fbpx
Wikipedia

54th Army (Soviet Union)

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.

54th Army
ActiveAugust 1941 – December 1944
Country Soviet Union
Branch Red Army
TypeInfantry
Part ofLeningrad Front
Volkhov Front
3rd Baltic Front
EngagementsSiege of Leningrad
Lyuban Offensive Operation
Operation Polar Star
Leningrad-Novgorod Offensive
Tartu Offensive
Riga Offensive
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Col. Gen. I.I. Fedyuninsky
Lt. Gen. Aleksandr Sukhomlin
Lt. Gen. S. V. Roginsky

Formation edit

The 54th Army was first formed in August, 1941, in the Leningrad Military District, to the east of the city in the vicinity of the town of Volkhov.[1] Its first commander was Marshal of the Soviet Union Grigory Kulik. When it was first formed the army's order of battle was as follows:

It also contained four motorized engineer battalions, and by the end of September it had been reinforced with the 3rd and 4th Guards Rifle Divisions, the 21st Tank Division, and the 16th Tank Brigade.[2]

Leningrad was isolated on Sept. 8 when the German forces captured Shlisselburg. The next day Gen. G.K. Zhukov took over coordinating the defense of the city from Marshal K.E. Voroshilov. 54th Army was under direct command of STAVKA, and on Zhukov's recommendations it was ordered into the attack on the 10th. This first attempt to break the blockade, the First Sinyavino Offensive, gained only 6 – 10km. during 16 days of on-and-off heavy fighting. Kulik was heavily criticized by both STAVKA and Zhukov for this dismal performance. When the Germans pushed back even some of these meagre gains, Kulik was sacked, court-martialed and reduced in rank.[3] He was replaced by Lt. Gen. M.S. Khozin, a protege of Zhukov. On October 26, Khozin was promoted to command of the Leningrad Front and was replaced by Lt. Gen. I.I. Fedyuninsky, another Zhukov protege.[4]

Tikhvin Offensive edit

A second attempt on Sinyavino was being prepared to start on Oct. 20, but was pre-empted by the German offensive towards Tikhvin on Oct. 16, which intended to encircle 54th Army on the way to cutting all possible supply routes to Leningrad and linking up with the Finnish Army.[5] In the face of this attack, the army, which had the bulk of the Soviet forces between Lake Ladoga and Lake Ilmen, was ordered to transfer the 4th Guards and 310th Rifle Divisions to 4th Army on October 23. By November 8, the entire German offensive had ground to a halt, due to Soviet resistance and the winter weather. 54th Army had not been encircled, and while Tikhvin had been taken, there had been no linkup with the Finns, and Army Group North was vastly over-extended. A new directive from Hitler ordered yet another attack on the army at Volkhov, but a desperate counterattack by 310th Rifle Division stopped the 8th Panzer Division east of the town.[6]

At this point, Fedyuninsky asked that 4th Army's Volkhov Operational Group of four rifle divisions and one rifle brigade be assigned to his command, which was approved on Nov. 12. While redeploying his forces, Fedyuninsky was faced with a German thrust to his army's rear toward Lake Ladoga. The successful counterattack by 285th Rifle Division and 122nd Tank Brigade set the stage for 54th Army to participate in the general Soviet counter-offensive along the entire front.[7]

On November 26 the army's main shock group (3rd Guards, 310th, and 311th Rifle Divisions and the 6th Naval Infantry Brigade) attacked the German 21st Infantry Division of I Army Corps south of Volkhov, driving it back several kilometres by the 29th. A few days later Fedyuninsky was further reinforced with the 80th Rifle Division and on Dec. 3 he renewed the attack on the German corps, driving its left flank southwards and successively encircling and destroying several companies of the 254th Infantry Division. The 115th and 198th Rifle Divisions then also arrived from Leningrad, joined the assault on the 15th, and helped drive the Germans back to Olomny by the 17th, enveloping the I Corps' left flank on the west bank of the Volkhov River. During their retreat, 54th Army's 1st and 2nd Ski Battalions constantly harassed the Germans' flank and rear. In the final stages, elements of three rifle divisions cut the MgaKirishi rail line, but the army was unable to capture the latter stronghold, which would remain in German hands until the autumn of 1943.[8]

