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Pyotr Berestov

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Pyotr Filippovich Berestov
Major General P.F. Berestov, postwar
Born(1896-12-21)December 21, 1896
Berestovo, Syumsinsky District of Udmurtia, Russian Empire
DiedNovember 26, 1961(1961-11-26) (aged 64)
Zaporizhia, Soviet Union
Buried
May Cemetery, Kiev
Allegiance
Years of service1917–1955
RankMajor General
Commands
Battles / wars
Awards

Pyotr Filippovich Berestov (Russian: Пётр Филиппович Берестов; December 21 [O.S. December 8] 1896, Berestovo – November 26, 1961, Zaporozhye) was a Red Army major general during the Second World War. Drafted into the Imperial Russian Army in 1917, Berestov participated in the Russian Revolution. He was drafted into the Red Army, fighting in the Russian Civil War and the Polish–Soviet War. He became a Red Army officer and served in several positions during the interwar period. Berestov was arrested and released during the Great Purge. He fought in the Winter War as a regimental commander. In the early days after the German invasion of the Soviet Union, he was given command of a People's Militia regiment, which was converted into a regular regiment. Berestov led the regiment in the early period of the Battle of Moscow and transferred to lead a regiment of the 82nd Motor Rifle Division. Berestov became the division's commander and in the spring of 1942 briefly led the 50th Rifle Division. In April, he took command of the 331st Rifle Division, which he led during the rest of the war. For his leadership, Berestov was awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union in late June 1945. Postwar he commanded the 72nd Guards Rifle Division, which was downsized into a brigade, and the 43rd Guards Rifle Brigade, which became the 113th Guards Rifle Division. Berestov retired in 1955 and lived in Zaporizhia until his death in 1961.

Early military career

Born into a large peasant family in the aptly-named village of Berestovo, Berestov obtained an elementary and some secondary education before going to work at age 14 as a sawyer. In February, 1917, he was drafted into the Imperial Russian Army, just as the Russian Revolution was beginning. He was promoted to the rank of junior non-commissioned officer in the 165th Reserve Infantry Regiment at Simbirsk, and participated in revolutionary demonstrations both there and in Petrograd. In February, 1918, he was demobilized.[1]

Berestov returned home, and worked his father's farm until he was drafted again in November, now into the 38th Rifle Regiment of the Red Army, in the town of Glazov. By 1920 he had taken part in fighting against the forces of A.V. Kolchak, done a course for infantry leaders at Kazan, and served as a machine-gun platoon commander in 4th Rifle Division's 12th Rifle Regiment in the war with Poland. During the war, Berestov became a company commander in August 1920.[1]

Interwar period

Berestov continued his service in the Red Army through the 1920s and '30s. In 1921 he graduated from a battalion commander course held at Vitebsk. In 1924 he graduated from the Higher School of Physical Education in Leningrad. Later that year he was in command of a battalion of the 4th Rifle Regiment. In November, 1930, he moved to a similar assignment the 54th Rifle Regiment of the 18th Rifle Division in Yaroslavl. Late the next year he got his first staff assignment in the same regiment, becoming a logistics officer.[1]

During Stalin's Great Purge in 1937, Berestov fell afoul of the NKVD and was arrested. In the course of his interrogation he had all his front teeth smashed out, all of his toes were broken, and he also suffered a broken rib. In 1939 he was released and rehabilitated, having been vouched for by Gen. S.K. Timoshenko.[2] After his release, in August, 1939, he became head of supply in the newly formed 168th Rifle Division. In December he took command of the 402nd Rifle Regiment in that same division. Wounded in late February, 1940, during the Winter War, he continued in command and was soon awarded his first of four Orders of the Red Banner. On 5 March he was promoted to Colonel. After the end of the war Berestov was sent to the Vystrel courses, from which he graduated in June 1941.[1]

Second World War

In the days after the German invasion, Berestov was appointed commander of the 1st Moscow Peoples' Militia Regiment, recruited from the Leninsky District. Berestov later became commander of the 60th Rifle Division's 1281st Rifle Regiment, leading it at Yelnya and Spas-Demensk. In November 1941, Berestov became commander of the 601st Motor Rifle Regiment. He later became commander of the 82nd Motor Rifle Division, defending the Minsk highway near Kubinka station during the Battle of Moscow. In 1942 he joined the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.[1]

On Mar. 13, 1942, he was named as the commanding officer of 50th Rifle Division, a post he held for less than a month, before being reassigned to command of 331st Rifle Division, where he would continue for the duration. The 331st would compile an enviable record during the rest of the war, mostly as a division of 31st Army, where it became known as "the best of the 31st".[1][3][4] On 27 June 1945, Berestov was awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union for his leadership.[1]

Postwar service and later life

In his postwar service, Berestov moved to command of the 72nd Guards Rifle Division in the Central Group of Forces (Hungary) in July; this division was transferred to Kiev Military District in January, 1946. His next assignment, from May until the end of the year, was as commander of 7th Separate Guards Rifle Brigade. During the whole of 1947 he led the 59th Guards Rifle Division in Odessa Military District. In 1948 he upgraded his command skills at the Frunze Military Academy, graduating successfully. His last assignment was the command of the 43rd Guards Rifle Brigade in the Tauric Military District from December 1948. In October 1953, the brigade was upgraded into the 113th Guards Rifle Division.[5] Berestov retired in December 1955. He lived and worked in the Ukrainian city of Zaporizhia until his death on Nov. 26, 1961. He was buried in the "May Cemetery" in Zaporizhia.[1][4]

Notes

Citations
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "Pyotr Berestov". Герои страны ("Heroes of the Country") (in Russian).
  2. ^ Boris Gorbachevsky, Through the Maelstrom, ed. and trans. by Stuart Britton, University Press of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, 2008, pp 335-36. Gorbachevsky gives the year of Berestov's release as 1940, but it must have been the previous year, given Berestov's service in the Winter War.
  3. ^ Gorbachevsky, p 333
  4. ^ a b "Biography of Major-General Petr Filippovich Berestov - (Петр Филиппович Берестов) (1896 – 1961), Soviet Union". www.generals.dk. Retrieved 2016-08-31.
  5. ^ Feskov et al 2013, p. 149

References

  • Feskov, V.I.; Golikov, V.I.; Kalashnikov, K.A.; Slugin, S.A. (2013). Вооруженные силы СССР после Второй Мировой войны: от Красной Армии к Советской [The Armed Forces of the USSR after World War II: From the Red Army to the Soviet: Part 1 Land Forces] (in Russian). Tomsk: Scientific and Technical Literature Publishing. ISBN 9785895035306.

Further reading

  • Boris Gorbachevsky, Through the Maelstrom, ed. and trans by Stuart Britton, University Press of Kansas, 2008, part four