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For the first time, women were awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union by decree of November 2, 1938. Pilots Valentina Grizodubova, Polina Osipenko and Marina Raskova were awarded for carrying out a non-stop flight from Moscow to the Far East on the Rodina plane.

On the morning of September 24, 1938, well-known pilots in the country Valentina Grizodubova, Polina Osipenko and Marina Raskova took off on a non-stop flight from Moscow to the Far East on a twin-engine Rodina aircraft. From the first hours of the flight, the plane began to struggle with the elements: after takeoff, the plane entered cloud cover, icing began on the plane approaching Novosibirsk, and at an altitude of 6,500 meters, the bumpiness that began forced the plane to be raised even higher, to an altitude of 7,450 meters. The crew had to work in oxygen masks and in extreme cold.

Outside Krasnoyarsk, the Rodina radio station fell silent. According to the flight schedule over Lake Baikal, it was necessary to change course in order to reach the Trans-Siberian Railway. But, without seeing the terrain and not hearing radio beacons, the plane's crew risked crossing the Chinese border. The commander makes a decision - just forward! The clouds parted only over the Sea of ​​Okhotsk in the area of ​​the Shantar Islands. Then “Rodina” followed south, to the nearest airfield in Komsomolsk-on-Amur. At 10 o'clock Moscow time on September 25, the lakes of the Amgun River appeared below, and immediately a red light flashed on the dashboard - fuel was running out, and taiga was in the gap in the clouds. Soon the engines began to stall. The plane had to land, but were able to land in a swamp. He stayed in the air for 26 hours and 29 minutes. The search route for the pilots was determined based on Raskova’s last direction finding, taken by the Chita radio station.

A rescue operation began immediately; over 50 aircraft, hundreds of foot troops, trackers on horses and deer, and fishermen on boats and motorboats were mobilized for the search. The plane was found on October 3 by the crew of the R-5 reconnaissance biplane, led by commander M. Sakharov. On October 6, at about 11 o'clock in the morning, a detachment of rescuers and the pilot, leaving the plane in the swamp until the frosts, moved to the Amgun River, through the village of Kerby in Komsomolsk-on-Amur, and then to Khabarovsk. They traveled from Khabarovsk to Moscow by a special train, covered with flowers, accompanied by the thunder of orchestras. For completing this flight and the courage and heroism shown during this, Valentina Grizodubova, Polina Osipenko and Marina Raskova were awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union with the Order of Lenin on November 2, 1938.

Unfortunately, two of them soon died in plane crashes. Polina Osipenko - a year later, and Marina Raskova in 1943, during a flight to the front at the head of the world's first female aviation regiment that she formed. Valentina Grizodubova commanded the 101st Long-Range Air Regiment during the war. On January 16, 1986, she was the only female Hero of the Soviet Union to be awarded the title of Hero of Socialist Labor.

Heroes of the Great Patriotic War

The first of the women Heroes of the Soviet Union during the war years was 18-year-old partisan Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya. She was awarded the highest degree of distinction by decree of February 16, 1942 (posthumously). And in total, for their exploits during the Great Patriotic War, 90 women became Heroes of the Soviet Union, more than half of them were awarded the title posthumously.

Sad statistics: out of 27 partisans and underground women, 22 were awarded posthumously, out of 16 representatives of the ground forces, 13 were awarded posthumously. It is worth noting that 30 people found awards after the war. Thus, by decree of May 15, 1946, six pilots of the 46th Guards Taman Aviation Regiment received the “Golden Stars” of Heroes, and on the 20th anniversary of the Victory, 14 women were awarded at once, although 12 of them were posthumous.

The only foreigner among the Heroes is a rifleman of a company of machine gunners of the 1st Polish Infantry Division. T. Kosciuszko - Anela Krzywoń died on October 12, 1943, saving wounded soldiers. On November 11, 1943, she was posthumously awarded the title of Hero.

Among the Heroes is Hero of the Soviet Union Lyudmila Pavlichenko. The most productive female sniper - 309 killed (including 36 snipers).

The last time in the history of the USSR the title of Hero of the Soviet Union was awarded to women on May 5, 1990. The “Gold Star” was awarded to Ekaterina Demina (Mikhailova), a former medical instructor of the 369th separate battalion of the Marine Corps. Two pilots, Ekaterina Zelenko and Lydia Litvyak, became heroes (posthumously). On September 12, 1941, Senior Lieutenant Zelenko rammed a German Me-109 fighter in her Su-2 bomber. Zelenko died after destroying an enemy plane. It was the only ram in aviation history performed by a woman. Junior Lieutenant Litvyak is the most successful female fighter who personally shot down 11 enemy aircraft and died in air combat on August 1, 1943.

Hero of the Soviet Union Lydia Vladimirovna Litvyak. The most successful female fighter of World War II. She has 14 enemy aircraft shot down.

Zoya Anatolyevna Kosmodemyanskaya, monument near Moscow school No. 201.

Women Heroes of the Soviet Union and Knights of the Order of Glory

Alexandrova Z.
Anderman L.
Andrianova M.
Aronova R.E.
Bazhenova L.
Bayda. M.K.
Baramzina T.N.
Batrakova (Demidova) M.S.
Belik V.L.
Belkina N.
Biseniek. A.A.
Bogomolova M.
Bondarenko O.
Borovichenko M.
Bredikhina L.
Budanova K.
Vasina S.
Volkova N.T.
Volkova-Muzyleva M.
Ganieva Z.
Gasheva R.S.
Gelman P.V.
Gnarovskaya V.O.
Gnilitskaya N.T.
Golubeva O.
Grechishkina M.
Grizodubova V.S.
Gromova U.M.
Dzhunkovskaya G.I.
Dobroselskaya V.
Valley M.I.
Dyachenko D.G.
Erofeeva N.
Zhigulenko E.A.
Zenkova E.S.
Zubkova A.L.
Zubkova L.
Kabanova E.
Kamenskikh M.
Kashcheeva V.S.
Kzhiwon A.
Kislyak M.T.
Kovaleva A.
Kovshova N.
Kovshova N.V.
Kolesova E.F.
Konstantinova K.S.
Konstantinova T.F.

Kopylova E.
Kosmodemyanskaya Z.A.
Kostyrina T.I.
Kotlyarova A.
Kravets L.S.
Kravtsova-Meklin N.F.
Kulman H.A.
Kurlyankina E.
Levchenko I.N.
Lisitsyna A.M.
Litvinova L.N.
Litishenko M.
Lobkovskaya N.
Lyapina A.
Magadze I.
Mazanik E.G.
Makarova T.P.
Malysheva N.
Malgina V. G.
Mametova M.Sh.
Mareseva Z.I.
Marinenko T.S.
Maslovskaya A.I.
Melentyeva M.V.
Melnikayte M.Yu.
Menshakova E.
Mikheeva A.
Mishanina-Apokina A.
Moldagulova A.
Moldogulova A.K.
Morozova A.A.
Morozova E.
Nazarova K.I.
Nazarova T.
Nedilko M.
Nikandrova A.A.
Nikishina T.
Nikolaeva-Tereshkova V.V.
Nikulina E.A.
Nosal E.I.
Oktyabrskaya M.V.
Onilova N.A.
Orlova-Rogozina V.G.
Osipenko P.D.
Osipova M.B.
Pavlichenko L.

Hero of the Soviet Union Lyudmila Pavlichenko. The most productive female sniper - 309 killed (including 36 snipers).

Parfenova Z.I.
Pasko E.B.
Petrova A.V.
Petrova G.K.
Petrova P.
Polivanova M.
Polivanova M.S.
Popova N.V.
Portnova Z.M.
Putina F.A.
Raskova M.M.
Raspopova N.M.
Ratushnaya L.S.
Rudneva E.M.
Ryabova E.V.
Salnikova E.
Samsonova Z.A.
Sanfirova O.A.
Safronova V.I.
Sebrova I.F.
Smirnova M.V.
Solntseva N.
Solovey N.
Sorokina L.
Sosnina N.I.
Soshnikova A.
Stempkovskaya E.K.
Syrtlanova M.G.
Sysolova R.
Teplyakova M.
Timofeeva L.
Timofeeva-Egorova A.A.
Tokareva V.
Troyan N.V.
Tusnolobova-Marchenko Z.M.
Ubiyvok E.K.
Ulyanenko N.Z.
Fedutenko N.N.
Fomicheva K.Ya.
Khlopotkina Z.
Khoreva V.
Khoruzhaya V.Z.
Khudyakova A.F.
Tsukanova M.
Chaikina E.I.
Chechneva M.P.
Shapran N.
Shebalina A.
Shevtsova L.G.
Shkarletova M.S.
Shcherbachenko M.Z.
Yaremenko M.