Lyuban Offensive Operation edit

Having liberated the territory occupied by the Germans in their Tikhvin offensive and caused them significant casualties, Stalin expected his armies to be able to break the siege of Leningrad, as part of a series of offensives across the front. Gen. K.A. Meretskov of Volkhov Front wrote:

"The 4th Army on the right flank was supposed to attack in the general direction of Kirishi and Tosno to encircle and destroy the enemy that had advanced north of Mga to Lake Ladoga in cooperation with the Leningrad Front's 54th Army."[9]

The new offensive was launched by 54th Army on Jan. 4, 1942 when it once again attacked I Corps, to the west of Kirishi. Forty-eight hours of heavy fighting produced an advance of only 4 – 5km, after which a counterattack by 12th Panzer Division drove Fedyuninsky's troops back to their starting line. The attack was renewed on Jan. 13 and the village of Pogoste was taken on the 17th, but that was the limit of success.[10] By mid-February 2nd Shock Army of Volkhov Front had driven across that river and was forcing its way through the swamps towards Lyuban, well in the German rear, but were unable to break out decisively toward Leningrad. On February 26, Leningrad Front received the following:

"The STAVKA of the Supreme High Command orders: after the 54th Army's shock group has been reinforced on 26–27 February, the 54th Army will launch a decisive offensive in the general direction of Lyuban no later than 1 March. By combining the 54th Army's attack with an attack by the Volkhov Front's forces, the fronts' united forces will completely liquidate the enemy's Lyuban – Chudovo grouping and capture the Lyuban – Chudovo rail line."[11]

Reinforcement of the army with the 4th Guards Rifle Corps made it possible to penetrate the German defenses near Pogoste on Mar. 15, driving 22km southwards to within 10km of Lyuban, but German re-deployments brought the advance to a halt by Mar. 31.[12] The 54th Army, while liberating territory, was not successful in linking up with 2nd Shock Army, and the latter army was cut off and destroyed during the following months. Fedyuninsky was moved to command of 5th Army in April,[13] and was replaced by Lt. Gen. A.V. Sukhomlin.[14]

Operation Polyarnaya Zvezda edit

54th Army was only marginally involved in the Second Sinyavino Offensive during August – October, and was engaged in mostly local fighting through the balance of 1942. At the beginning of 1943 its order of battle was as follows:

On January 12, Leningrad and Volkhov Fronts launched Operation Iskra, which by the end of the month had finally opened a land corridor to the besieged city, but this also did not directly involve the 54th. However, the success of Iskra, as well as the encirclement and destruction of German Sixth Army at Stalingrad and the subsequent offensives in the south, led STAVKA to plan a larger operation near Leningrad, to be called Operation Polyarnaya Zvezda (Pole Star), with the objective of the complete destruction of Army Group North.[16]

The objective of 54th Army was to create a shallow encirclement, in conjunction with 55th Army from Leningrad, of the German forces still holding the Sinyavino – Mga area. The army was to attack north of the village of Smerdynia in the direction of Tosno where it would meet the 55th; it would then attack towards Lyuban to divert the attention of German 18th Army from the deep encirclement being planned by Northwestern Front once its forces captured the Demyansk salient and its defenders.[17]

The 54th was reinforced before the offensive, which it began on Feb. 10. Sukhomlin attacked the German 96th Infantry Division, which was recovering from the earlier fighting at Sinyavino, with four rifle divisions, three rifle brigades, and the 124th Tank Brigade, and yet only managed to penetrate 3 – 4km on a 5km front in three days of heavy fighting. German reinforcements of small battlegroups from unengaged sectors brought the advance to a standstill; meanwhile, 55th Army was faring no better. On February 27, STAVKA ordered Pole Star halted, as almost no progress had been made on any sector.[18] On March 11, Sukhomlin was demoted to deputy commander of the army,[19] and Lt. Gen. S.V. Roginsky took over command, which he would hold until the army was disbanded.[20]

Leningrad–Novgorod Offensive edit

The front went back to relative inactivity for the remainder of 1943. At the beginning of October, after nearly two years of intermittent pressure, Army Group North evacuated the Kirishi salient to free up desperately needed reserves.[21] In spite of this, the army group was in a very precarious position as the Soviet Fronts began planning a winter offensive. Prior to the offensive, 54th Army's order of battle comprised:

