Kuznetzov. The 300th fought in the defense of Kharkov in October, after which, in November, it was reported as having been reduced to a strength of 2,684 men. In spite of this, the division went on to take part in the winter counteroffensive. [5]

During the Soviet offensive phase of the Second Battle of Kharkov, which began on 12 May 1942, 38th Army deployed the 300th, along with the 124th and 226th Rifle Divisions and one regiment of the 81st Rifle Division, on the penetration sector of Dragunovka, Peschanoe, and Piatnitskoe, and reinforced them with two tank brigades and almost all the army artillery assets. Despite this, and possibly due to its still-depleted state, the division played a secondary role in the offensive. In its report on the first day's operations, 38th Army staff does not mention the division at all, although in fact it did attempt to seize German positions around Piatnitskoe with a multi-battalion task force. This was repulsed with heavy losses. [6]

During the first half of the following day, 38th Army's shock group (less the 300th) made impressive gains as the German lines fell back. However, starting at 1300 hrs., a concerted German counterthrust, led by 3rd and 23rd Panzer Divisions and supported by three infantry regiments, struck the advancing Soviet forces "on the nose" and sent them reeling back. Under this pressure, the shaken rifle divisions withdrew as best they could to the Bolshaia Babka River, where the 300th was already positioned. This temporarily ended 38th Army's role in the offensive. [7]

On 18 May, as a crisis began to develop due to a German counteroffensive against the south face of the Barvenkovo salient, Marshal S.K. Timoshenko ordered 38th Army to renew its attacks. The 81st and 300th Divisions were to launch a secondary attack against Peschanoe. The Army's attacks began on time at 0700 hrs. but were staged on much too broad a front; elements of the division penetrated only 1.5 – 2 km at heavy cost before grinding to a halt. Over the following day or two local battles were conducted to improve positions, but the offensive on this sector was definitively finished on 20 May. [8]

Operation Blue and Stalingrad

By 1 June the division had been transferred to the 28th Army, still in Southwestern Front. [9] Prior to the start of Operation Blue, German Sixth Army launched a preliminary attack, Operation Wilhelm, against the 28th Army bridgehead over the Donets at and south of Volchansk, from 10–15 June. The 300th was caught up in this and was largely encircled in spite of beginning to retreat almost immediately; on the 13th Marshal Timoshenko reported it was "seriously battered". [10] By 1 July it had been removed to the reserves of Southwestern Front. [11] On 29 July, Colonel Merkulov was reassigned to command of the 304th Rifle Division, and was replaced by Col. Ivan Mikhailovich Afonin.

As the German offensive pressed on, the division was transferred again to the 21st Army of Stalingrad Front. In the process of fighting in these unequal circumstances the division took further losses, and was withdrawn into the Reserve of the Supreme High Command at Tuymazy [12] in August for rebuilding. [13]

On 2 October, the rebuilt 300th was assigned to 4th Reserve Army, back in Stalingrad Front, for future employment in the Stalingrad region, although the deteriorating situation in 62nd Army forced its early commitment to the fight for the city. [14] At this stage of the battle the Supreme High Command was apprehensive that the enemy might attempt to cross the Volga, so the division was ordered to deploy on the east bank of the river on 11 October, along a sector running from Lake Tuzhilkino to the mouth of the Akhtuba River. [15] The division next saw action later that month, when two rifle battalions of the 1049th Rifle Regiment attempted an assault amphibious landing across the river aimed at the village of Latashanka, in an attempt to relieve German pressure on the defenders of Rynok and the northern factory districts. The effort failed, at a cost of at least 900 men killed, wounded or captured. [16] [17]

The division next saw action with the beginning of the operation to encircle the German/Romanian forces at Stalingrad. The 300th, now in 51st Army crossed to the right bank of the Volga by a pontoon bridge downstream from the city, and formed part of the second echelon of the southern pincer which completed the encirclement by 22 November. [18]