Monument to Ekaterina Zelenko.

Ekaterina Zelenko is a pilot, the only woman in the world who has committed an aerial ram, Hero of the Soviet Union. A combative and fearless pilot who did not lose her composure in the most difficult conditions of the Great Patriotic War. “Volitional qualities are well developed. Energetic. Decisive. Personal fire training is good...”

Valentina Grizodubova, Polina Osipenko and Marina Raskova became national heroines in September 1938.
On September 24-25, the Rodina aircraft, piloted by crew commander Grizodubova, pilot Osipenko and navigator Raskova, made the longest non-stop flight in history along the route Moscow - the village of Kerby (Far East), with a length of 6450 km, thereby breaking the world record held by the French pilot . The pilots spent 26 hours and 29 minutes in the air, showing true heroism, courage and fearlessness. In conditions where communication with the crew was interrupted, the plane was icy, and fuel was running out, the crew managed to complete the flight and land the plane without damaging it. Before landing, crew commander Valentina Grizodubova ordered navigator Marina Raskova to jump with a parachute - in case of an unsuccessful landing, the impact would fall on the place where Raskova was sitting. The women were found 10 days after the plane landed. Two months after the flight, all three were awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union and awarded the Order of Lenin.

Valentina Grizodubova

Valentina Grizodubova was born on the night of December 31 to January 1, 1910 in Kharkov in the family of pilot and aircraft designer Stepan Grizodubov. She made her first flight at the age of 14 - at a glider rally in Crimea. After school, Grizodubova entered two educational institutions at once - the Kharkov Institute of Technology and a music school for piano, after which she was enrolled in the conservatory. But Grizodubova’s main dream was the sky. It was not easy for a woman to enter flight school at that time. 18-year-old Valentina seeks admission from Sergo Ordzhonikidze, and thanks to his petition, the girl is enrolled in the first intake of the Kharkov Central Aero Club. Grizodubova completed courses at the aviation club in three months, dropped out of the Technological Institute and entered the 1st Tula Flight Sports School of Osoaviakhim. And a year later - at the age of 20 - she entered the Penza School of Pilot Instructors. From 1930 to 1933, Valentina Grizodubova worked as an instructor pilot at a flying club, during which time she trained 36 pilots. In 1933, the Grizodubov family moved to Moscow, Valentina began working in a propaganda squadron. She flies throughout the Soviet Union on various types of aircraft. And in September 1938, the name of Valentina Grizodubova became known not only to the entire Soviet Union, but also to the whole world. The non-stop flight of 6,450 km, piloted by three young women, became the main event in the life of the country. In the USSR, for the first time, female Heroes of the Soviet Union appeared, setting a world record for flight distance. During the war, 32-year-old Grizodubova commanded an aviation regiment. From 1941 to 1943, she flew 200 combat missions to bomb enemy targets and deliver ammunition to the front lines. After the war, Valentina Grizodubova was demobilized from the army and went to work in civil aviation as deputy head of the Institute of Instrumentation for the flight department. Her unit tested electronic equipment for the Air Force and civil aviation. In 1963, Grizodubova achieved the creation of the Research Flight Test Center (SRITC), which she headed - the latest aviation electronics were developed and tested at the institute - in fact, the foundation was laid for all-weather missile-carrying jet aircraft. In 1972, Grizodubova returned to the Institute of Instrument Engineering to the position of deputy head, where she worked until 1993. In April 1993, Valentina Stepanovna passed away.

Polina Osipenko

Polina Osipenko was born in 1907 into a large peasant family in the Zaporozhye region. After completing 2nd grade at school, the girl dropped out of school - her parents had nothing to buy clothes, shoes and notebooks for classes. The 8-year-old girl was sent to be a nanny, and then a farm laborer. And then the revolution happened, a collective farm was organized in the village, and Polina was appointed poultry worker. During the day, the girl worked on a poultry farm, and in the evenings she sat down to study textbooks at evening school. For the first time in her life, Polina saw an airplane at the age of 20 - two small airplanes landed in a meadow near a poultry farm. The entire collective farm came running to see this spectacle. That’s when Polina Osipenko had a big dream.
She wrote a letter to her fellow villager, who was a cadet at a military aviation school, and soon went to see him. Her service in aviation began as a waitress in the cadet canteen. While serving visitors, Polina every day persuaded the head of the school to accept her. He finally gave in and ordered her to undergo a physical examination. Fortunately, Polina’s health was fine, and soon yesterday’s birder was enrolled in a flying school. It would be difficult to find a more diligent student. After graduating from school, Osipenko entered service in a military unit. And when she came home on vacation, not only the villagers, but also her own mother did not immediately believe that Polina was flying and not just walking around in uniform. To dispel all doubts, Polina went back to the unit with her mother - and when she looked at the sky and saw her daughter doing “Nesterov loops.” “barrels” and “corkscrews”, she cried with happiness.
Between 1936 and 1938, Polina Osipenko set 5 world aviation records for altitude and flight range for women. And on September 24 - 25, 1938, Polina’s main flight took place together with Valentina Grizodubova and Marina Raskova along the route Moscow - Komsomolsk-on-Amur. And soon, in November 1938, all crew members were awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union.
In May 1939, Major Osipenko, who worked in the flight inspection, was supposed to take part in a training camp for commanders to train in blind flights at the Advanced Training Course for Commanding Officers.
On the first day, the pilots worked on simulators, on the second day they flew with instructors, and only on the third day they had to make independent flights. Hero of the Soviet Union Anatoly Serov, who also took part in these courses, suggested that the pilots fly in pairs. He flew out with Polina Osipenko. Polina easily and confidently lifted the plane into the air. This was the last flight of 32-year-old Polina Osipenko. The plane crashed - the reasons for what happened were never determined.

Marina Raskova

Marina Raskova was born on March 28, 1912 in Moscow, in the family of an opera singer. She didn’t even think about aviation - the girl had a good ear for music and a voice, and they predicted a singing career for her. Marina studied at school and at the same time in the children's department of the conservatory. But life decreed otherwise. Marina's father, the only breadwinner, suddenly died - the girl had to work after 9th grade. Marina got a job at the Butyrsky Chemical Plant, and then as a draftsman at the aeronautical laboratory of the Zhukovsky Air Force Academy. At first it was very difficult for the girl - it was a completely unfamiliar world to her. The laboratory contained pressure gauges, aerothermometers, and aeroplanchettes; at first, Marina could not distinguish them from each other. But as part of her job, she had to bring these devices to lectures and demonstrate them to the audience.
But quite quickly, the capable and diligent employee figured them out, she was interested in what was being said at the lectures, she absorbed everything she heard, and suddenly air navigation became very interesting to her. She sat down to her textbooks on her own and began to study higher mathematics, physics, topography, astronomy, radio engineering and other sciences. The lecturer appreciated Marina’s curiosity and determination and began to help her with her studies. As a result, Maotna graduated from the Leningrad Institute of Civil Air Fleet Engineers and became a navigator. The Academy decided to reward Marina for her good work. When asked what award she would like to receive, she answered - learning to fly. The Academy kept its promise, and navigator Marina Raskova entered and graduated from the Central Aero Club in Tushino. The ability to fly an airplane was added to theoretical knowledge.
That same famous flight on the Rodina plane began quite peacefully. However, with such a long route it is difficult to expect good weather along the entire route. The crew of the Rodina plane understood this very well and were prepared for clouds and cyclones. But the weather conditions turned out to be worse than expected. Continuous cloudiness began already 60 km after the start of the flight - we had to fly blind. And while approaching the Urals, the plane began to icing. To top it all off, due to the cold, radio communications stopped working and gasoline ran out. Not far from the Chinese border, the pilots decided to deviate from the course so as not to accidentally cross the border. The plane began to lose altitude.
The navigator's place, Raskova, was in the bow, and in case of an unscheduled landing, the plane could have landed nose-first, in which case the chart room would have been crushed into a cake. Grizodubova ordered Raskova to jump with a parachute. So as not to crash the car. Grizodubova and Osipenko landed the plane on its belly. The brave pilots were found on the 10th day.
At the beginning of the war, Marina Raskova turned to Stalin with a request to allow the formation of a women's air regiment, and already in October an air group of three women's air regiments was created. She was unofficially called the "Night Witch".
In January 1943, Marina Mikhailovna Raskova died while flying to the front after reformation - the plane crashed in difficult weather conditions near Saratov.