111th Rifle Corps, with:

115th Rifle Corps, with:

  • 281st Rifle Division
  • 285th Rifle Division
  • 14th and 53rd Rifle Brigades

Independent Divisions:

  • 80th, 177th and 198th Rifle Divisions
  • 2nd Fortified Region
  • 124 Separate Tank Regiment
  • 107th and 501st Separate Tank Battalions
  • 48th Heavy Tank Battalion

plus nine assorted regiments of artillery.[22]

The plan that was issued to Roginsky between October and December must have looked familiar: a drive westwards towards Tosno, Lyuban and Chudovo as part of a short encirclement, followed by an advance southwest to Luga. However, in the past year the German forces had grown weaker, the Soviets stronger, and the offensive would be launched on three attack axes.[23]

The first two of these, from Leningrad itself and from the Oranienbaum bridgehead, began on Jan. 14. 54th Army launched the third prong on the 16th:

"The enemy, who has to defend simultaneously along several directions, was subjected to yet another assault – the Volkhov Front's 54th Army went over to the attack. The direction of the attack is toward Liuban'. However, the enemy's resistance still has not been overcome. He is continuing to cling fiercely to every clump of ground and launching counterattacks. It is requiring considerable bravery and selflessness to overcome him."

Roginsky led his attack with 80th Rifle Division and 115th Rifle Corps, adding 44th Rifle Division early on the 17th. Although the attack had only advanced 5km by Jan. 20, it was preventing German XXXVIII Army Corps from transferring forces to even harder-pressed sectors.[24]

On January 25 the army was reinforced with the new 119th Rifle Corps from 8th Army, and on the next night finally liberated Tosno, and reached the railroad southeast of Lyuban, forcing the Germans to abandon the latter. Two German corps were in danger of encirclement if the 54th could link up with 59th Army. By the end of the month, the prospect of trapping the entire 18th Army presented as Roginsky's troops advanced on Luga from the northeast. On the 30th, Hitler finally gave permission for 18th Army to pull back to the Luga River Defense Line, which was already compromised. The following day, 54th Army began pursuing XXXVIII Corps. 115th Rifle Corps advanced 75km in nine days and captured the town of Oredezh on Feb. 8. The next day, in a major regrouping, the 115th was transferred to 67th Army and Roginsky's headquarters redeployed to Novgorod to retake command of 111th as well as 119th Rifle Corps. Once this was complete, the army was ordered to penetrate the German defense west of Shimsk, thereafter advancing to Porkhov.[25]

At midnight, Feb. 13, Volkhov Front was disbanded, and 54th Army rejoined Leningrad Front. On the 17th this new command proposed that 54th and 8th Armies continue their offensive towards Ostrov, in order to breach the German Panther Line in that sector. The army resumed its offensive that day, aiming to take the Utorgosh – Soltsy – Shimsk line by the 19th, which would threaten the German X Corps, but that corps was successful in holding the line for three days as it withdrew. Following this, the 54th pursued for four days to a depth of 60km before liberating the town of Dno on Feb. 24, in conjunction with 1st Shock Army. Porkhov was taken on Feb. 26, and after another three days of combat and an advance of 65km, the army reached the Panther Line on Mar. 1, between Ostrov and Pskov.[26]

During March and the first half of April, the depleted armies of Leningrad and 2nd Baltic Fronts were ordered into repeated attacks against this line, with meagre results reached at high cost. Finally, with even the weather against them, shortly after midnight on Apr. 18, Stalin ordered the Fronts onto the defense. The following day, 3rd Baltic Front was formed on the base of 20th Army headquarters, with 42nd, 67th and 54th Armies under command.[27]

Baltic Offensive and Disbandment edit

During the following months 54th Army rebuilt its forces in anticipation of a summer offensive. This began to its south on June 22, with the launch of Operation Bagration. As Army Group Center reeled back from the Red Army's attack, a gap opened between it and Army Group North, which the latter could do little to mend as it was under pressure from holding attacks. Finally, 3rd Baltic Front joined the offensive on July 8, with the intention to breach the Panther Line and seize Ostrov and Pskov. By the 19th, German 16th Army had pulled back to a switch line called the Lithuania position, but Soviet forces kept going, and Pskov had to be given up on the 22nd.[28]

