51st Army (Russia)

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51st Army
Commemorative plaque 3 (OT-34 in Simferopol).jpg
Memorial to 51st Army in Simferopol
Active1941–45, 1977–1993
Country USSR (to 1991)
Russia (1992–1993)
Size3–6 divisions
Part of Front or Military District
Engagements World War II
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Pavel Batov
Fyodor Kuznetsov
Yakov Kreizer

The 51st Army was a field army of the Red Army that saw action against the Germans in World War II on both the southern and northern sectors of the front. The army participated in the Battle of the Kerch Peninsula between December 1941 and January 1942; it was destroyed in May 1942 with other Soviet forces when the Wehrmacht launched an operation to dislodge them from the peninsula. The army fought in the Battle of Stalingrad during the winter of 1942–43, helping to defeat German relief attempts. From late 1944 to the end of the war, the army fought in the final cutting-off of German forces in the Courland area next to the Baltic. Inactivated in 1945, the army was activated again in 1977 to secure Sakhalin and the Kuril Islands. Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the army continued in existence as a component of the Russian Ground Forces. The army was active during two periods from 1941 until 1997.

Contents

The Crimea

The Army was ordered formed on 14 August 1941 in the Crimea based on the 9th Rifle Corps and other units as the 51st Independent Army under Colonel General F.I. Kuznetsov, with the task of guarding the Crimean Peninsula. Pavel Batov was appointed as his deputy. [1] Professor John Erickson in The Road to Stalingrad describes Stalin's rationale for the formation of the Army during a 12 August session within the Stavka war room: Stalin and the Stavka had concluded from the German moves underway at the time that a strike on the Crimea (along with an attack on Bryansk) was likely, and thus the formation of an Independent Army in the Crimea had been decided upon. Thus Kuznetsov was summoned, and after a discussion, he was sent south to take up his new command. [2]

The army's initial forces included the 9th Rifle Corps, the 271st and 276th Rifle Divisions, the 40th, 42nd and 48th Cavalry Divisions, and the 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th irregularly formed Crimean Rifle divisions (later converted into regular rifle divisions) [3] and a number of smaller units. However, due to what Erickson describes as Kuznetsov's 'sticking blindly to the prewar plan', which anticipated a seaborne assault, and leaving the Perekop and Sivash approaches too thinly held, Erich von Manstein, leading the German assault, was able to push past the defenses. [4] Therefore, the Stavka ordered that the army command be handed over to Batov. [5]

In November the army was evacuated from the Taman Peninsula and it joined the Transcaucasian Front (briefly known as the Caucasian Front after 30 December 1941). The army participated in the Kerch-Feodosiya landing operation in December 1941 – January 1942 alongside the 44th Army. 51st Army was originally planned to be the Kerch arm of the assault, but delays caused by bad weather and a schedule change prompted by renewed German attacks on Sevastopol resulted in 51st Army troops being landed at Capes Sjuk and Chroni during the night of 26–27 December 1941. [6] The 44th and 51st Armies then formed the Crimean Front under General Dmitri T. Kozlov, formally established on 28 January 1942, which hammered repeatedly at Von Manstein's Eleventh Army. On 1 February 1942, 51st Army comprised the 138th and 302nd Mountain Rifle Divisions, the 224th, 390th, and 396th Rifle Divisions, the 12th Rifle Brigade, 83rd Naval Infantry Brigade, 105th Separate Mountain Rifle Regiment, 55th Tank Brigade, 229th Separate Tank Battalion, artillery units, and other support units. [7] A German offensive was launched against the Front on 8 May 1942. Army commander Lieutenant General Vladimir Nikolayevich Lvov was killed by bomb fragments on 11 May while changing his command post. [8] The offensive concluded around 18 May 1942 with the near complete destruction of Soviet defending forces, which Erickson attributes to bickering between Kozlov and the Front commissar, Lev Mekhlis, and a trail of incompetent actions. Three armies (44th, 47th, and 51st), 21 divisions, 176,000 men, 347 tanks, and nearly 3,500 guns were lost. [9] The remains of the force were evacuated. [10]

