1st Guards Motor Rifle Division

1st Rifle Division (1918–1920)?
1st Moscow Rifle Division (c. 1926–27 – 1940)
1st Moscow Motor Rifle Division (1940–1941)
1st Guards Moscow Motor Rifle Division (1941–1943)
1st Guards Moscow Rifle Division (1943–1957)
1st Guards Moscow Motor Rifle Division (1957–2002)
Active 1918–1920, 1926–2002
Country  Soviet Union (1918–1920, 1926–1991)
 Russia (1991–2002)
Branch Red Army (1918–1920, 1926–1991)
Russian Ground Forces (1991–2002)
Type Infantry
Size Division
Part of 11th Guards Army (1945–1998)
Engagements World War II

The 1st Guards Proletariat Moscow-Minsk Order of Lenin, twice Red Banner Orders of Suvorov (II) and Kutuzov (II) Motor Rifle Division (Russian: 1-я гвардейская мотострелковая Пролетарская Московско-Минская ордена Ленина, дважды Краснознаменная, орденов Суворова и Кутузова дивизия (2-е формирование)) was a division of the Red Army and Russian Ground Forces active from c. 1918 to 2002.

History

The division was first formed at Petrograd, November 1918. It fought around Olonets with the 6th and 7th armies from November 1918 into 1920. Defended the Aleksandrovsk-Melitopol railroad line on the Southern Front in August 1920. Awarded the Order of the Red Banner in October 1920. Reorganized as a brigade of the 15th Rifle Division in November 1920.

Interwar period

It was then re-formed either in December 1924 or at the beginning of 1927 in the Moscow Military District,[1] gaining the title of the "1st Moscow Proletariat Red Banner Rifle Division". Pavel Batov was a battalion and then regiment commander in the division in the late 1920s. In August 1939 it raised cadres for 115th and 126th rifle divisions.

In the mid 1930s the 1st Division was also the first to use modern headgear and weapons for the rising WPRA.

World War II

It was re-raised from its single remaining regiment in September 1939 (second formation), and by January 1940 was re-formed as the 1st Moscow Motor Rifle Division. Training was complete 7 June 1940, and 1st Moscow Motor Rifle Division took part in Soviet occupation of the Baltic states since 15 June 1940, advancing from base in Polotsk and forward positions at Widze to Panevėžys 16 June 1940. After a month-long garrison duty in Panevėžys and 2-month long garrisoning of Daugavpils, the 1st Moscow Motor Rifle Division was returned to Russia.[2] For the actions during Soviet occupation of the Baltic states, the 6th motorized rifle regiment was awarded Order of the Red Star 22 February 1941.

Eastern Front (World War II)

Before annihilation near Smolensk

Yartsevo in Sep 1941.

After annihilation near Smolensk

5 August 1941, the 1st Moscow Motor Rifle Division was re-formed anew within 20th army, 18 August 1941 renamed "1st armoured division" and on September 21, 1941, it was renamed the "1st Guards Moscow Motor Rifle Division".[5] The division was renamed (again) as the "1st Guards Rifle Division", in January 1943.[6]

Post war

The division was for all of the post-war period stationed in Kaliningrad. It formed part of the 11th Guards Army. It became the 1st Guards Moscow MRD (again) in 1957. Of the regiments of the war period, the 171st Guards was eliminated, but instead in March 1959 came the 12th Guards Motorised Rifle Regiment. Virtually all of the time the division was truncated.[7]

For much of the 1990s the 1st Guards MRD was reduced to a strength of only 4,400 men, but in 2002 was reduced in size again to the 7th Separate Guards Motor Rifle Brigade, and, circa 2009-10, was reduced yet again, this time renamed as the 7th Independent "Proletarian Moscow-Minsk" Guards Motorized Rifle Regiment of the Baltic Fleet (Russian: отдельный гвардейский Пролетарский Московско-Минский ордена Ленина дважды Краснознаменный орденов Суворова и Кутузова мотостерлковый полк БФ).

Notes

  1. Slaughterhouse says December 1926
  2. 1-я моторизованная Московская Краснознаменная дивизия
  3. http://www.tashv.nm.ru/BoevojSostavSA
  4. http://www.tashv.nm.ru/BoevojSostavSA/1942/19421101.html
  5. Keith E. Bonn (ed.), Slaughterhouse, Aberjona Press, 2005, p.358
  6. This was the second formation of 1st Guards Rifle Division. This should not be confused with the first formation of the 1st Guards Rifle Division, formed from the 100th Rifle Division, which was later reorganized as the 1st Guards Mechanized Corps (Soviet Union).
  7. Micheal Holm, 1st Guards Motorised Rifle Division, 2015.

References

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