After the breaching of the Panther Line, 3rd Baltic Front was directed northwest both to retake Estonia and cut off retreating elements of Army Group North in the Tartu Offensive, and later the Riga Offensive. Although most of the German forces were able to escape (only to be bottled up in the Courland Pocket), the former objective was won.[29]

As these offensives drew to a close, it became apparent that 54th Army was no longer needed on a front that was contracting in length as it drew closer to Germany. Following the capture of Riga in mid-October, 3rd Baltic Front was disbanded, and 54th Army was removed to STAVKA reserves. On December 13, Lt. Gen. Roginsky was placed in reserve; he would later briefly command 67th Army. On the last day of 1944, 54th Army was officially disbanded, and its forces were distributed to other formations.[30]

Commanders edit

  • Marshal of the Soviet Union Grigory Kulik (from 02.09.1941 to 25.09.1941);
  • Lieutenant General Mikhail Khozin (from September 26, 1941, to 26.10.1941);
  • Major General Ivan Fedyuninsky (from 27.10.1941 to 22 April 1942);
  • Major General Aleksandr Sukhomlin (from April 22, 1942, to March 11, 1943);
  • Major General, from 25.09.1943 Lieutenant General Sergey Roginsky (from March 11, 1943, to 13.12.1944);

References edit

  1. ^ David M. Glantz and Jonathan House, When Titans Clashed, University Press of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, 1995, pp 69–70
  2. ^ Glantz, The Battle for Leningrad 1941 – 1944, University of Kansas Press, Lawrence, KS, 2002, p 83
  3. ^ Glantz, Leningrad, pp 69, 75, 83
  4. ^ Glantz, Leningrad, pp xvii, xviii, 94
  5. ^ Glantz, Leningrad, p 89, 94
  6. ^ Glantz, Leningrad, p 101
  7. ^ Glantz, Leningrad, p 102
  8. ^ Glantz, Leningrad, pp 109–11
  9. ^ Glantz, Leningrad, p 151
  10. ^ Glantz, Leningrad, pp 158, 162
  11. ^ Glantz, Leningrad, p 169
  12. ^ Glantz, Leningrad, pp 172–73
  13. ^ "Biography of Army General Ivan Ivanovich Fediuninskii – (Иван Иванович Федюнинский) (1900–1977), Soviet Union". www.generals.dk. Retrieved 2016-01-24.
  14. ^ Glantz, Leningrad, p xxi
  15. ^ Combat composition of the Soviet Army (БОЕВОЙ СОСТАВ СОВЕТСКОЙ АРМИИ), ЧАСТЬ III, (Январь – декабрь 1943 г.), p 10
  16. ^ Glantz, After Stalingrad, Helion & Co., Ltd., Solihull, UK, 2009, p 403
  17. ^ Glantz, After Stalingrad, p 405
  18. ^ Glantz, After Stalingrad, pp 412–14.
  19. ^ "Biography of Lieutenant-General Aleksandr Vasilevich Sukhomlin – (Александр Васильевич Сухомлин) (1900–1972), Soviet Union". www.generals.dk. Retrieved 2016-01-24.
  20. ^ "Biography of Lieutenant-General Sergii Vasilevich Roginskii – (Сергей Васильевич Рогинский) (1901–1960), Soviet Union". www.generals.dk. Retrieved 2016-01-24.
  21. ^ Glantz, Leningrad, pp 319–20
  22. ^ Combat composition of the Soviet Army (БОЕВОЙ СОСТАВ СОВЕТСКОЙ АРМИИ), ЧАСТЬ IV, (Январь – декабрь 1944 г.), p 9
  23. ^ Glantz, Leningrad, pp 333–35
  24. ^ Glantz, Leningrad, pp 341, 347
  25. ^ Glantz, Leningrad, pp 360, 368–70, 385
  26. ^ Glantz, Leningrad, pp 388, 395
  27. ^ Glantz, Leningrad, pp 408–10
  28. ^ Earl F. Ziemke, Stalingrad to Berlin, Center of Military History U.S. Army, Washington, DC, 1968, pp 333–34
  29. ^ Mcateer, Sean M. (2009-01-01). 500 Days: The War in Eastern Europe, 1944–1945. Dorrance Publishing. p. 274. ISBN 9781434961594.
  30. ^ "54-я АРМИЯ" [54th Army]. bdsa.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2016-07-03.