The first of the women Heroes of the Soviet Union during the war years was 18-year-old partisan Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya. She was awarded the highest degree of distinction by decree of February 16, 1942 (posthumously). And in total, for their exploits during the Great Patriotic War, 90 women became Heroes of the Soviet Union, more than half of them were awarded the title posthumously.

Sad statistics: out of 27 partisans and underground women, 22 were awarded posthumously, out of 16 representatives of the ground forces, 13 were awarded posthumously. It is worth noting that 30 people found awards after the war. Thus, by decree of May 15, 1946, six pilots of the 46th Guards Taman Aviation Regiment received the “Golden Stars” of Heroes, and on the 20th anniversary of the Victory, 14 women were awarded at once, although 12 of them were posthumous.
The only foreigner among the Heroes is a rifleman of a company of machine gunners of the 1st Polish Infantry Division. T. Kosciuszko Anelya Krzywoń - died on October 12, 1943, saving wounded soldiers. On November 11, 1943, she was posthumously awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.
The last time in the history of the USSR the title of Hero of the Soviet Union was awarded to women on May 5, 1990. The “Gold Star” was awarded to Ekaterina Demina (Mikhailova), a medical instructor of the 369th separate battalion of the Marine Corps. Two pilots, Ekaterina Zelenko and Lydia Litvyak, became heroes (posthumously). On September 12, 1941, Senior Lieutenant Zelenko rammed a German Me-109 fighter in her Su-2 bomber. Zelenko died after destroying an enemy plane. It was the only ram in aviation history performed by a woman. Junior Lieutenant Litvyak is the most successful female fighter who personally shot down 11 enemy aircraft and died in air combat on August 1, 1943.


Pavlichenko Lyudmila Mikhailovna

Born on June 29 (July 12), 1916 in the village of Belaya Tserkov, now a city in the Kyiv region of Ukraine, in the family of an employee. Russian. Graduated from the 4th year of Kyiv State University.
Participant in the Great Patriotic War since June 1941, volunteer. Member of the CPSU(b)/CPSU since 1945. As part of the Chapaev division, she participated in defensive battles in Moldova and southern Ukraine. For her good training, she was assigned to a sniper platoon. Since August 10, 1941, Pavlichenko, a sniper of the 54th Infantry Regiment of the 25th Infantry Division (Chapaevskaya), has been participating in the heroic defense of Odessa. In mid-October 1941, after bloody battles, the troops of the Primorsky Army were forced to leave Odessa and evacuate to the Crimea to strengthen the defense of Sevastopol.
Sniper Lyudmila Mikhailovna Pavlichenko spent 250 days and nights in heavy and heroic battles near Sevastopol. She, together with the soldiers of the Primorsky Army and the sailors of the Black Sea Fleet, courageously defended the legendary city of Russian military glory.
By July 1942, Lyudmila Pavlichenko had killed 309 Nazis with a sniper rifle. During the period of defensive battles, she trained dozens of good snipers, who, following her example, exterminated more than one hundred Nazis.
The title of Hero of the Soviet Union with the presentation of the Order of Lenin and the Gold Star medal was awarded to Lieutenant Lyudmila Mikhailovna Pavlichenko on October 25, 1943.

Oktyabrskaya Maria Vasilievna

She was born on August 16, 1905 in the village of Kiyat, now the village of Blidneye, Krasnogvardeisky district of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea, Ukraine, in a peasant family. Ukrainian. Lived in Dzhankoy, graduated from 6th grade.
During the Great Patriotic War, she built the “Fighting Girlfriend” tank with her own savings. She graduated from the Omsk Tank School and from October 1943 she fought on her tank on the Western Front, being a mechanic-driver of the 2nd Tank Battalion of the 26th Guards Tank Brigade of the 2nd Guards Tank Corps of the Western Front.
On January 17, 1944, near the Krynki station in the Vitebsk region of Belarus, the “Fighting Girlfriend” tank had its caterpillar hit. The driver-mechanic M.V. Oktyabrskaya tried to repair the damage under enemy fire, but a mine that exploded nearby dangerously wounded her in the left eye.

On March 15, 1944, Maria Oktyabrskaya (nee Garagulya) died in a front-line hospital in Smolensk. She was buried there near the Kremlin wall at the Kutuzovsky cemetery.
The title of Hero of the Soviet Union was awarded posthumously to Maria Vasilyevna Oktyabrskaya on August 2, 1944.
She was awarded the Order of Lenin and the Order of the Patriotic War, 1st degree.

Kislyak Maria Timofeevna

She was born on March 6, 1925 in the village of Lednoe, now within the city of Kharkov (Ukraine), into a peasant family. Ukrainian. She graduated from the Kharkov medical and midwifery school. She worked in a hospital as a nurse.
A participant in the Great Patriotic War, underground Komsomol member Maria Kislyak in February 1943 organized and led the underground Komsomol organization in the city of Kharkov, which actively fought against the enemy during the days of the occupation of the city. The young patriot wrote and distributed leaflets among residents of the village of Lednoye, destroyed SS officers, and transferred Soviet soldiers who were surrounded across the front line. She saved the lives of 43 wounded Red Army soldiers. Brave 18-year-old Komsomol member Maria Kislyak was arrested by the Gestapo at the end of May 1943 in her native village. Executed by fascist executioners on June 18, 1943.
For her heroism in the fight against the Nazi invaders on May 8, 1965, Maria Timofeevna Kislyak was posthumously awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.
Awarded the Order of Lenin.

Kashcheeva Vera Sergeevna

Born on September 15, 1922 in the village of Petrovka, now Troitsky district, Altai Territory, into a peasant family. Russian. She graduated from nursing courses in Barnaul in 1941.
In the Red Army since 1942, at the front since March 1942. Member of the CPSU(b)/CPSU since 1944.
The sanitary instructor of the battalion of the 120th Guards Rifle Regiment (39th Guards Rifle Division of the 8th Guards Army of the 3rd Ukrainian Front) Guard, senior sergeant Kashcheeva, on October 24, 1943, was among the first to cross the Dnieper River south of the city of Dnepropetrovsk. Being seriously wounded, she remained in the ranks, supporting and inspiring the soldiers.

On February 22, 1944, for the exemplary fulfillment of command assignments and the courage and heroism shown in battles with the Nazi invaders of the guard, senior sergeant Vera Sergeevna Kashcheeva was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union with the Order of Lenin and the Gold Star medal.

Litvyak Lidia Vladimirovna

Born on August 18, 1921 in Moscow. Russian. In 1935 she entered the flying club. After graduating from the Kherson Aviation School, she worked at the Kalinin Aero Club.
On September 13, 1942, in the skies of Stalingrad, she opened the account of her victories in the 437th Fighter Aviation Regiment of the 287th Fighter Division: she shot down a bomber and a fighter. On September 27, a Ju-88 was hit in an air battle. Then she shot down an Me-109.
Soon she was transferred to the 9th Guards Odessa Fighter Aviation Regiment, commanded by Hero of the Soviet Union L.L. Shestakov. In December 1942, Litvyak destroyed a bomber. Her glory was crowned with new victories even after her transfer to another regiment. By that time, Litvyak had 6 aerial victories to her name.
February 11, 1943 Lydia shot down 2 planes. In one of the battles, her Yak-1 was shot down, and she made an emergency landing on enemy territory. Jumping out of the cabin, she rushed to run from the German soldiers. But the distance was getting shorter. And suddenly our attack aircraft flew over the heads of the enemy. Pouring fire on the Germans, he forced them to throw themselves to the ground. Then he planned next to Lida and stopped. The pilot waved his hands. The girl squeezed herself onto the pilot’s lap, the plane took off, and soon Lydia was in the regiment. On February 23, 1943, Litvyak was awarded the Order of the Red Star.

