Roman Mashkov

Hero of the Soviet Union
Roman Mashkov
Native name
Russian: Роман Спиридонович Машков
Born(1922-09-24)September 24, 1922
Bolshiye Goly in Irkutsk Oblast, USSR[1]
DiedJuly 22, 1971(1971-07-22) (aged 48)
Novokhopyorsk in Voronezh Oblast, USSR[1]
Allegiance Soviet Union
Service/branchRed Army
Years of service1942–45
RankLieutenant
UnitCommander of the intelligence platoon of 5th motorized infantry brigade of 5th Tank Corps, 2nd Baltic Front
Battles/warsAttack on Ērgļi railway station[1]
AwardsHero of the Soviet Union
Order of Lenin
Order of the Red Star
Other workWas engaged in country work in collective farm[1]

Roman Spiridonovich Mashkov (Russian: Рома́н Спиридо́нович Машко́в; September 24, 1922 – July 22, 1971) was the commander of a Soviet reconnaissance platoon during World War II. He was awarded the Soviet Union's highest award for military valour, the Hero of the Soviet Union.[1]

Biography

Mashkov was born on September 24, 1922, to a Russian peasant family in Bolshiye Goly, a village in the Kachugsky District of Irkutsk Oblast. After completing seven years of primary school in his home town, he worked on a collective farm.[2][3]

In October 1941, Mashkov was conscripted into the Red Army during a Komsomol mobilization and then served in the Soviet Airborne Forces. Beginning in April 1942, he commanded an infantry reconnaissance platoon in battles on the Northwestern and Kalinin Fronts. In December 1943, he took command of the reconnaissance platoon of a motor rifle battalion.[3]

He served as the commander of a reconnaissance platoon of the 5th Motor Rifle Brigade of the 5th Tank Corps of the 2nd Baltic Front and participated in the battle for Latvia. On August 21, 1944, under the command of Major Korney Dityuk, Mashkov was deployed in a mechanized infantry battalion that attacked the Ērgļi railway station in the Madona Municipality of Latvia (now the Ērgļi municipality). The day after, the battalion was cut off from the brigade's main forces.[1] As the platoon fought to hold its position, Lieutenant Mashkov commanded eight soldiers to hold off the enemy attacks, killing ten German soldiers in the process. During the attack, he fired bullets from a mounted machine gun. Afterwards, he supplied information on the deployment and location of German soldiers and artillery.[1]

Later on, Mashkov was in charge of several reconnaissance sorties. During one of them, he discovered the location of the headquarters of a German division. Mashkov led an attack on the headquarters, seized documents and killed the German division commander.[citation needed]

Mashkov played an essential role in preparing an exit strategy for the battalion and breaking through the enemy defenses. He delivered intelligence on positions of German weapons emplacements to Dityuk.[1] For his accomplishments, Mashkov was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union on 24 March 1945.[1] Dityuk and Starshina Gennady Myakshin from the battalion were also made Heroes of the Soviet Union.[4]

He was wounded four times during the war, returning to the front lines shortly after each treatment. He was present in Berlin on Russian Victory Day.[5]

After World War II, Mashkov was transferred to the reserve. Demobilized, he returned home to a hero's welcome in August 1946 and addressed the Second Pyatiletka kolkhoz, telling them that he would "rest a little after the road" and "take up his native peasant business.".[6] In his retirement, he moved to Novokhopyorsk in Voronezh Oblast, where he died on July 22, 1971.[1][3]

Mashkov was awarded the Order of Lenin, the Gold Star medal (No. 8936), and various other medals.[1] A memorial bust of Moshkov is part of the World War II Victory Memorial in the city of Novokhopyorsk.[5]

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Roman Mashkov". Герои страны ("Heroes of the Country") (in Russian).
  2. ^ Shkadov 1988, p. 62.
  3. ^ a b c Kuznetsov 1982, pp. 111–112.
  4. ^ Leonid Sandalov (1965). Трудные рубежи. Moscow, Russia: Voenizdat. Retrieved 2009-11-12.
  5. ^ a b Anchukov, G. A.; Petrov, V. T. (2005). Из истории земли Новохоперской. Одна на всех победа (in Russian). Voronezh: Voronezh Regional Printing House. ISBN 5-87456-465-9. Retrieved 2009-11-12.
  6. ^ "Встреча с земляком" [Meeting with a fellow countryman]. Vostochno-Sibirskaya Pravda (in Russian). Vol. 164, no. 7890. 18 August 1946. p. 4.

Bibliography

  • Kuznetsov, I. I. (1982). Золотые Звезды иркутян. Irkutsk: West Siberia Book Publishing.
  • Shkadov, Ivan, ed. (1988). Герои Советского Союза: краткий биографический словарь [Heroes of the Soviet Union: A Brief Biographical Dictionary] (in Russian). Vol. 2. Moscow: Voenizdat. ISBN 5203005362.