External links edit

  • Ivan Ivanovich Fedyuninsky
  • Aleksandr Vasilevich Sukhomlin
  • Sergii Vasilevich Roginsky

54th, army, soviet, union, army, 54th, army, soviet, field, army, during, second, world, first, formed, leningrad, military, district, august, 1941, continued, service, northern, sector, soviet, german, front, until, 1944, spent, much, attempting, break, germa. 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 54th ArmyActiveAugust 1941 December 1944Country Soviet UnionBranchRed ArmyTypeInfantryPart ofLeningrad FrontVolkhov Front3rd Baltic FrontEngagementsSiege of LeningradLyuban Offensive OperationOperation Polar StarLeningrad Novgorod OffensiveTartu OffensiveRiga OffensiveCommandersNotablecommandersCol Gen I I FedyuninskyLt Gen Aleksandr SukhomlinLt Gen S V Roginsky Contents 1 Formation 2 Tikhvin Offensive 3 Lyuban Offensive Operation 4 Operation Polyarnaya Zvezda 5 Leningrad Novgorod Offensive 6 Baltic Offensive and Disbandment 7 Commanders 8 References 9 External linksFormation editThe 54th Army was first formed in August 1941 in the Leningrad Military District to the east of the city in the vicinity of the town of Volkhov 1 Its first commander was Marshal of the Soviet Union Grigory Kulik When it was first formed the army s order of battle was as follows 285th Rifle Division 286th Rifle Division 310th Rifle Division 314th Rifle Division 27th Cavalry Division 122nd Tank Brigade 119th Separate Tank Battalion 881st and 882nd Corps Artillery Regiments 150th Pontoon Bridge BattalionIt also contained four motorized engineer battalions and by the end of September it had been reinforced with the 3rd and 4th Guards Rifle Divisions the 21st Tank Division and the 16th Tank Brigade 2 Leningrad was isolated on Sept 8 when the German forces captured Shlisselburg The next day Gen G K Zhukov took over coordinating the defense of the city from Marshal K E Voroshilov 54th Army was under direct command of STAVKA and on Zhukov s recommendations it was ordered into the attack on the 10th This first attempt to break the blockade the First Sinyavino Offensive gained only 6 10km during 16 days of on and off heavy fighting Kulik was heavily criticized by both STAVKA and Zhukov for this dismal performance When the Germans pushed back even some of these meagre gains Kulik was sacked court martialed and reduced in rank 3 He was replaced by Lt Gen M S Khozin a protege of Zhukov On October 26 Khozin was promoted to command of the Leningrad Front and was replaced by Lt Gen I I Fedyuninsky another Zhukov protege 4 Tikhvin Offensive editA second attempt on Sinyavino was being prepared to start on Oct 20 but was pre empted by the German offensive towards Tikhvin on Oct 16 which intended to encircle 54th Army on the way to cutting all possible supply routes to Leningrad and linking up with the Finnish Army 5 In the face of this attack the army which had the bulk of the Soviet forces between Lake Ladoga and Lake Ilmen was ordered to transfer the 4th Guards and 310th Rifle Divisions to 4th Army on October 23 By November 8 the entire German offensive had ground to a halt due to Soviet resistance and the winter weather 54th Army had not been encircled and while Tikhvin had been taken there had been no linkup with the Finns and Army Group North was vastly over extended A new directive from Hitler ordered yet another attack on the army at Volkhov but a desperate counterattack by 310th Rifle Division stopped the 8th Panzer Division east of the town 6 At this point Fedyuninsky asked that 4th Army s Volkhov Operational Group of four rifle divisions and one rifle brigade be assigned to his command which was approved on Nov 12 While redeploying his forces Fedyuninsky was faced with a German thrust to his army s rear toward Lake Ladoga The successful counterattack by 285th Rifle Division and 122nd Tank Brigade set the stage for 54th Army to participate in the general Soviet counter offensive along the entire front 7 On November 26 the army s main shock group 3rd Guards 310th and 311th Rifle Divisions and the 6th Naval Infantry Brigade attacked the German 21st Infantry Division of I Army Corps south of Volkhov driving it back several kilometres by the 29th A few days later Fedyuninsky was further reinforced with the 80th Rifle Division and on Dec 3 he renewed the attack on the German corps driving its left flank southwards and successively encircling and destroying