On March 22, in the Rostov-on-Don area, Litvyak participated in the interception of a Ju-88 group. During a long and difficult battle, she managed to shoot down one Junkers. At this time, six Me-109s that came to help went on the attack. Lydia noticed them and, in order to disrupt the blow, stood in their way. The death carousel spun for 15 minutes. With great difficulty, the pilot brought the fighter home. Having reported that the task was completed, she lost consciousness... After treatment, she went to Moscow, giving a receipt that she would receive further treatment within a month. But a week later Lydia returned to the regiment. On May 5, Litvyak flew out to escort the bombers. A battle ensued, and Lydia shot down an enemy fighter. Two days later she shot down another Messer.
At the end of May, a spotter balloon appeared in the sector of the front where the regiment was operating. Repeated attempts to knock down this “sausage” led to nothing. Having taken off, Lydia walked along the front line, went deep into the enemy’s rear and approached the balloon from the direction of the sun. The quick attack lasted less than one minute! For this victory she was awarded the Order of the Red Banner.

On May 21, Lydia’s husband, pilot, Hero of the Soviet Union Guard Captain Alexey Solomatin, died. For Lydia, the death of her husband was a heavy blow. On July 16, 1943, Litvyak flew out to escort attack aircraft. The fighters entered into battle with 30 bombers, accompanied by 6 Messers. In this battle, Litvyak personally shot down a Junkers and, together with a wingman, a Me-109, but she was also wounded. She refused the demand to go for treatment.

On that fateful day, she flew 3 combat missions. On the fourth flight, six Yak-1s entered the battle. And now the Junkers is on fire, the Messer is falling apart. Our six got ready to leave. Suddenly a Messer jumped out and fired a burst at the plane with tail number 23. The “Yak” seemed to have failed, but the pilot tried to level it near the ground... This gave birth to hope that she was alive. However, neither the plane nor the pilot could be found. Litvyak was nominated posthumously for the title of Hero of the Soviet Union. But there were rumors that the pilot was captured. Most of the aviators did not believe it and continued to find out Lydia’s fate. But the shadow of suspicion spread beyond the regiment. The command, showing “caution,” did not approve the nomination for the rank, limiting itself to the Order of the Patriotic War, 1st degree.
In the post-war years, fellow soldiers continued to search for the pilot. It was found in a mass grave in the village of Dmitrievka, Donetsk region. In July 1988, in Litvyak’s personal file, the entry “missing in action” was replaced with “died while performing a combat mission.” Veterans of the regiment renewed their petition to award her the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

On May 5, 1990, for the exemplary fulfillment of command assignments and demonstrated courage and heroism in battles with the Nazi invaders, flight commander, fighter pilot, guard junior lieutenant Lidiya Vladimirovna Litvyak was posthumously awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.
She was awarded the Order of Lenin, the Order of the Red Banner, the Order of the Patriotic War, I and II degrees, and the Order of the Red Star.

These fragile, gentle girls fought on an equal basis with men during the Great Patriotic War. They flew planes, carried out the wounded under shells, and went on reconnaissance missions. It was scary, but they did it.

Lydia Litvyak - “the white lily of Stalingrad”

She died at 21!

Lydia Vladimirovna Litvyak

At the front: from April 1942 to August 1943. She served in the 586th Fighter Aviation Regiment - the famous women's air regiment of Marina Raskova. She died on August 1, 1943 in Donbass.

Military rank: guard junior lieutenant.

Military specialty: fighter pilot.

Awarded: Hero of the Soviet Union, Order of Lenin, Order of the Red Banner, Order of the Red Star, Order of the Patriotic War, 1st degree.

The most successful female fighter of the Second World War, Lida Litvyak was, first of all, a charming girl who, despite the war conditions, tried to bring a sweet, girlish quality to her appearance. How she cried when the order came to cut off her braids. She always kept a bouquet of wildflowers in the cockpit of her plane, and on the cockpit of her combat vehicle, at her request, a white lily was painted, which served as the beginning of her combat call sign - “White Lily of Stalingrad.” And once Lydia sewed fur from her high boots onto the collar of her flight suit and then because of this she was punished and had to sew the fur back.

She gained fame, turning into fear among the Germans, after she shot down two planes at once in September 1942 on her second combat mission as part of the 437th Fighter Aviation Regiment near Stalingrad. And at the wheel of one of them was a colonel from an elite squadron, a holder of three Iron Crosses. The German ace asked to show him who defeated him. And he was shocked to learn that she was a young, fragile blonde.

In the battles near Stalingrad, Lydia Litvyak made 89 combat missions and shot down 7 enemy aircraft. In one of the battles, her Yak was shot down. Lydia made an emergency landing in enemy territory. Jumping out of the cabin, she, firing back, rushed to run from the approaching German soldiers. But the distance was shrinking, and it seemed that death was inevitable. Suddenly our attack aircraft flew over the heads of the enemy, stunning the Germans with torrential fire. He abruptly released the landing gear, sitting down next to Lida. The girl was not at a loss and jumped into the cabin - so unexpectedly she was saved.

The war tempered Lida; it seemed that she was invulnerable. But the deaths of her relatives undermined her persistent character. In May, her husband, Hero of the Soviet Union, Alexei Solomatin, died, and in July, her best friend, also an ace pilot, Katya Budanova.

On August 1, 1943, in the battles for Donbass, the flight commander of the 3rd squadron, Lydia Litvyak, left for the last battle. That day she flew three combat missions and did not return from the last one. The “White Lily of Stalingrad” was only 21 years old. For a long time she was considered missing. And only in the summer of 1969, search engines near a farm in the Donetsk region discovered her remains, which were then reburied in a mass grave.

In 1943, Lydia Litvyak appeared on the cover of Ogonyok magazine.

A white lily was painted on the cockpit of her plane.

Withdrew more than 3,000 children from the occupied territory

At the front: from September to November 1941, a liaison officer of the Batya partisan detachment, and from November 1941, a reconnaissance officer of the Batya detachment, participated in battles.

Awarded: Order of the Red Banner of Battle; posthumously awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

August 14, 1942. An unusual train approached the platform of the Moscow railway station in the city of Gorky (now Nizhny Novgorod): children had difficulty getting out of the cars, or even crawling out completely. There were more than 3 thousand of them! Exhausted, poorly dressed and almost barefoot, they did not cry. They are on the mainland, which means they are alive and all the horrors of the war are left behind! They were taken out of the occupied Smolensk region by three young women led by 24-year-old intelligence officer Matryona Volskaya. It was she who was instructed by the leadership of the partisan detachment to collect and lead children along the “partisan corridor” to the Toropets railway station, which is 200 kilometers through forests, swamps, and through villages burned by the Nazis. The summer of 1942 was very hot, exhausted children were constantly thirsty, but there was no drinking water: corpses were floating in the rivers, and there were signs “The water is poisoned” on the wells. In addition to the heat, thirst and fatigue, constant air raids plagued us. The forest saved us from raids and starvation. For the first time, they received a small piece of bread only in Bologoye, and their first lunch - in Ivanovo. For Maria Volskaya, this road of life was doubly difficult. Having declared another halt, she set out to reconnaissance 25 kilometers ahead. After which she returned, raised the guys - and forward again! And this despite the fact that she was carrying a child under her heart. Upon arrival in Gorky, the children were assigned to vocational schools, orphanages and collective farms. Maria Volskaya herself remained to live in the village of Smolki, Gorky Region, where she worked as a teacher for many years.

Behind enemy lines, a Kaluga woman jumped from a plane without a parachute

Photo: family archive of Natalia Alexandrushkina

Vera Sergeevna Andrianova

At the front: from January to June 1942.

