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Please, meet Lt.-Commander of Engineers CHEKMENEV Ivan Kuz’mich, 1903. Entered the service in 1925 as a cadet on Black sea Fleet. Later in December 1926 after finishing the Navy school, he was trasfered to Amour flotilla and began his service as an mechanic on monitor "Sverdlov". He rose in the ranks and by 1936 became the head of "Sverdlov" 5th battle station, i.e. the head of electromechanics crew. 1937-1941 - cadet of High Navy school. After finishing the school, he was sent to Pacific Navy and entered as 5th battle station commander on minesweeper "Vekha". From 1943 he becomes chief engineer for the whole 6th minesweeper squadron.
This is the service record covering years 1925 - 1944.
The Red Star citation:
The ships at which the veteran served:
River monitor "Sverdlov". Taifun "Typhoon" class (7 in class, but 3 armed 4×130mm, 3 armed 8×120mm, and 1 armed 4×152mm). Displacement: 965-977 tons. Speed: 10-15 knots.
Armament: 4 x 152 mm, 2 x 37 mm, 6 x 20 mm, 4 x 12.7 mm and 5 x 7.62 mm machine guns.
Armor: belt, 76 - 38mm; bulkheads, 9mm; turrets, 76mm; deck, 19mm; CT, 51mm.
Launched 1909, Tsarist Commision Sept 1910, Soviet Commission 24 April 1922.
Repairs and upgrades in 1934 - 1935.
In August 1945, participated fighting along the Songhua River and in the capture of Fuyuan and Jiamusi in Heilongjiang (Manchuria). 30 August 1945 awarded Guards title.
Scrapped, the 13 March 1958.
In 1929, the monitor participated in the last and (possibly) the largest ever monitors and riverine gunboats battle in the modern history. Soviet navy had a total and decisive river’s victory using monitors during conflict against Nationalist China. There were a number of Chinese boats and monitors sunk and no Soviet losses.
And here is the cherry: the photograph of the "Sverdlov" monitor engine mechanics crew. CHEKMENEV must be one of them!
The year the photo is taken is not clear, but it must be before 1939, I think. The petty officer in the middle must me CHEKMENEV himself!
Just after opinions on the following relic bayonet (part of a lot containing WW1 wire cutters, relic Brodie Helmet and a WW1 pattern British water bottle). To me the quillion appears to have a round tip….could be due to part of the quillion rusting out. There appears to be an oil hole as well behind the where the grips would have sat on the right hand side. I always thought oil holes indicated it was not an early Lee Enfield. I can see 1907 in one of the images. My feeling is that this is a WW2 bayonet dressed up as a WW1. I contacted the seller and they have indicated that they purchased the items at the Villers Cotterets markets.
Any opinions would be great appreciated.
As always, thanks.
Andrew