several companies of the 254th Infantry Division The 115th and 198th Rifle Divisions then also arrived from Leningrad joined the assault on the 15th and helped drive the Germans back to Olomny by the 17th enveloping the I Corps left flank on the west bank of the Volkhov River During their retreat 54th Army s 1st and 2nd Ski Battalions constantly harassed the Germans flank and rear In the final stages elements of three rifle divisions cut the Mga Kirishi rail line but the army was unable to capture the latter stronghold which would remain in German hands until the autumn of 1943 8 Lyuban Offensive Operation editHaving liberated the territory occupied by the Germans in their Tikhvin offensive and caused them significant casualties Stalin expected his armies to be able to break the siege of Leningrad as part of a series of offensives across the front Gen K A Meretskov of Volkhov Front wrote The 4th Army on the right flank was supposed to attack in the general direction of Kirishi and Tosno to encircle and destroy the enemy that had advanced north of Mga to Lake Ladoga in cooperation with the Leningrad Front s 54th Army 9 The new offensive was launched by 54th Army on Jan 4 1942 when it once again attacked I Corps to the west of Kirishi Forty eight hours of heavy fighting produced an advance of only 4 5km after which a counterattack by 12th Panzer Division drove Fedyuninsky s troops back to their starting line The attack was renewed on Jan 13 and the village of Pogoste was taken on the 17th but that was the limit of success 10 By mid February 2nd Shock Army of Volkhov Front had driven across that river and was forcing its way through the swamps towards Lyuban well in the German rear but were unable to break out decisively toward Leningrad On February 26 Leningrad Front received the following The STAVKA of the Supreme High Command orders after the 54th Army s shock group has been reinforced on 26 27 February the 54th Army will launch a decisive offensive in the general direction of Lyuban no later than 1 March By combining the 54th Army s attack with an attack by the Volkhov Front s forces the fronts united forces will completely liquidate the enemy s Lyuban Chudovo grouping and capture the Lyuban Chudovo rail line 11 Reinforcement of the army with the 4th Guards Rifle Corps made it possible to penetrate the German defenses near Pogoste on Mar 15 driving 22km southwards to within 10km of Lyuban but German re deployments brought the advance to a halt by Mar 31 12 The 54th Army while liberating territory was not successful in linking up with 2nd Shock Army and the latter army was cut off and destroyed during the following months Fedyuninsky was moved to command of 5th Army in April 13 and was replaced by Lt Gen A V Sukhomlin 14 Operation Polyarnaya Zvezda edit54th Army was only marginally involved in the Second Sinyavino Offensive during August October and was engaged in mostly local fighting through the balance of 1942 At the beginning of 1943 its order of battle was as follows 115th Rifle Division 177th Rifle Division 198th Rifle Division 281st Rifle Division 285th Rifle Division 294th Rifle Division 311th Rifle Division 6th Naval Infantry Brigade 140th Rifle Brigade 319th Guards Mortar Regiment 461st Separate Antiaircraft Battalion 124th Tank Brigade 48th Separate Heavy Tank Battalion 691 Sapper Regiment 15 On January 12 Leningrad and Volkhov Fronts launched Operation Iskra which by the end of the month had finally opened a land corridor to the besieged city but this also did not directly involve the 54th However the success of Iskra as well as the encirclement and destruction of German Sixth Army at Stalingrad and the subsequent offensives in the south led STAVKA to plan a larger operation near Leningrad to be called Operation Polyarnaya Zvezda Pole Star with the objective of the complete destruction of Army Group North 16 The objective of 54th Army was to create a shallow encirclement in conjunction with 55th Army from Leningrad of the German forces still holding the Sinyavino Mga area The army was to attack north of the village of Smerdynia in the direction of Tosno where it would meet the 55th it would then attack towards Lyuban to divert the attention of German 18th Army from the deep encirclement being planned by Northwestern Front once its forces captured the Demyansk salient and its defenders 17 The 54th was reinforced before the offensive