Military rank: private.

Military specialty: reconnaissance radio operator.

Awarded: Medal "For Courage" (posthumously).

On December 30, 1941, units of the Red Army liberated Kaluga from the Nazis, and on New Year’s Eve, primary school teacher Vera Andrianova came to the city committee of the Komsomol and submitted an application with a request to send her to the front.

“My relative’s request was granted and sent in a truck to the outskirts of the city of Yukhnova for reconnaissance radio operator courses,” says Natalya Aleksandrushkina, cousin-great-granddaughter of Vera Andrianova. - After short-term raids behind German troops, Vera was ordered to reconnoiter the location of enemy forces in the area of ​​Yukhnov and Zaitsevaya Gora. The pilot of the U-2 aircraft was tasked with finding a suitable landing site, landing the reconnaissance aircraft and returning back. But there was no site. Andrianova moved from the cockpit to the wing of the plane. During a low-level flight without a parachute, she jumped into a ravine covered with snow. The pilot circled over the ravine and noticed that the girl was giving him a sign: “Everything is fine!” That time Vera suffered frostbite on her face and hands, but she completed the command’s instructions exactly. The commanders loved Andrianova for her modesty, courage and bravery.

Later, the intelligence officer infiltrated the location of Army Group Center and carried out a number of successful acts of sabotage, leading Red Army soldiers to Nazi ammunition warehouses and a communications center near Spas-Demensk. In June 1942, Vera was captured by the Gestapo: on the way to a safe house, they stopped her, searched her and found a walkie-talkie. In the Stodolishchenskaya prison, the Nazis tried to lure her to their side, but all their efforts were in vain. During the execution, Vera refused to obey the Gestapo order to stand with her back to them. At the last moment, she threw angry words into the faces of the executioners. The soldiers discharged their pistols into the face of the Kaluga woman. In May 1966, Anastasia Ipatievna Andrianova, Vera’s mother, received an invitation to come to the Kaluga City Executive Committee to receive the medal “For Courage,” which was awarded to her daughter posthumously. Two years later, one of the Kaluga streets began to bear the name of a fearless primary school teacher.”

17-year-old girl raised the battalion to attack

Photo: Svetlana Bellendir, archive of Z.A. Shipanova

At the front: from November 1943 to March 1945. She served in the 933rd Infantry Regiment of the 254th Division of the 52nd Army, 2nd Ukrainian Front. She traveled military roads through Ukraine, Moldova, Romania, Poland, and Germany. Having been seriously wounded in the German city of Görlitz, she celebrated Victory Day in the hospital.

Military rank: staff Sergeant.

Military specialty: medical instructor.

Awarded: Order of the Red Star, Order of the Patriotic War, 1st degree, medals.

“I’ve been desperate since childhood,” smiles Ufa resident Zinaida Shipanova. “I climbed trees with the boys, and was not inferior in any way.” She also loved reading books about heroes and dreamed of accomplishing a feat.”

In 1941, the song “Get up, huge country!” came from the loudspeakers, but the parents did not allow the child to go to the front. Two years later, she falsified the date of birth in the documents (“let them think that I’m not 16, but 18 years old!”) and went to the military registration and enlistment office. She left a note for her family: “Don’t worry about me, I’ve gone to the front.”

Zina was appointed as a cook, but she did not serve as a cook for long - she begged the commander to send her as a medical instructor to a rifle battalion. The young girl carried the wounded out from under the fire, bandaged them, and calmed the adult, experienced fighters. And one day she had the opportunity to raise a battalion to attack. This happened in August 1944 in Romania.

Here’s how Zinaida Shipanova herself wrote about it in the essay “Zinkin’s Order, or How They Raised It to the Attack”: “There was tense silence. Suddenly there was some movement in the sunny haze, and soon the naked heads of Germans appeared above the tall stalks of corn. The battalion commander with binoculars on his chest came out of cover and commanded in a young falsetto: “Follow me, comrades, hurray!” He took a few steps forward and looked back. There was no one behind him. The company did not obey the order. It took my breath away. Without reasoning, but only obeying a feeling of pity for the battalion commander, I rushed to his aid. She looked back at the men hiding under the vines and saw how slowly the fighters crawled deeper into the bushes. Fury took over me. And suddenly the words came out of my lips: “Where are you going?.. Your mother!” And a moment later, in complete detachment, I was running down a steep green slope, clearly aware that these were the last minutes of my life. For the first time I saw how beautiful the land was, how clean and fragrant the air was... I heard the patter of feet behind me - a rifle company rose to attack. Overtaking me, soldiers with machine guns in their hands crashed into a corn field, and the crackling of dry stalks mixed with machine gun fire. It never occurred to me that I would ever have the opportunity to raise these strong, but for some reason confused men to attack.”

The command took a long time to decide what award Shipanova deserved: the Order of the Patriotic War or the medal “For Courage”. But in the end they gave nothing. She received the Order of the Red Star for another feat - in the vicinity of the German city of Görlitz, where the battalion was ambushed, she gathered the soldiers under machine-gun fire and brought them to the captain. Zinochka flew into empty, dilapidated houses where soldiers were shooting back, and shouted, “By order of Captain Gubarev, follow me!” And they obeyed the young girl.

“When I was running under fire, I thought, what a feat! - says Zinaida Alexandrovna. “I did it after all!”

A few days later, Zinaida Shipanova was seriously wounded (her fingers were torn off by shell fragments) and concussed. The girl was worried that she did not reach Berlin, but was glad that she was alive.

After the war, Zinaida Alexandrovna went to Sakhalin, got married there and gave birth to a son. The family moved to Belarus, and Zinaida Shipanova returned to her native Bashkiria only in 1975. Working as a personnel inspector at one of the large Ufa enterprises, she found time for creativity. The war participant still writes heartfelt books and essays today, and collaborates with the editors of newspapers and magazines. She often meets with schoolchildren and tells children about the war.

Vera Voloshina, intelligence officer and saboteur executed by the Nazis

Voloshina Vera Danilovna

At the front: immediately after the start of the war, she was mobilized to dig trenches on the outskirts of Moscow. In October 1941, she went to the front as a volunteer. She was enlisted in special military unit No. 9903 of the intelligence department of the headquarters of the Western Front to work behind enemy lines. On November 29, 1941, she went on her last combat mission and died in the village of Golovkovo, Naro-Fominsk district, Moscow region.

Military specialty: reconnaissance saboteur.

Awarded: Order of the Patriotic War, 1st degree and the title of Hero of the Russian Federation posthumously.

For Vera Voloshina, the real war lasted only a month - in October 1941 she became a partisan, and in November she was executed by the Germans. But during this time, the intelligence officer managed to complete seven combat missions and forever entered the history of the Great Patriotic War.

Vera was born in Kemerovo, studied at school No. 12, where she met her first, but never realized love - Yuri Dvuzhilny. After graduating from school, the young people went to different cities: Yura - to Leningrad, to the Institute of Civil Air Fleet, Vera - to Moscow, to the Institute of Physical Education. They wrote letters to each other and were planning to get married in the summer of 1942. The girlfriends bought the girl a white dress. But the war ruined everything. Yura and Vera never met again. But the white dress never became a wedding dress...

On November 22, 1941, a group of scouts, which included Vera Voloshina and her friend Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya, was dropped behind enemy lines in the Naro-Fominsk region. The detachment carried out several successful acts of sabotage, and on the way back came under fire. The Germans took the seriously wounded Vera prisoner. She was tortured and interrogated all night in a former school building, and on the morning of November 29, she was hanged from a roadside willow tree. Vera was 22 years old.

Captain Yuri Dvuzhilny died a heroic death in the battle for the liberation of Belarus in 1944. He was posthumously awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union. In Kemerovo, two intersecting streets are named after Vera Voloshina and Yuri Dvuzhilny.

Vera Voloshina is sitting in the first row, Yura Dvuzhilny is standing nearby (2nd row)

Raisa Aronova saved the regiment's banner

Raisa Ermolaevna Aronova

At the front: from May 1942 to May 1945.

Military rank: Guard senior lieutenant.

