Serov

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Coat of arms of Serov
Coat of arms of Serov

Serov (Russian: Серо́в) is a mining and commercial town in Sverdlovsk Oblast, Russia and the administrative center of Serovsky District.

It is located on the eastern foothills of the Ural Mountains, on the left bank of the Kakva River, a tributary of the Sosva River. Population: 99,804 (2002 Census); 104,158 (1989 Census). Serov is located approximately 350 km north of Yekaterinburg. It can be reached most conveniently by train from Moscow or Yekaterinburg. The climate is continental, with temperate summers and cold snowy winters.

Serov is a major center of ferrous metallurgy, which constitutes 80% of its economy. Two largest companies are A.K. Serov Metallurgical Plant and Serov Ferro-Alloys Plant. The latter produces approximately 5% of the world's ferrochromium. Other inductries are machine-building, timber, food. Serov Power Plant (Serovskaya GRES) provides electricity to the area. The town is the center of a mining area, with lignite, iron, bauxite, and gold mines.

[edit] History

Archeological evidence suggests that the Serov area was populated as early as 1000 BCE by the Mansi or their ancestors. In the early days of Russian colonization of Siberia there were only a few minor villages in the area. The situation changed in 1893, when the chief manager of Bogoslovsk Mining District, Alexander Andreyevich Auerbach, proposed a construction of a cast iron and rail plant on Kakva River near the end of an existing railroad. This year the construction of a workers town began. The town was named Nadezhdinsk after Nadezhda Mikhaylovna Polovtsova, the owner of Bogoslovsk Mining District. The first steel and rails in Nadezhdinsk were produced in 1896. The town was an important supplier of rails for Transsiberian Railroad. Dmitri Mendeleev, who visited Nadezhdinsk, was pleasantly surprised by the progressive technology used at the plant. The first school in Nadezhdinsk opened in December 1895, the first power plant (415 kW)—in 1907.

Nadezhdinsk was touched by the Russian Revolution of 1905, with the turmoil continuing through 1908. At the beginning of the World War I Nadezhdinsk industry was reshaped to meet the demands of the military. Klein Brothers machine-building factory was relocated to Nadezhdinsk from Riga in 1917. The growing demand for workforce was met by hiring workers from China and Korea, as well as prisoners of war (POWs). There were 1,266 Chinese and Koreans, and 3,329 POWs in Nadezhdinsk in 1917.

On October 27, 1917, two days after the October Revolution in Petrograd, the power in the town was bloodlessly transferred to the Worker's Soviet. On December 18, 1917, Bogoslovsk Mining District, including the Nadezhdinsk plants, was nationalized. In October 1918, the army of the Provisional Government of Siberia, which opposed the Soviets in the Russian Civil War, occupied Nadezhdinsk. On November 20, 1918, two days after admiral Kolchak become the head of the White government of Siberia, the "whites" in Nadezhdinsk executed 23 of their "red" opponents. On July 19, 1919, Red partisans, supporting the Soviets, took the town back. The town was devastated after the Civil War. None of the factories was working and many engineers left the area.

The Soviet government put a lot of efforts to restore the town life and economy. By the end of 1925, Nadezhdinsk plant was running at its full capacity. The town changed too. Streets and house numbers were changed. A hospital, a circus, and a cabaret were opened.

In 1926, Nadezhdinsk was granted town status. In the 1930s, the ferrous metal production in Nadezhdinsk was expanded and diversified. In 1934, the town was renamed Kabakovsk, after I. D. Kabakov, the leader of the Bolshevik Party in Sverdlovsk Oblast. In 1937 Kabakov was dismissed as a result of Stalin's purges, and the town was renamed back to Nadezhdinsk. In 1939, the town was renamed Serov, after the airpilot A.K. Serov, a former Nadezhdinsk Plant worker, and a Spanish Civil War hero, who died earlier in the same year.

Serov was an important center of steel production during World War II. Due to the shortage of males, who were conscribed into the active service, most steel jobs were taken by women. Numerous organization were evacuated to Serov from the Soviet territories occupied by Germans: hospitals from Polotsk and Smolensk, Leninskiy Komsomol theater from St. Petersburg.

After the war the demand for steel increased even more due to the reconstruction. Serov became a major electrified railroad center,and a new power plant was built. In 1958 Serov produced first ferrosilicon. In 1970s a timber factory and a gas pipeline were built.

In early 1990s, the failed reforms of Gorbachev brought the town economy to a record low level. The town saw a significant growth of unemployment and poverty as most other small cities in Russia. At the same time many businesses were privitized or became municipal property. On July 14, 1993 a dam at Kiselevskoe water reservoir was broken and 1,373 families lost their houses.

Since the 2000s, the town ecomony is on the rise, the standards of living went up, and the town appearance continues to improve. In November 2004 Serov hosted Russian Bodybuilding and Fitness Championship. The current town mayor, V.F. Anisimov, was elected on March 14, 2004.

[edit] Famous people

[edit] External links

  • Town government [1]
  • Bisuness website [2]
  • Personal website [3]
  • Map[4]
  • A.K. Serov Metallurgical Plant [5]
  • Serov Ferro-alloys Plant[6]


Coat of arms of Sverdlovsk Oblast Cities and towns in Sverdlovsk Oblast Flag of Russia
Administrative center: Yekaterinburg

Alapayevsk | Aramil | Artyomovsky | Asbest | Beryozovsky | Bogdanovich | Degtyarsk | Irbit | Ivdel | Lesnoy | Kachkanar | Kamensk-Uralsky | Kamyshlov | Karpinsk | Kirovgrad | Krasnoturyinsk | Krasnoufimsk | Krasnouralsk | Kushva | Mikhaylovsk | Nevyansk | Nizhniye Sergi | Novaya Lyalya | Nizhny Tagil | Nizhnyaya Salda | Nizhnyaya Tura | Novouralsk | Pervouralsk | Polevskoy | Revda | Rezh | Serov | Severouralsk | Sredneuralsk | Sukhoy Log | Sysert | Talitsa | Tavda | Turinsk | Verkhnyaya Pyshma | Verkhnyaya Salda | Verkhnyaya Tura | Verkhny Tagil | Verkhoturye | Volchansk | Zarechny

Coordinates: 59°36′N 60°34′E