which it began on Feb 10 Sukhomlin attacked the German 96th Infantry Division which was recovering from the earlier fighting at Sinyavino with four rifle divisions three rifle brigades and the 124th Tank Brigade and yet only managed to penetrate 3 4km on a 5km front in three days of heavy fighting German reinforcements of small battlegroups from unengaged sectors brought the advance to a standstill meanwhile 55th Army was faring no better On February 27 STAVKA ordered Pole Star halted as almost no progress had been made on any sector 18 On March 11 Sukhomlin was demoted to deputy commander of the army 19 and Lt Gen S V Roginsky took over command which he would hold until the army was disbanded 20 Leningrad Novgorod Offensive editThe front went back to relative inactivity for the remainder of 1943 At the beginning of October after nearly two years of intermittent pressure Army Group North evacuated the Kirishi salient to free up desperately needed reserves 21 In spite of this the army group was in a very precarious position as the Soviet Fronts began planning a winter offensive Prior to the offensive 54th Army s order of battle comprised 111th Rifle Corps with 44th Rifle Division 288th Rifle Division115th Rifle Corps with 281st Rifle Division 285th Rifle Division 14th and 53rd Rifle BrigadesIndependent Divisions 80th 177th and 198th Rifle Divisions 2nd Fortified Region 124 Separate Tank Regiment 107th and 501st Separate Tank Battalions 48th Heavy Tank Battalionplus nine assorted regiments of artillery 22 The plan that was issued to Roginsky between October and December must have looked familiar a drive westwards towards Tosno Lyuban and Chudovo as part of a short encirclement followed by an advance southwest to Luga However in the past year the German forces had grown weaker the Soviets stronger and the offensive would be launched on three attack axes 23 The first two of these from Leningrad itself and from the Oranienbaum bridgehead began on Jan 14 54th Army launched the third prong on the 16th The enemy who has to defend simultaneously along several directions was subjected to yet another assault the Volkhov Front s 54th Army went over to the attack The direction of the attack is toward Liuban However the enemy s resistance still has not been overcome He is continuing to cling fiercely to every clump of ground and launching counterattacks It is requiring considerable bravery and selflessness to overcome him Roginsky led his attack with 80th Rifle Division and 115th Rifle Corps adding 44th Rifle Division early on the 17th Although the attack had only advanced 5km by Jan 20 it was preventing German XXXVIII Army Corps from transferring forces to even harder pressed sectors 24 On January 25 the army was reinforced with the new 119th Rifle Corps from 8th Army and on the next night finally liberated Tosno and reached the railroad southeast of Lyuban forcing the Germans to abandon the latter Two German corps were in danger of encirclement if the 54th could link up with 59th Army By the end of the month the prospect of trapping the entire 18th Army presented as Roginsky s troops advanced on Luga from the northeast On the 30th Hitler finally gave permission for 18th Army to pull back to the Luga River Defense Line which was already compromised The following day 54th Army began pursuing XXXVIII Corps 115th Rifle Corps advanced 75km in nine days and captured the town of Oredezh on Feb 8 The next day in a major regrouping the 115th was transferred to 67th Army and Roginsky s headquarters redeployed to Novgorod to retake command of 111th as well as 119th Rifle Corps Once this was complete the army was ordered to penetrate the German defense west of Shimsk thereafter advancing to Porkhov 25 At midnight Feb 13 Volkhov Front was disbanded and 54th Army rejoined Leningrad Front On the 17th this new command proposed that 54th and 8th Armies continue their offensive towards Ostrov in order to breach the German Panther Line in that sector The army resumed its offensive that day aiming to take the Utorgosh Soltsy Shimsk line by the 19th which would threaten the German X Corps but that corps was successful in holding the line for three days as it withdrew Following this the 54th pursued for four days to a depth of 60km before liberating the town of Dno on Feb 24 in conjunction with 1st Shock Army Porkhov was taken on Feb 26 and after another three days of combat and