Military specialty: senior pilot of the 46th Guards Regiment.

Awarded: Hero of the Soviet Union, Order of Lenin, Order of the Red Banner, Order of the Patriotic War, 1st degree, Order of the Red Star, medal “For the Defense of the Caucasus,” medal “For the Victory over Germany in the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945.”

Raisa Ermolaevna was born in Saratov. She studied at the Institute of Mechanization. Then she transferred to the Moscow Aviation Institute. She fought from May 1942 until the Victory as part of the 4th Air Army. In 1943 she was wounded, but nevertheless continued her service.

In the summer of 1944, Aronova had to save the regiment's banner. In Belarus, not far from the regiment's base, scattered groups of German troops appeared. During the execution of combat missions, information was transmitted to headquarters that these groups could join the regiment. The unit on duty was Raya Aronova. She took the banner from the staff, rolled it up, put it in a canvas bag and wrapped it around her body - under her tunic, and tightened the belt. Aronova knew that the loss of the banner was a disgrace for the military unit and would lead to the disbandment of the regiment. But everything ended well.

After the war, Aronova graduated from the Institute of Foreign Languages. She had many government awards. In May 1946, she was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union for 941 combat missions.

Lydia Tselovalnikova flew 590 combat missions during the war years

Lida in the photo on the right

Photo: Saratov State Museum of Military Glory

Lidia Mikhailovna Tselovalnikova

At the front: from December 1941 to May 1945.

Military rank: Guard Lieutenant.

Military specialty: flight navigator of the first aviation squadron.

Awarded: medals “For Military Merit”, “For Victory over Germany in the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945”, “For Defense of the Caucasus”, Order of the Red Star, Order of the Patriotic War II degree.

Lida Tselovalnikova was born in Saratov. She joined the regiment in 1941 through the Komsomol recruitment. When she was asked at the commission: “What can you do?”, she answered: “Nothing.” And to the question: “What will you do if you see a German?”, Lida, after thinking, said: “And I’ll run away.” Everyone laughed, but the girl was still enrolled in the regiment.

At the front, Lydia worked as an armed soldier, but dreamed of becoming a navigator. Her dream came true on September 13, 1943.

After the liberation of the Taman Peninsula, the liberation of Crimea began. In November 1943, a marine landing force landed in the area of ​​the village of Eltigen, but failed to gain a secure foothold. The sailors needed help. The 46th Night Bomber Regiment delivered ammunition, food and medicine. The pilots had to approach the target from enemy territory with the engine turned off, drop the cargo and go to sea at low level. During one of the flights, Tselovalnikova’s plane was hit by a machine gun burst. It was impossible to fly over the Kerch Strait. Then Lida's partner Raya Aronova decided to land the plane on a sandy beach over which sea waves rolled. Our anti-aircraft gunners helped the young pilots get out of the cockpit and took them to the command post, from where the girls connected with their superiors and reported that the mission had been completed.

Nadezhda Georgievna Rudenko (Safonova)

Served in the Baltic Fleet in the 7th assault aviation regiment. I celebrated Victory Day in Germany.

Military rank: sergeant.

Military specialty: aircraft radio equipment master.

Awarded: Order of the Patriotic War, medals “For the Defense of Leningrad”, “For Military Merit”, “For the Capture of Koenigsberg”, “For Victory in Germany”, badges “Defender of the Krondstadt Fortress”, “Defender of the Oranienbaum Bridgehead”.

18-year-old Nadya was a real beauty

Nadezhda Georgievna is now 92 years old. She was born in Irkutsk in 1923 into a large family (five children). On June 21, 1945, she danced at the school prom, dreamed of studying, but the war began, and 17-year-old Nadya went to work at an aircraft factory, making parts for airplanes on a machine.

In the spring of 1942, she volunteered for the front. In five months, the girl completed a two-year training program under the “aircraft equipment master” program and went to serve in the Baltic Fleet.

In December 1942, my girlfriend Marina and I were transported along the Road of Life in the back of a car across Lake Ladoga, first to Leningrad, then to the 7th Assault Aviation Regiment. And so Marinka and I served throughout the war as aircraft radio equipment technicians: during breaks between combat missions, we repaired and restored faulty wiring and communication devices. I had to work day and night, under bombing and artillery shelling. It was very scary, but we defended the Road of Life, destroyed German trains that were bringing food, equipment and ammunition to the invaders, so we tried not to give in to this fear. Some couldn't stand the stress and went crazy. A lot of pilots died. But we, the technical personnel, also suffered, as the airfields were shelled from morning to evening. There were many different wounds: the girl’s leg was cut off by a shrapnel while she was running, so she ran in boots, and one leg in the boot was left lying on the field; the equipment was covered with earth so that when they dug it out, it was all blue. But God had mercy on me - I went through the whole war without a single scratch.

Pilot Nikolai Bakulin, Nadezhda Georgievna’s first love

“I fell in love for the first time during the war,” says Lyubov Grigorievna. - He was a newcomer to our regiment, which at that time was stationed in Oranienbaum. This new guy seemed like a dude to me: he was dressed in clean overalls, a headset and a white balaclava, and I was angry with him. And after a while I began to notice that no matter where I went, he would definitely come across my path. Then he began to come to our dugout, either leave a berry or a gingerbread on the pillow, or write a note. And at the age of 19 I fell madly in love with him. It was my first love, my first kiss, my first man - everything was the first time with him. He was a very sensitive and sincere person.

And on January 14, 1944, the day the operation to break the blockade began, he flew off on a mission and did not return. His name was Nikolai Bakulin, he was from Baku. He was 25 years old. He was a healthy and handsome young man...

Ekaterina Vasilievna Budanova

At the front: from August 1942 to July 1943. She served in the 586th Fighter Aviation Regiment, 73rd GvIAP.

Military rank: Guard senior lieutenant.

Military specialty: fighter pilot.

Awarded: Hero of the Russian Federation, Order of Lenin, Order of the Red Star, Order of the Patriotic War, 1st degree.

Ekaterina Budanova, legendary pilot, brave among the brave. These popular titles were assigned to her after the battles of Stalingrad, Rostov-on-Don and the liberation of Donbass. During the war, she made 266 combat missions, personally destroyed 6 enemy aircraft and 5 in a group with her comrades.

Katya Budanova was immediately accepted into Marina Raskova’s famous women’s fighter aviation regiment as an experienced pilot who had many flights at the flying school. At first, the experienced aces greeted the thin girl with a boy's haircut with distrust. Very soon their opinion changed.

Catherine found herself at Stalingrad on September 10, 1042, when the fiercest non-stop fighting took place here. From the first day, Budanova’s plane went on combat missions several times a day; it seemed that she did not sleep, did not eat. She could not be stopped, because Katya lived with a strong desire to avenge the death of her mother and sister during the occupation. Even experienced aces were surprised at her courage. Here are the battles in her flight biography: in a pair - against twelve, one - against thirteen, as part of a four - against nineteen enemy aircraft.

From the memoirs of the regiment commander, Lieutenant Colonel A.V. Gridnev: “Once, returning from a combat mission, Budanova saw 12 German bombers walking below her. Despite the fact that she was running out of ammunition and there was very little fuel in the aircraft tanks, she decides to attack the enemy. The first target - the leader of the group - began to smoke. But the pilot used up her last cartridge. Then, simulating an attack, it comes in a second time and, without firing, goes towards the bomber. The Nazis lost their nerve. Breaking formation, they dropped bombs without reaching the target. And Ekaterina Budanova, wounded, lands on a riddled plane..."

Tall and thin, Katya wore a man's haircut and looked like a guy in uniform. And in the regiment they called her Volodka.

On the last day of her life, Katya, as part of a group of fighters, covered our Il-2s. Having successfully completed the attack, the “humpbacks” went home. Our Yaks, covering their retreat, walked behind. Budanova was at the back of the cover group and suddenly saw three Me-109s very close by. There was no time to warn her comrades about the danger, and the pilot took on the unequal battle alone... On July 19, 1943, Ekaterina Budanova was mortally wounded in an air battle. Despite the injury, she was able to land the plane on her territory. The pilot's heart stopped with the last revolution of the propeller. In this fight she won her last, 11th victory. She was only 26 years old.