External links

  • Машков Роман Спиридонович
  • Машков Роман Спиридонович -- ЭНЦИКЛОПЕДИЯ МУЗЕЯ ПОБЕДЫ
  • Машков, Роман Спиридонович -- ИркипедияRU
  • ИРКУТЯНЕ - ГЕРОИ СОВЕТСКОГО СОЮЗА (ИЗ ФОНДОВ ИОКМ)
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Hero of the Soviet Union awarded by medals No. 8900–8999
8900-8919
  • 8900 Vasiliy Zlydnev (ru)
  • 8901 Anatoly Kuznetsov (ru)
  • 8902 Vladimir Litvinov (ru)
  • 8903 Andrey Spirin (ru)
  • 8904:Andrey Kostyuk (ru)
  • 8905 Vasily Balakin (ru)
  • 8906 Vladimir Fomin (ru)
  • 8907 Beniamin Miletskiy (ru)
  • 8908 Konstantin Khadzhiev (ru)
  • 8909 Spartak Ugryumov (ru)
  • 8910 Maksim Horbach (ru)
  • 8911 Pavel Sidorov (ru)
  • 8912 Galina Dzhunkovskaya
  • 8913 Nikolai Pakhotischev (ru)
  • 8914 Alexander Sviridov (ru)
  • 8915 Ivan Yumashev
  • 8916 Yegor Vorobyov (ru)
  • 8917 Saparmet Khojaev (ru)
  • 8918 Viktor Grazhdankin (ru)
  • 8919 Nikolai Simonenkov (ru)
medal
medal
8920-8939
  • 8920 Nikolai Alexandrov (ru)
  • 8921 Ivan Babanin (ru)
  • 8922 Georgy Vodzhakin (ru)
  • 8923 Dmitriy Yefremov (ru)
  • 8924 Fedor Zatsepilov (ru)
  • 8925 Georgy Kaloyev (ru)
  • 8926 Stepan Savchuk (ru)
  • 8927 Ivan Birchenko (ru)
  • 8928 Vasiliy Afanasyev (ru)
  • 8929 Victor Kuznetsov (ru)
  • 8930 Nikolay Podsadnik (ru)
  • 8931 Peter Shpak (ru)
  • 8932 Vasily Kuzmichyov (ru)
  • 8933 Vasily Yershov (ru)
  • 8934 Ivan Shchukin (ru)
  • 8935 Ivan Ageev (ru)
  • 8936 Roman Mashkov
  • 8937 Yakov Statcenko (ru)
  • 8938 Unknown
  • 8939 Anatoly Shcherbak (ru)
8940-8959
  • 8940 Ivan Sivruk (ru)
  • 8941 Vasily Pogorelov (ru)
  • 8942 Nikifor Pavlov (ru)
  • 8943 Ivan Frolov (ru)
  • 8944 Semyon Razinkinkin (ru)
  • 8945 Boris Shmelyov (ru)
  • 8946 Mikhail Kiyashko (ru)
  • 8947 Nikolay Vorontsov (ru)
  • 8948 Ivan Petrenko (ru)
  • 8949 Semyon Bakhtin (ru)
  • 8950 Vasiliy Plesinov (ru)
  • 8951 Semyon Fedotov (ru)
  • 8952 Pavel Chernenok (ru)
  • 8953 Viktor Yudin (ru)
  • 8954 Semyon Shakhmatov (ru)
  • 8955 Marina Chechneva
  • 8956 Ivan Gromov (ru)
  • 8957 Jarovoi Artemy (ru)
  • 8958 Stepan Averyanov (ru)
  • 8959 Bator Basanov (ru)
8960-8979
  • 8960 Alexey Korelyakov (ru)
  • 8961 Raisa Aronova
  • 8962 Polina Gelman
  • 8963 Dmitriy Korkotcenko (ru)
  • 8964 Konstantin Maltsev (ru)
  • 8965 Konstantin Mikhalenko (ru)
  • 8966 Unknown
  • 8967 Kesar Korovin (ru)
  • 8968 Nikolay Kotelnikov (ru)
  • 8969 Grigory Kukharev (ru)
  • 8970 Aleksei Martynov (ru)
  • 8971 Arsentiy Nechayev (ru)
  • 8972 Nikolay Shataev (ru)
  • 8973 Unknown
  • 8974 Vasiliy Yudin (ru)
  • 8975 Dmitriy Lupov (ru)
  • 8976 Alexander Vasko(ru)
  • 8977 Ivan Holubnychy (ru)
  • 8978 Alexey Horelenkov (ru)
  • 8979 Vladimir Gromakovskiy (ru)
8980-8999
  • 8980 Georgy Gromov (ru)
  • 8981 Mikhail Malyarenko (ru)
  • 8982 Alexey Pleshakov (ru)
  • 8983 Valentin Shapiro (ru)
  • 8984 Ivan Shcherbakov (ru)
  • 8985 Nikolay Bogomolov (ru)
  • 8986 Grigory Popovich (ru)
  • 8987 Valentin Zinchenko (ru)
  • 8988 Agzam Valeyev (ru)
  • 8989 Dmitriy Zaytsev (ru)
  • 8990 Alexander Kuchumov (ru)
  • 8991 Alexey Lebedev (ru)
  • 8992 Anatoly Mukhin (ru)
  • 8993 Mikhail Nikitin (ru)
  • 8994 Alexander Osadchiev (ru)
  • 8995 Vladimir Palagin (ru)
  • 8996 Ivan Prosandeev (ru)
  • 8997 Nikolay Fedorenko (ru)
  • 8998 Mikhail Shevchenko (ru)
  • 8999 Valentin Shirokikh (ru)
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Category:World War II Memorials in Russia
Heroes of the Soviet Union
  • Ivan Gubanov
  • Nikolay Dunayev
  • Semyon Zhogov
  • Stepan Zaboryev
  • Anatoly Ivanov
  • Igor Kreyzer
  • Ivan Matveyenko
  • Roman Mashkov
  • Vasily Trushechkin
  • Adam Turchinsky
  • Vasily Khromykh
  • Ivan Shein
Full cavaliers of the Order of Glory
Trofim Kiselyov