Stalingrad and after

After the evacuation 51st Army joined the North Caucasian Front at Kuban. In July, Marshal Budenny received orders to combine the Southern Front and North Caucasian Front into a single formation retaining the title of North Caucasian Front, and 51st Army joined the 'Don group' of that front under General Lieutenant Rodion Malinovsky, along with the 12th Army and the 37th Army. [11] On 22 July, army commander Major general Nikolai Trufanov was relieved of command. [12] As part of the Stalingrad Front (from 1–5 August), then briefly with the Southeast Front (from 6 August until 27 September), and then back with the Stalingrad Front it took part in the Battle of Stalingrad. On 31 July when it came under Stalingrad Front control it was so worn down by its previous rough handling that it was only 3,000 men strong. [13] It was attacked on the same day by the 4th Panzer Army, which was able to break through. [14]

During Operation Uranus, the counterattack from Stalingrad, the 4th Mechanized Corps began its attack from the 51st Army's sector. In early December, 51st Army was deployed to cover the Kotelnikovo approaches against German relief attempts by the LVII. Panzerkorps. [15] On 24–25 December 1942, the commander of 51st Army, Major-General N.I. Trufanov, organized a local offensive operation on the right flank with the forces of three rifle divisions, and moved to the north bank of the Aksay River, on the eve of the Kotelnikovo offensive operation, [16] which eventually defeated the German efforts made as part of Operation Winter Storm to relieve the Sixth Army in Stalingrad. On 30 January 1943, the Luftwaffe's Kampfgeschwader 51 destroyed the 51st Army's Headquarters, near Salsk. Dropping 100 – 250 kg bombs, a wave of Junkers Ju 88s and Heinkel He 111s destroyed the communications center, working offices of the chief-of-staff, the operational headquarters and the offices of the operational duty officer. Up to 20 buildings and personnel billets were also destroyed. Casualties among personnel were also very high. [17]

After January 1943 as part of the Southern Front, that became the 4th Ukrainian Front on 20 October 1943, the 51st Army took part in the Rostov, Donbass (August–September 1943), Melitopol (September–November 1943) and the 1944 Crimean offensive operation. On 1 June 1943 the 2nd Guards Breakthrough Artillery Division was part of the 51st Army. [18] On 1 April 1944, 51st Army included the 1st Guards Rifle Corps (33rd Guards, 91st and 346th Rifle Divisions), 10th Rifle Corps (216th, 257th, and 279th Rifle Divisions), 63rd Rifle Corps (263rd, 267th, and 417th Rifle Divisions), the 77th Rifle Division, the 78th Fortified Region, artillery, armor and other support units. [19] During these operations, the 51st Army's attacks trapped the German XXIX. Armeekorps against the Sea of Azov. [20]

The army was withdrawn to the Reserve of the Supreme High Command ( Stavka Reserve) on 20 May and relocated to the area of Polotsk and Vitebsk in Belarus. [21] As part of the 1st Baltic Front it participated in operations clearing Latvia and Lithuania  – the Baltic Offensive. [22] Leading the penetration of 1st Baltic Front into German lines, 51st Army reached the Bay of Riga on 31 July 1944, cutting off German Army Group North to the northeast of Riga. [23] [24] Under tremendous pressure, the Germans organized an armored counter-attack ( Doppelkopf ) from 16 to 27 August 1944 that succeeded in re-opening a 40-kilometer wide corridor through which Army Group North retreated westward into the Courland region of Latvia. [25]

After regrouping in September 1944, the 51st Army attacked westward in October, reaching the Baltic coast north of Memel, and with other 1st Baltic Front armies, definitively cut off Army Group North in Courland, where the German force would remain for the rest of the war. Thereafter, 51st Army took up position on the far western flank of the Soviet forces arrayed against Army Group North (later renamed Army Group Courland). Of the six major battles for Courland, 51st Army's only real progress was during the first Courland battle, from 15 to 22 October 1944, in which the army pushed some ten kilometers north against bitter resistance of the German III. SS-Panzerkorps . Thereafter, the front lines in this area of the Courland front changed little. [26]

After 9 May 1945 it accepted the capitulation of the German Army Group Courland. [27] Order of Battle 1 May 1945

1st Guards Rifle Corps (53rd Guards, 204th, 267th Rifle Divisions)

10th Rifle Corps (91st, 279th, 347th Divisions),

63rd Rifle Corps (77th, 87th, 417th Divisions)