Together with his friend Lydia Litvyak

Military rank: guard sergeant

Military specialty: tank driver mechanic.

Awarded: Order of Lenin, Order of the Patriotic War, 1st degree, medal and title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

A native of Crimea was evacuated to Tomsk in 1941. Having lost her husband in the war, Maria asks to be sent to the front line. “I know how to drive a car, shoot a machine gun, throw a grenade, provide medical assistance and have a specialty as a telephone operator,” admits Oktyabrskaya. - Why am I sitting in the rear? After all, I am a trained warrior!”

But attempts to get into the line of fire were in vain. Then, having sold all her belongings, Maria donates money (50,000 rubles) for the construction of a tank, but with one condition - to name the car “Battle Friend” and allow her to become a member of the crew of this tank.

Photo: archive of the Tomsk Regional Museum of Local Lore

And here she is - a driver-mechanic of a combat vehicle as part of a group of junior lieutenant Pyotr Chebotko, sergeant Gennady Yasko and sergeant Mikhail Galkin. This whole team will have to go through a lot...

The front was moving west when the "Battle Friend"'s track was torn off. We need to go upstairs. Her boys (as she called them) always protected Maria and took on dangerous work themselves. But Oktyabrskaya, without waiting for an order, climbed out through the hatch. Together with Misha Galkin, we fixed the breakdown and returned back. But then, in one of the heavy battles, Oktyabrskaya was wounded by a mine fragment.

All members of her crew were waiting for the good news about their “mother’s” recovery. But... there was no recovery.

On March 15, 1944, Maria Oktyabrskaya died in one of the hospitals in Smolensk. They buried her there. Following the coffin were the military garrison, the hospital staff and her military friends Petya Chebotko, Gena Yasko and Misha Galkin.

"Night Witches". Soviet pilots from the women's 46th Guards Night Bomber Regiment, Heroes of the Soviet Union Rufina Gasheva (left) and Natalya Meklin at the Po-2 aircraft. These girls are one of the most successful pilots of Soviet military aviation in combat missions. Rufina studied at the Faculty of Mechanics and Mathematics at Moscow State University and went to war in 1941. By December 1944, she had flown 823 combat missions and was shot down twice by enemy anti-aircraft gunners. After the war, she graduated from the Military Institute of Foreign Languages ​​and worked as a senior teacher of English at the Military Academy of Armored Forces. Before the war, Natalya Meklin managed to complete the 1st year of the Moscow Aviation Institute. In October 1941, upon personal application, she was enrolled in the aviation regiment. In total, flight commander Natalya Meklin has 980 combat missions. (From the report: “On intense days of combat work, Comrade Meklin carries out 9-10 combat sorties”). After the war, she became the author of a large number of essays and stories, and her collection of stories “Come Back from Flight!” was awarded the Fadeev medal.


Ekaterina Vasilievna Ryabova (July 14, 1921 - September 12, 1974) - navigator of the squadron of the 46th Guards Women's Night Bomber Regiment, Hero of the Soviet Union. Born in the Ryazan region, into a peasant family. She managed to enter the Faculty of Mechanics and Mathematics of Moscow State University, but soon volunteered for the front and completed navigator courses at the Engels Military Aviation School. By January 1945, the pilot made 816 combat missions and took part in the liberation of the Caucasus, Taman, Belarus, and Poland. After the war, she married twice Hero of the Soviet Union Grigory Sivkov, whom she met at the front, and raised two children. She died early. One of the last entries in her diary: “The doctors said that I had a constant headache from a strong blow during the war. Probably this was when I hit the dashboard during an unsuccessful landing and lost consciousness. At that time I did not understand anything , an hour later she was already continuing to fly. And if you remember, this happened more than once. I don’t say anything to Grisha. I don’t want to upset anyone...” Tatyana Sumarokova’s book “Fly Over Me After the Battle” is dedicated to the story of Ekaterina Ryabova and Grigory Sivkov.



46th Guards Taman Red Banner Order of Suvorov 3rd degree night bomber aviation regiment (until February 8, 1943 - 588th night light bomber aviation regiment) - a women's aviation regiment formed in October 1941. Number of people: 115 people - the majority are between the ages of 17 and 22, former students. The regiment commander is Evdokia Bershanskaya, a pilot with ten years of experience. Under her command the regiment fought until the end of the war. The Red Army soldiers arrogantly called it: “Dunkin’s Regiment,” with a hint of an all-female composition and justified by the name of the commander. The Nazis called the pilots “night witches” for their skill and fearlessness. The air regiment differed from other formations in that it was entirely female. Two other women's air regiments became mixed during the war, but in the 588th, only women filled all positions from mechanics and technicians to navigators and pilots. During the liberation of Crimea in May 1944, the regiment was temporarily part of the 2nd Guards Night Bomber Air Division. During the entire war, the regiment never left for reorganization. Natalia Meklin (Kravtsova), Sofia Burzaeva, Polina Gelman. 1943

Soviet pilots, Crimea, 1944. The girls flew on training aircraft that were not created for military operations. Without radio communications and armored backs capable of protecting the crew from bullets, with a low-power engine. The plane did not have a bomb bay; bombs were hung in bomb racks directly under the plane of the plane. “There were no sights,” the pilots recalled, “we created them ourselves and called them PPR (simpler than a steamed turnip). The amount of bomb cargo varied from 100 to 300 kg. On average, we took 150-200 kg. But during the night the plane managed to make several sorties , and the total bomb load was comparable to that of a large bomber." The controls were dual: the plane could be controlled by both the pilot and the navigator. There were cases when navigators brought planes to the base and landed them after the pilot died. Until August 1943, female pilots did not take parachutes with them, preferring to take another 20 kg of bombs instead. Machine guns on airplanes also appeared only in 1944. Before this, the only weapons on board were TT pistols.

Despite the fact that the pilots died behind the front line, not one of them is considered missing. After the war, regimental commissar Evdokia Rachkevich, using money collected by the entire regiment, traveled to all the places where planes had crashed and found the graves of all those killed.

Lyudmila Mikhailovna Pavlichenko, sniper of the 25th Chapaev Rifle Division of the Red Army. Hero of the Soviet Union, the most successful female sniper in world history, with 309 confirmed fatal hits on enemy soldiers and officers. Lieutenant Pavlichenko in 1942 gave a speech to the International Student Assembly in Washington, before the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) in New York, but many remember her words spoken in Chicago when she called on the United States to open a second front: “Gentlemen, I’m twenty five years. At the front, I have already managed to destroy three hundred and nine fascist invaders. Don't you think, gentlemen, that you have been hiding behind my back for too long?!"

Rosa Shanina - Soviet single sniper of a separate platoon of female snipers of the 3rd Belorussian Front, holder of the Order of Glory; one of the first female snipers to receive this award. She was known for her ability to accurately fire at moving targets with a doublet - two shots in succession. She beat in January 1945 while covering a seriously wounded artillery unit commander. In her letter dated January 17, Rosa reported that she might soon die, since their battalion had lost 72 of 78 soldiers.

Rosa Shanina.

Pilot of the 73rd Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment, junior lieutenant Lydia Litvyak, after a combat flight on the wing of her Yak-1B fighter. She is listed in the Guinness Book of Records as the female pilot with the most victories in air combat. Born in Moscow in 1921. From the age of 14 she studied at a flying club, and at the age of 15 she made her first solo flight. At the front, she mastered the Yak-1 fighter. Already in the second combat mission over Stalingrad, she shot down a Yu-88 bomber and a Me-109 fighter. The Me-109 pilot turned out to be a German baron who won 30 aerial victories and was a holder of the Knight's Cross. At her request, a white lily was painted on the hood of Lydia’s plane, and Litvyak received the nickname “White Lily of Stalingrad,” and “Lily” became her radio call sign. She was wounded several times, and in May 1943, her husband, a pilot for whom she was a wingman, died. She did not return from her flight in August 1943, when there were heavy battles to break through the German defenses at the line of the Mius River, which closed the road to Donbass. In the post-war years, fellow soldiers continued to search for the missing pilot. It was found by chance in a mass grave in the village of Dmitrovka, Shakhtarsky district, Donetsk region. Her remains were discovered by local boys near the Kozhevnya farm and buried on July 29, 1969 in a mass grave in the village of Dmitrovka as an “unknown pilot.”