an advance of 65km the army reached the Panther Line on Mar 1 between Ostrov and Pskov 26 During March and the first half of April the depleted armies of Leningrad and 2nd Baltic Fronts were ordered into repeated attacks against this line with meagre results reached at high cost Finally with even the weather against them shortly after midnight on Apr 18 Stalin ordered the Fronts onto the defense The following day 3rd Baltic Front was formed on the base of 20th Army headquarters with 42nd 67th and 54th Armies under command 27 Baltic Offensive and Disbandment editDuring the following months 54th Army rebuilt its forces in anticipation of a summer offensive This began to its south on June 22 with the launch of Operation Bagration As Army Group Center reeled back from the Red Army s attack a gap opened between it and Army Group North which the latter could do little to mend as it was under pressure from holding attacks Finally 3rd Baltic Front joined the offensive on July 8 with the intention to breach the Panther Line and seize Ostrov and Pskov By the 19th German 16th Army had pulled back to a switch line called the Lithuania position but Soviet forces kept going and Pskov had to be given up on the 22nd 28 After the breaching of the Panther Line 3rd Baltic Front was directed northwest both to retake Estonia and cut off retreating elements of Army Group North in the Tartu Offensive and later the Riga Offensive Although most of the German forces were able to escape only to be bottled up in the Courland Pocket the former objective was won 29 As these offensives drew to a close it became apparent that 54th Army was no longer needed on a front that was contracting in length as it drew closer to Germany Following the capture of Riga in mid October 3rd Baltic Front was disbanded and 54th Army was removed to STAVKA reserves On December 13 Lt Gen Roginsky was placed in reserve he would later briefly command 67th Army On the last day of 1944 54th Army was officially disbanded and its forces were distributed to other formations 30 Commanders editMarshal of the Soviet Union Grigory Kulik from 02 09 1941 to 25 09 1941 Lieutenant General Mikhail Khozin from September 26 1941 to 26 10 1941 Major General Ivan Fedyuninsky from 27 10 1941 to 22 April 1942 Major General Aleksandr Sukhomlin from April 22 1942 to March 11 1943 Major General from 25 09 1943 Lieutenant General Sergey Roginsky from March 11 1943 to 13 12 1944 References edit David M Glantz and Jonathan House When Titans Clashed University Press of Kansas Lawrence KS 1995 pp 69 70 Glantz The Battle for Leningrad 1941 1944 University of Kansas Press Lawrence KS 2002 p 83 Glantz Leningrad pp 69 75 83 Glantz Leningrad pp xvii xviii 94 Glantz Leningrad p 89 94 Glantz Leningrad p 101 Glantz Leningrad p 102 Glantz Leningrad pp 109 11 Glantz Leningrad p 151 Glantz Leningrad pp 158 162 Glantz Leningrad p 169 Glantz Leningrad pp 172 73 Biography of Army General Ivan Ivanovich Fediuninskii Ivan Ivanovich Fedyuninskij 1900 1977 Soviet Union www generals dk Retrieved 2016 01 24 Glantz Leningrad p xxi Combat composition of the Soviet Army BOEVOJ SOSTAV SOVETSKOJ ARMII ChAST III Yanvar dekabr 1943 g p 10 Glantz After Stalingrad Helion amp Co Ltd Solihull UK 2009 p 403 Glantz After Stalingrad p 405 Glantz After Stalingrad pp 412 14 Biography of Lieutenant General Aleksandr Vasilevich Sukhomlin Aleksandr Vasilevich Suhomlin 1900 1972 Soviet Union www generals dk Retrieved 2016 01 24 Biography of Lieutenant General Sergii Vasilevich Roginskii Sergej Vasilevich Roginskij 1901 1960 Soviet Union www generals dk Retrieved 2016 01 24 Glantz Leningrad pp 319 20 Combat composition of the Soviet Army BOEVOJ SOSTAV SOVETSKOJ ARMII ChAST IV Yanvar dekabr 1944 g p 9 Glantz Leningrad pp 333 35 Glantz Leningrad pp 341 347 Glantz Leningrad pp 360 368 70 385 Glantz Leningrad pp 388 395 Glantz Leningrad pp 408 10 Earl F Ziemke Stalingrad to Berlin Center of Military History U S Army Washington DC 1968 pp 333 34 Mcateer Sean M 2009 01 01 500 Days The War in Eastern Europe 1944 1945 Dorrance Publishing p 274 ISBN 9781434961594 54 ya ARMIYa 54th Army bdsa ru in Russian Retrieved 2016 07 03 External links editIvan Ivanovich Fedyuninsky Aleksandr Vasilevich Sukhomlin Sergii Vasilevich Roginsky Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 54th Army Soviet Union amp oldid 1173732608, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.