World War II Commanders

Commander [21] Assumption of Command [21] Handed over Command [21]
Colonel-General F. I. Kuznetsov Aug 1941Nov 1941
Lieutenant-General P. I. Batov Nov 1941Dec 1941
Lieutenant-General V. N. L'vov Dec 1941May 1942 (KIA)
Major-General Nikolai Kirichenko May 1942June 1942
Colonel A. M. KuznetsovJun 1942July 1942
Major-General Nikolai Trufanov July 1942July 1942
Major-General Trofim Kolomiets July 1942Sept 1942
Major-General Nikolai Trufanov Oct 1942Feb 1943
Lieutenant-General G. F. Zakharov Feb 1943Jul 1943
Lieutenant-General Ia. G. Kreizer Aug 1943May 1945 [28]

Postwar

During June 1945, the army moved from the Baltic States to the Urals with almost all its forces. [29] In July 1945, the army headquarters became the headquarters of the Ural Military District. [30] The army's 63rd Rifle Corps (77th, 279th and 417th Rifle Divisions) became part of the district. [31] Its 10th Rifle Corps (87th, 91st and 347th Rifle Divisions) became part of the Kazan Military District. [32] The 1st Guards Rifle Corps (53rd Guards, 204th and 267th Rifle Divisions) became part of the Moscow Military District. [33]

In 1977, the 51st Combined Arms Army was re-formed on the basis of the staff of the 2nd Army Corps in the Far East Military District. [34] The army was stationed on Sakhalin and in the Kuril Islands. [30]

Order of Battle in the 1980s

In 1988, the composition of the 51st Combined Arms Army included: [34] Army headquarters was located at Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, Sakhalin Oblast.

FormationHeadquarters LocationRemarks
33rd Motor-Rifle Red Banner Division Khomutovo 97th Separate Tank Battalion(Khomutovo), 465th Motor Rifle Regiment (Aniva), 377th Motor Rifle Regiment (Dolinsk), 389th Motor Rifle Regiment (Dachnoye), 989th Artillery Regiment, 1108th Antiaircraft Missile Regiment [34]
79th Motor Rifle Division Leonidovo 'Sakhalin Red Banner'; 157th Motor Rifle Regiment (Pobedino/Победино), 398th Motor Rifle Regiment (Gastello), 396th Motor Rifle Regiment (Leonidovo), 284th Artillery Regiment, 1224th Anti-Aircraft Rocket (Missile) Regiment (Pobedino) [34] [30]
18th Machine Gun Artillery Division Settlement Goryachiye Klyuchi (Iturup), Sakhalin110th Separate Tank Battalion (Kunashir), 484th Machine-Gun Artillery Regiment, 605th Machine-Gun Artillery Regiment, 468th Artillery Regiment, 490th Antiaircraft Artillery Regiment (Iturup) [34]

Other Army-level troops reported by Feskov et al. 2013, as of 1988, included the 31st Anti-Aircraft Rocket Brigade with surface-to-air missiles at Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, the 326th Engineer-Sapper Regiment also at Yuzno-Sakhalinsk; and the 1101st Separate Motor Rifle Regiment at Sokol. [30] The 264th Artillery Brigade and 957th Anti-Tank Artillery Regiment were based at Solovevka. [30]

On 11 October 1993 the army was reorganized as the 68th Army Corps. [35] Its 33rd Motor Rifle Division and 18th Machine Gun Artillery Division became part of the 68th Army Corps. [36] [37] The 79th Motor Rifle Division was disbanded in 1994. [38] The 68th Army Corps disbanded in 2010, but was later reformed in 2014. [39]

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The Red Army's 54th Army was a Soviet field army during the Second World War. It was first formed in the Leningrad Military District in August, 1941, and continued in service in the northern sector of the Soviet-German front until the end of 1944. It spent much of the war attempting to break the German siege of Leningrad, in which it helped to achieve partial success in January, 1943, and complete success one year later. During these operations the soldiers of the 54th served under five different commanders, most notably Col. Gen. Ivan Fedyuninsky in the winter of 1941–42. After helping to drive Army Group North away from Leningrad and into the Baltic states in the first nine months of 1944, the army was deemed surplus to requirements on the narrowing front, and was officially disbanded on the last day of the year.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">346th Rifle Division (Soviet Union)</span> Military unit