Operation Little Saturn

Stalingrad Front faced two challenges following the encirclement: first, to prevent a German relief operation of the pocket, and second, to exploit the huge gaps in the Axis lines and drive the enemy out of the Caucasus steppes. To this end, on 8 December, the STAVKA formed the new 5th Shock Army, which included the 300th, with four other rifle divisions, 4th Mechanized Corps, two tank corps, and the 3rd Guards Cavalry Corps. By the end of the day on 10 December, the division, with the 315th Rifle Division alongside, had occupied jumping-off positions on the eastern bank of the Don, opposite Nizhne-Chirskaia, supporting 4th Mechanized Corps. [19] The focus at this time was on the defensive battle, and on 21 December elements of the division helped stop one of the last attempts of Army Group Don to break the encirclement. [20]

On 26 December, 5th Shock Army headquarters issued Operational Summary No. 24, which stated in part:

"On the basis of the STAVKA's orders, 300th Rifle Division and 4th Cavalry Corps were transferred from 5th Shock Army to 2nd Guards Army." [21]

At this time, with the Stalingrad encirclement secured, 5th Tank, 5th Shock, and 2nd Guards Armies all turned their attentions to the ad hoc Corps Mieth holding in the great bend of the Don, headquartered at the town of Tormosin. On 29 December, 2nd Guards Army began a westward advance across the river. An operational group was formed under the command of Maj. Gen. I.G. Kreizer (former and future commander of 2nd Guards) consisting of 2nd Guards Mechanized Corps, 4th Cavalry Corps, and 33rd Guards, 300th and 387th Rifle Divisions. This group made great strides through the rag-tag Axis forces towards Tormosin over the next 24 hours, and in order to ease command and control in this operation and others, early on 30 December, most of Stalingrad Front became the re-created Southern Front. The division was across the Don somewhat north of the confluence with the Aksai River on 31 December, the same day Tormosin was liberated by the mechanized corps. [22] During the next two months the division continued exploiting the Soviet victory along the Don River towards and then past Rostov-na-Donu. On 8 February 1943, Col. Kirill Yakovlevich Tymchik took over command of the division, whose advance finally came to a halt along the Mius River. On 21 February, Southern Front reported to STAVKA that:

"The 300th Rifle Division is fighting on the southeastern outskirts of Novaia Nadezhda, Alekseevka, and Aleksandrovka (I repeat, on the southeast outskirts of these points)..." [23]

All of these points were on the left bank of the Mius, as the overstretched Soviet forces were unable to penetrate the German defenses on the right bank, based on fortifications they had built a year earlier.

On 16 April 1943, in recognition of the division's prowess both on the defense and during the offensive that crushed the trapped German Sixth Army and threw their forces out of the Caucasus, it was re-designated as the 87th Guards Rifle Division. [24] Colonel Tymchik remained in command during the re-designation, and held command of 87th Guards for the duration of the war, being promoted to Major General on 2 November 1944.

2nd Formation

The second 300th Rifle Division was formed, along with the 87th Rifle Corps, in the 1st Red Banner Army on 9 August 1943. Its order of battle remained the same as the first formation, with the addition of a Divisional Training Battalion. Col. Vasilii Vladimirovich Bardadin was appointed as commanding officer on the same date. The division served in the Maritime Group of Forces, in 1st Army or in Far Eastern Front reserves, for the duration. On 31 May 1944, Maj. Gen. Andrei Pavlovich Karnov took over command from Colonel Bardadin.

Transferring from the west alongside the new 1st Red Banner Army commander, Afanasy Beloborodov, Major General Kornily Cherepanov took command of the division before the invasion of Manchuria. When the Soviet Union declared war on Japan on 9 August 1945, the division, now in 26th Rifle Corps, joined in the advance into Manchuria. In preparation it was reinforced with a battalion of 13 SU-76s and also had the following assets attached:

In addition, the 257th Tank Brigade was attached on the second day. [25] 26th Corps had to take a route through mountainous terrain towards the city of Mutanchiang; the advance was expected to take 18 days, but after just eight days the 300th was across the Mutan River and was clearing the city. It accomplished this by creating a forward detachment consisting of the 1049th Rifle Regiment, loaded in all the truck-drawn support that could be found. This was the first infantry able to reinforce the tank brigade and the divisional SU-76 battalion at the river-crossing sites. [26] In recognition of this feat, the division was given the honorific Harbin (Russian: Харбинская). During the fighting, Cherepanov was seriously wounded, resulting in the amputation of his hand, and for his leadership was made a Hero of the Soviet Union. [27]

On 14 April 1946 at Pokrovka in Primorsky Krai the division became the 3rd Tank Division (3-я танковая Харбинская дивизия) (1946–57). After a brief period as the 46th Tank Division (1957–59) the division was disbanded, still located at Pokrovka. [28]

Later the Strategic Rocket Forces' 4th Harbin Rocket Division was given the name 'Harbin' in succession to the 46th Tank Division.

