The
'Hurban' Armoured train located in Zvolen, Slovakia. It is not the
original, but a replica used in a film. Attribution: Martin Hlauka
(Pescan)
Armored
trains showed their effectiveness during the Civil War in Russia in
1917-1922. They were used as a means of transportation for people and
transportation of guns, also as mobile hospitals, with their help
convoying and added fire support. After the outbreak of the Great
Patriotic War (WWII in the USSR), the Soviet government decided to build
a number of new armored trains and deploy railway anti-aircraft defense
batteries.
On November 4, 1941, at the Sevastopol Marine Plant, the armored train called “Zheleznyakov” was built. Its
main tasks included the defense of Sevastopol. A crew of sailors of the
Black Sea Fleet was recruited to serve on the armored train.
A Russian armored wagonThe
basis of the armored train was flatbed wagons, plant workers welded
armored plates 15-30 mm thick and reinforced them with concrete. The
number of railroad cars was usually 4. The cars were driven by a
locomotive with a steam power plant with increased power of up to 600
hp. The maximum speed was 50kmh (31mph).
The Armament Zheleznyakov consisted of 14 x 7.62 mm Maxim
machine guns, a 3 x 76 mm artillery installation 34-K, 2 × 82 mm
mortars, 2 × 76mm air-defense gun M1914/15 and 2 × 12.7 mm machine gun DShK. Destroyed Russian Armored Train – Winter 1941-1942On November 7, 1942, Zheleznyakov began to perform combat missions, and the first of its commanders was Captain Sahakyan.
Throughout the period in 1941-1942, the armored train went on more than
140 missions. With the help of guns and machine guns, it supported the
infantry, suppressed German artillery batteries, entered into an open
battle with tanks and shot down German aircraft. Captured Soviet armored steam locomotiveAlso
on the armored train, there was a special rehabilitation brigade, which
repaired the damaged railway track each day. Midshipman Alexandrov, who
served on Zheleznyakov, recalled:
“The armored
train changed its appearance all the time. Under the guidance of the
junior lieutenant Kamornik, the sailors tirelessly painted armored
plates and locomotives with stripes and camouflage devices so that the
train indistinctly merges with the terrain. The armored train skillfully
maneuvered between grooves and tunnels. To confuse the enemy, we
constantly change parking places. Our mobile rear is also in continuous
traveling”
Captured Soviet Armored Train in Crimea.
Zheleznyakov
conducted military operations at the front line of the attack, which
allowed it to inflict serious damage on German troops. From January 7 to
March 1, 1942, the armored train destroyed thirteen machine-gun nests,
nine bunkers, one heavy battery, six dugouts, three cars, three
airplanes, ten wagons with cargo, up to 1,500 soldiers and enemy
officers. German armored train Panzerzug typ BP42 1943German pilots repeatedly tried to track down the armored train and destroy it. Each time, Zheleznyakov took refuge in narrow excavations of rocks or tunnels before the Germans had time to raise aviation or react with artillery.
Moving at night helped to camouflage it from enemy sights. For the quickness and elusiveness of Zheleznyakov, the Germans called it “The Green Ghost”. Captured Soviet Armored Locomotive.On
December 29, 1941, during an air raid German pilots still managed to
inflict significant damage to Zheleznyakov. As a result of the air raid,
many members of the crew of the armored train were killed. However, on
January 1, 1942, they took revenge and shot down two German fighters. Panzerzug armored train in Russia
On June 15, 1942, Zheleznyakov
joined a battle against a column of German tanks. The guns were fired
from a distance of about 400 meters, which allowed the armored train to
destroy at least three German tanks.
On June 26, 1942, more than
50 German bombers struck at the base of the Green Ghost – along the
Troitsky Tunnel. As a result of the air strike, the second armored car
was buried under rubble. However, the exits of the tunnel remained open.
This was used by the crew of the armored train and unexpectedly for the
Germans out came the surviving part of Zheleznyakov, which again opened fire on the enemy. Panzerzug German armored train with winter camouflageThe
next day, on June 27, the German aircraft made another air raid and the
only way out of the tunnel was destroyed. The surviving crewmembers
took up defensive positions near the thermal power plant.
On June 30, the Sevastopol garrison received an order to leave the city, and a couple of days later the crew of the Green Ghost decided to blow up their armored train. Destroyed Soviet Armored Train.In August 1942, German troops cleared the Troitsky tunnel and decided to restore the armored train Zheleznyakov. From the rebuilt armored train the Germans created the train “Eugen” («Ойген»), equipping it with howitzers with a caliber 105 mm
After
that, the German armored train fought against the Soviet army. In May
1944, when retreating from the city, it was blown up by the Germans at a
railway station. A captured Soviet armored train
After the end of the war, the restored locomotive Zheleznyakov
was used for pulling wagons to Crimea. On October 24, 1967, the former
front-line brigade delivered it from the railway depot of Dzhankoy to Sevastopol. At present, Zheleznyakov has been turned into a Historical monument and is one of the many sights of Sevastopol.
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