Sanitary instructor of the 369th separate marine battalion of the Danube military flotilla, chief petty officer Ekaterina Illarionovna Mikhailova. One of the few women to serve in Marine Corps intelligence. Born in Leningrad in 1925, she managed to finish 9 grades and nursing school. She got to the front, adding several years to her age of 15. In the battles near Gzhatsk she was seriously wounded. After recovery, she served on a military hospital ship that transported the wounded from Stalingrad to Krasnovodsk. After the end of the Battle of Stalingrad, Mikhailova, at her request, was enlisted as a medical instructor in the 369th separate battalion of the Marine Corps. With this battalion, which later received the honorary name “Kerch Red Banner”, Mikhailova fought through the waters and shores of the Caucasus and Crimea, the Azov and Black Seas, the Dniester and the Danube, with a liberation mission - across the lands of Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia and Austria. Together with the soldiers of the battalion, she entered into battle, repelled enemy counterattacks, carried the wounded from the battlefield, and provided them with first aid. She was wounded three times. She was awarded the Order of Lenin, two Orders of the Red Banner, Orders of the Patriotic War of the 1st and 2nd degrees, medals, including the Medal for Courage and the Florence Nightingale Medal. To the title of Hero of the Soviet Union, Chief Petty Officer E.I. Mikhailova was presented in August and December 1944, but the award did not take place. By decree of the President of the USSR dated May 5, 1990, Demina (Mikhailova) Ekaterina Illarionovna was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union with the Order of Lenin and the Gold Star medal (No. 11608). Lives in Moscow.

Squadron commander of the 46th Guards Night Bomber Aviation Regiment, Hero of the Soviet Union Guard, Major Evdokia Andreevna Nikulina (1917-1993). Before the war, she graduated from an aviation technical school and an aviation school; she served in the Red Army in 1941. “Dina Nikulina is a professional pilot with excellent piloting technique,” ​​her friends wrote about her. “Her character is cheerful and cheerful. She flew fearlessly. And at amateur performance evenings she enthusiastically tap-danced until she was wounded in the leg. After that we found out that she sings excellently...” Honorary citizen of the city of Rostov-on-Don, where she lived after the war. One of the city streets bears her name.

Evdokia Borisovna Pasko - navigator of the squadron of the 46th Guards Night Bomber Aviation Regiment, Hero of the Soviet Union. Born in Kyrgyzstan, she also entered the Faculty of Mechanics and Mathematics of Moscow State University. From the fourth year of university, together with her student friends, she volunteered for the army. According to the flight logbook, she made 790 combat missions and 10 special missions. The total flight time was 1220 hours. Lives in Moscow.

Marina Mikhailovna Raskova - Soviet pilot-navigator, major; one of the first women awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union. Born in Moscow in 1912, she studied at the Moscow Conservatory, worked part-time as a laboratory assistant at the aeronautical laboratory of the N. E. Zhukovsky Air Force Academy. In 1934 she graduated from the Leningrad Institute of Civil Air Fleet Engineers and became a navigator. In the Red Army since 1938. Died in 1943.

Marina Mikhailovna Raskova.

Sniper Evgeniya Makeeva. Born in 1922 in the Krasnodar region. In April 1943, in the Kuban, volunteer girls were mobilized into sniper units - this is how Evgenia ended up at the front. After graduating from sniper school in Krasnodar, she was sent to the front line. As part of the 570th Sevastopol Rifle Regiment, she took part in the battles on the Blue Line for the liberation of Kerch, Old Crimea, Feodosia and the assault on Sapun Mountain near Sevastopol. In the battles for Crimea, Kuban sniper girls killed about 1,000 fascists. Evgenia Makeeva also made her contribution to this matter, with 17 fascists on her combat account (Many sources indicate 68 killed enemies. However, the last award list, compiled after her death, indicates 17 destroyed fascists). On April 22, 1944, junior sergeant E.V. Makeeva died during the assault on Sapun Mountain. She was buried in the city of Balaklava (Brotherly cemetery of soldiers of the 227th Infantry Division). In 1981, the lane where she spent her childhood and youth was named after Evgenia Makeeva.

Senior paramedic Ekaterina Ivanovna Rumyantseva. From the age of 16 she worked in a hospital.

Hero of the Soviet Union, flight commander of the 46th Guards Night Bomber Aviation Regiment, Lieutenant Nina Zakharovna Ulyanenko (1923 - 2005). Born in 1923 in the city of Votkinsk, Vyatka province (now the Udmurt Republic) in a working-class family, she studied at the Saratov Aviation College. She fought in the skies of Stalingrad, off the banks of the Volga, and participated in the liberation of the North Caucasus, Crimea, Belarus, Poland and East Prussia. She fought her way to Berlin. After the war, she worked in the editorial office of the Udmurtskaya Pravda newspaper and was the head of the training department of the Republican DOSAAF flying club.

Volunteer sniper Nadezhda Kolesnikova. Destroyed 19 (from other sources 27) fascists, awarded the medal "For Courage". Volkhov Front, 1943. Born in 1921 at Pologi station (Chubarevsky district, Dnepropetrovsk region, Ukraine). She graduated from high school and worked as a secretary-typist at a brick factory in Alma-Ata (Kazakh SSR). Since August 1942 - in the active army, as a sniper. “Listening to the alarming messages of the Sovinformburo on the radio, my friend and I decided to voluntarily go to the front,” Nadezhda Nikitichna recalled after the war. “We were sent to courses for signalmen. But we wanted to fight directly on the front line.” The friends completed training and fought with other female snipers as part of the 60th Regiment of the 65th Infantry Division. They took part in crossing the Volkhov River, taking Novgorod, and lifting the blockade of Leningrad. After one of her “hunting” trips, Nadezhda could not return to the regiment for a long time - her death was even officially announced in the unit. At the front, Nadezhda married a combat reconnaissance commander and was demobilized in 1944 due to pregnancy. After the war, she continued to work as a secretary-typist and became the mother of five daughters.

Guard captain, deputy squadron commander of the 125th Guards Bomber Aviation Regiment of the 4th Guards Bomber Aviation Division Maria Dolina at the Pe-2 aircraft. Born in the Omsk region, she graduated from an aviation school (in order to enter it, Dolina added an extra 2 years to her age). Since July 1941 - in the active army. By the end of the war, she made 72 successful (photographed) combat missions. After the war, she continued to serve in the Air Force and was deputy commander of a bomber aviation regiment. She lived in the city of Siauliai, then in Riga, and since 1983 she has lived in Kyiv. She passed away on March 3, 2010 and was buried at the Baikovo cemetery.

Maria Dolina dropped 45 tons of bombs on the enemy in a Pe-2 dive bomber. In six air battles she shot down 3 enemy fighters (in a group). On August 18, 1945, for the courage and military valor shown in battles with the enemy, she was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

Sanitary instructor, senior medical officer Valentina Sokolova. July 1943, Oryol region.

Fighter pilot Antonina Lebedeva. Born in 1916 in the Tver region, she entered the correspondence department of the Faculty of Biology of Moscow State University, and became a cadet at the Dzerzhinsky Aero Club of Moscow. From the first days of the Great Patriotic War, she persistently sought and achieved assignment to an active aviation unit, and fought as part of a flight of female pilots. During fierce air battles in the Oryol direction, she made 2-3 combat sorties a day. On July 17, 1943, in an unequal battle between four of our pilots and 30 enemy aircraft, Antonina Lebedeva was shot down, her fate remained unknown for a long time. Only in 1982, a group of Oryol pathfinders participated in the excavation of an airplane that crashed in the summer of 1943 near the village of Betovo, Bolkhovsky district, Oryol region. During the excavations, the remains of the pilot, his parachute, pistol, knife and documents were recovered. Among other things, the documents included a flight and medical book, where the name of the owner was clearly stated: Antonina Vasilievna Lebedeva.



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