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The 33rd Guards Rifle Division was formed as an elite infantry division of the Red Army in May 1942, based on the 2nd formation of the 3rd Airborne Corps, and served in that role until after the end of the Great Patriotic War. It was the second of a series of ten Guards rifle divisions formed from airborne corps during the spring and summer of 1942. It was briefly assigned to the 47th Army in the North Caucasus Front but was soon moved to the Volga Military District and saw its first action as part of 62nd Army in the fighting on the approaches to Stalingrad. It was withdrawn east of the Volga in September, but returned to the front with the 2nd Guards Army in December, and it remained in this Army until early 1945. After helping to defeat Army Group Don's attempt to relieve the trapped 6th Army at Stalingrad the 33rd Guards joined in the pursuit across the southern Caucasus steppe until reaching the Mius River in early 1943. Through the rest of that year it fought through the southern sector of eastern Ukraine as part of Southern Front and in the spring of 1944 assisted in the liberation of the Crimea, earning a battle honor in the process. The Crimea was a strategic dead-end, so 2nd Guards Army was moved north to take part in the summer offensive through the Baltic states and to the border with Germany as part of 1st Baltic Front. During the offensive into East Prussia the division and its 13th Guards Rifle Corps was reassigned to 39th and the 43rd Armies before returning to 2nd Guards Army in April. For its part in the capture of the city-fortress of Königsberg the 33rd Guards would receive the Order of Suvorov. In mid-1946 it was converted to the 8th Separate Guards Rifle Brigade.

The 1940 formation of the 160th Rifle Division was an infantry division of the Red Army, formed as part of the prewar buildup of forces, based on the shtat of 13 September 1939. The division completed its formation at Gorki in the Moscow Military District and at the time of the German invasion of the Soviet Union was in the same area, assigned to the 20th Rifle Corps in the Reserve of the Supreme High Command. It was moved west by rail to join the 13th Army of Western Front in the first days of July 1941 in the Mogilev area. At the end of the month the division was assigned to the reserves of Central Front before becoming part of Operations Group Akimenko in the reserves of Bryansk Front. In mid-September it was encircled and forced to break out; in the process it lost its commanding officer, much of its command staff and so many men and heavy weapons that it was briefly written off. Its number was reallocated to the 6th Moscow Militia Division and for the next 18 months there were two 160th Rifle Divisions serving concurrently. By the start of Operation Typhoon at the end of September it was in Operations Group Ermakov; while falling back to southwest of Kursk it managed to avoid encirclement but remained barely combat-effective due to its heavy losses.

The 214th Rifle Division was an infantry division of the Red Army, originally formed in the months just before the start of the German invasion, based on the shtat of September 13, 1939. It was moved to the fighting front to join 22nd Army in late June and took part in the fighting between Vitebsk and Nevel in early July, escaping from encirclement in the process, and then played a significant role in the liberation of Velikiye Luki, the first Soviet city to be retaken from the invading armies. In October it was again encircled near Vyasma during Operation Typhoon and was soon destroyed.

The 219th Rifle Division was formed as an infantry division of the Red Army after a motorized division of that same number was redesignated about 10 weeks after the start of the German invasion of the Soviet Union. Due to a chronic lack of vehicles, and especially tanks, the division had been effectively serving as a motorized rifle brigade since June 22, so the redesignation was a formality and it was soon destroyed in the encirclement battle east of Kiev.