The 346th Rifle Division began forming in late August, 1941, as a standard Red Army rifle division, in the Volga Military District. It was assigned to the 61st Army while both it and its Army continued to form up before moving to the front lines in December to take part in the winter counteroffensive south of Moscow. In September, 1942, it became part of the 5th Tank Army, and joined the offensive that encircled German Sixth Army at Stalingrad during Operation Uranus. During 1943 and early 1944 it continued to serve in the southern part of the front, taking part in the liberation of Crimea, before being transferred to the Baltic States region, serving in Latvia and Lithuania until February, 1945, when it was once again reassigned, this time to be part of the follow-on forces in the conquest of eastern Germany. The division ended the war with a distinguished service record, but was disbanded shortly after the German surrender.

The 347th Rifle Division began forming in mid-September 1941, as a Red Army rifle division, in the North Caucasus Military District. It was soon assigned to the 58th Army while both it and its Army continued to form up before entering combat in November, as part of the offensive that first liberated Rostov-on-Don. During the German summer offensive in 1942 the division retreated back into the Caucasus, fighting to defend the routes to the oil fields at Baku, until the German forces began to retreat after their defeat at Stalingrad. During 1943 and early 1944 it continued to serve in the southern part of the front, taking part in the liberation of Crimea, before being transferred to the Baltic States region, serving in Latvia and Lithuania for the duration of the war, compiling a distinguished record of service along the way. In 1946 it was reformed as a rifle brigade, and its several successor formations remained part of the Red Army until 1959, when it was finally disbanded.

The 374th Rifle Division was raised in 1941 as an infantry division of the Red Army, and served for the duration of the Great Patriotic War in that role. It began forming in August 1941 in the Siberian Military District. It joined the fighting front in December with the new 59th Army along the Volkhov River and it continued to serve in the fighting near Leningrad until early 1944. The dismal fighting on this front gave little opportunity for a unit to distinguish itself, and the division did not finally earn a battle honor until late January 1944, during the Leningrad–Novgorod Offensive. It continued to serve in the summer and autumn offensive through the Baltic States, becoming so reduced in strength that its remaining infantry was consolidated into a single understrength regiment which nevertheless won a battle honor in the liberation of Riga. The 374th ended the war in Latvia, helping to contain and reduce the German forces trapped in the Courland Pocket, and was disbanded shortly thereafter.

The 417th Rifle Division was formed as an infantry division of the Red Army in the spring of 1942 and served in that role until after the end of the Great Patriotic War. Although it was formed in the Transcaucasus, unlike the 414th and 416th Rifle Divisions formed in about the same place at the same time it was never designated as a National division. After its formation it remained in service in the Caucasus under direct command of the Transcaucasus Front until the summer of 1942, when it was redeployed first to the Northern Group of Forces in that Front and then to the 9th Army. As German Army Group A retreated from the Caucasus in January, 1943 the division was reassigned to the 58th Army and a few months later to 37th Army in North Caucasus Front. In July it redeployed northward to join Southern Front, where it was assigned to the 63rd Rifle Corps in 44th Army in mid-September as the Front fought through south Ukraine, eventually reaching the land routes to the Crimea. It took part in the offensive that liberated that region in April and May, 1944, fighting in the 51st Army and winning both a battle honor and the Order of the Red Banner in the process. After the Crimea was cleared the 51st Army was moved far to the north, joining 1st Baltic Front. During operations in the Baltic states the 417th was further distinguished with the award of the Order of Suvorov. In March, 1945 it joined the Courland Group of Forces on the Baltic coast containing the German forces encircled in northwest Latvia. It ended the war there and was soon moved to the Ural Military District before being downsized to a rifle brigade. This brigade was briefly brought back to divisional strength during the Cold War.

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.

References

Citations

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  33. Feskov et al 2013, p. 499.
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  35. Feskov et al 2013, p. 131.
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  37. Holm, Michael. "18th Machine-Gun Artillery Division". ww2.dk. Retrieved 1 January 2016.
  38. Holm, Michael. "79th Motorised Rifle Division". ww2.dk. Retrieved 1 January 2016.
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Bibliography

Further reading