The 226th Rifle Division was an infantry division of the Red Army, originally formed as one of the first reserve rifle divisions following the German invasion of the USSR. After being hastily organized it arrived at the front along the lower Dniepr River as part of 6th Army and in the wake of the German victory in the Kiev encirclement it fell back toward, and then past, Kharkiv and spent the winter fighting in this area. During the Second Battle of Kharkov in May 1942 it scored early successes but was soon forced back by counterattacking panzers and barely escaped destruction in the first phases of the German summer offensive. After rebuilding in the Reserve of the Supreme High Command the division returned to the front north of Stalingrad where it joined the 66th Army. It took heavy losses in one of the last efforts to break through to the city before Operation Uranus cut off the German 6th Army, but it still played an important role in the reduction of the pocket during Operation Ring and as a result was redesignated as the 95th Guards Rifle Division in May 1943.

The 229th Rifle Division was an infantry division of the Red Army, originally formed in the months just before the start of the German invasion, based on the shtat of September 13, 1939. As part of 20th Army it was moved from the Moscow Military District to the front west of Orsha by July 2. Serving under the Western Front the 20th was soon pocketed in the Smolensk region but the 229th was able to escape at the cost of significant losses. It was partially rebuilt before the start of the final German offensive on Moscow, when it was completely encircled and destroyed.

References

Citations

  1. Walter S. Dunn, Jr., Stalin's Keys to Victory, Stackpole Books, Mechanicsburg, PA, 2007, p. 77
  2. Charles C. Sharp, "Red Tide", Soviet Rifle Divisions Formed From June to December 1941, Soviet Order of Battle World War II, Vol. IX, 1996, p. 68
  3. Combat Composition of the Soviet Army, 1941, p. 52
  4. David Stahel, Kiev 1941, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 2012, pp. 210, 261
  5. David M. Glantz, Kharkov 1942, Ian Allan Publishing, Hersham, UK, 1998/2010, p. 120
  6. Glantz, Kharkov, pp. 92, 120, 169, 171
  7. Glantz, Kharkov, pp. 180-83
  8. Glantz, Kharkov, pp. 251, 261-63, 273
  9. Combat Composition of the Soviet Army, 1942, p. 104
  10. Glantz, To the Gates of Stalingrad, University Press of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, 2009, pp. 90-97
  11. Combat Composition of the Soviet Army, 1942, p. 126
  12. Isaak Kobylyanskiy, From Stalingrad to Pillau, ed. & trans. S. Britton, University Press of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, 2008, pp. 60-61
  13. Sharp, "Red Tide", p. 68
  14. Glantz, Endgame at Stalingrad, Book One, University Press of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, 2014, p. 85
  15. John Erickson, The Road to Stalingrad, George Weidenfeld and Nicolson, Ltd., London, UK, 1975, p. 420
  16. Kobylyanskiy, pp. 69-70
  17. This operation is detailed in Jochen Hellbeck, Stalingrad - The City that Defeated the Third Reich, trans. C. Tauchen and D. Bonfiglio, Perseus Books Group, New York, 2015, pp. 203-22. Kobylyanskiy is quoted on p. 207. In this account the name of the village is transliterated as "Latoshinka".
  18. Sharp, "Red Tide", p. 68
  19. Glantz, Endgame at Stalingrad, Book Two, University Press of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, 2014, pp. 26, 58, 64-65
  20. Kobylyanskiy, p. 73
  21. Glantz, Endgame, Book Two, p. 262
  22. Glantz, Endgame, Book Two, pp. 273-76, 282
  23. Glantz, After Stalingrad, Helion & Company, Ltd., Solihull, UK, 2011, p. 214
  24. Sharp, "Red Tide", p. 68
  25. Glantz, August Storm: The Soviet 1945 Strategic Offensive In Manchuria, Verdun Press, 2015, Kindle ed., table 12
  26. Sharp, "Red Swarm", Soviet Rifle Divisions Formed From 1942 to 1945, Soviet Order of Battle World War II, Vol. X, 1996, p. 112
  27. "Kornily Cherepanov". Герои страны ("Heroes of the Country") (in Russian). Retrieved 19 November 2017.
  28. Holm 2015, http://www.ww2.dk/new/army/td/3td.htm

Bibliography

Further reading