Other countries

Names of abandoned villages in the Novosibirsk region. Seven persistent residents, or why the village of Berezovka will not disappear. How to find abandoned villages

NOVOSIBIRSK, December 17 – RIA Novosti, Elena Zhukova. The authorities talk about the senseless waste of funds on providing utilities to sparsely populated villages and maintaining roads to them, but residents refuse to move from there. RIA Novosti correspondents went to one of these Novosibirsk villages, where seven people live, and asked the residents what the reason was for their reluctance to move to more civilized places.

In the footsteps of Stolypin: a collective farm of a new format near NovosibirskAlexander Leichtling created an agricultural enterprise that did not depend on the price of grain and meat, or on the authorities and bank loans. And also, at the same time, he returned the dying village of Ukrainka to the map of the region.

The village of Berezovka is located in the Bolotninsky district of the Novosibirsk region. It is 160 kilometers from Novosibirsk and ten from the nearest settlement, the village of Acha.

This is exactly the kind of settlement the regional governor recently spoke about the tenacity of its residents. According to him, the authorities are ready to help people move from dying villages. This will be economically beneficial for the local budget, since the need to support the livelihoods of small villages will be removed, and it will ultimately be more convenient for people in more developed villages.

“And one family says: I’m not going anywhere. It’s probably possible to just make a decision, but it’s not right...”, Vasily Yurchenko gave an example at one of the recent press conferences.

And in total in the Novosibirsk region, according to data at the beginning of the year, there are about 140 villages in which less than 20 people live. And most people, especially retirees, do not want to leave their familiar places.

Born and married here

We stop in Berezovka: there is not a soul on the snowy Tsentralnaya Street. Near one of the houses there is a payphone and the only lantern in the village. Local residents joke that if it weren’t for him, the village would not be visible in the evenings. The village consists of four houses. No store, no pharmacy.

But seven residents of Berezovka are quite accustomed to doing without it. And proposals from the Achinsk village council to move to Acha are regularly rejected.

“All that’s left is what they couldn’t take apart. There used to be a big farm here,” says Elena Eisner, pointing to a metal frame in the middle of a field not far from the village. Elena works as the head of the post office in the village of Acha, Bolotninsky district, and brings pensions and food for her parents and father-in-law to her native Berezovka.

Together with Elena we go to her parents Sergei Efimovich and Faina Vasilievna Malinovsky, who live in a house right at the entrance to the village. The house is solid - a large kitchen with a Russian stove, two spacious rooms.

“No, we won’t go. We’ll live here. I don’t like what to do there. I’ve lived here for 57 years, why do I need that Acha, or Elfimovka or Sosnovka,” says Faina Vasilievna.

She came to Berezovka from the Vladimirov region in 1956 after a distribution college to work as a livestock specialist. Here I met my husband - I was driving in the evening from milking from a neighboring village, and Sergei Efimovich was returning on a timber truck and gave the girl a lift. Since then they have lived together in Berezovka.

Sergei Efimovich proudly says that he was born in Berezovka, and during the first census, which was carried out before the war, 80 people lived in Ache, and more than 400 in Berezovka.

He remembers that at that time people from Belarus came to the village, they received land here on which they could grow grain and livestock. For a long time, the village flourished - there was not only a large collective farm, but each family kept cattle for themselves.

“There was such a queue to hand over to the meat processing plant in Bolotnoye that we took the bulls to hand over to Novosibirsk to the meat processing plant, but we didn’t have time to process them - all the shops, counters, everything was littered with meat and sausage. A special sausage was prepared for the Novosibirsk regional committee in Bolotnoye, a car from the regional party committee came, they loaded everything and took it to Novosibirsk,” recalls Sergei Efimovich.

First they broke down the school...

According to him, the village began to die after the school was destroyed - this happened in the 1970s. Children began to be taken from Berezovka to neighboring Acha, they grew up and began to move there or to large cities - Novosibirsk and Yurga. After some time, the village club, a place where they once held dances and showed films, was also closed.

But the biggest blow to the village, adds Faina Vasilievna, was dealt during perestroika, when they began to reduce the number of livestock. Gradually the large farm died, and with it there was no work and no prospects for the village.

The couple sigh, remembering their own household. They say that they haven’t seen their local police officer for ten years - and they don’t even know his name. That’s why they even stopped keeping sheep - visiting “tourists” stole them, and elderly people could not protect their property in any way. But they repeat that they won’t leave here anyway.

All children bring

The next house on Tsentralnaya Street is a two-apartment and well-appointed house. It has running water, heating and a bath. An elderly man, a former cattle farmer, lives in one of the apartments. But he didn’t want to communicate, he didn’t even open the gate. He recently buried his wife and, as his neighbors explain, he is better off alone now.

And the neighbors are Vasily Avgustovich and Nina Nikolaevna Eisner, Elena’s father-in-law and mother-in-law. They moved to this house about six years ago, when there were no neighbors left on the street where they lived before.

“What am I going to do in Acha? I’m used to this land, I got into such an apartment - all the amenities. But in Acha they won’t give me something like this,” says Vasily Avgustovich.

He came to the village as a child - in 1941 he was evacuated here from the Volga region with his German parents.

Nina Nikolaevna agrees with her husband. According to her, she is not at all bored in the village, despite the absence of a store, club and other establishments usual for populated areas. Children and grandchildren do not forget; they regularly bring food, newspapers, and medicines.

“Berezovka! What kind of friendly, hard-working people lived here, I want to cry. Not like now. We are afraid that (the door) will be hooked,” Nina Nikolaevna sighs, but when asked about the move, she shakes her head negatively.

“If a rich man would be found, he would upset Berezovka and people would come,” sighs Vasily Avgustovich.

Neighbor Olga Litvinova comes to visit the Eisner couple - she and her husband Vasily are the only residents of Berezovka who have not yet reached retirement age. Neighborhood get-togethers, along with watching TV, which only has five channels, are popular pastimes here.

With my horse

Olga, having discovered the journalists, invites them to her place. Her house is on the outskirts, at the end of the street. On the road we pass a water tower that supplies water to residents, the building of a closed, or rather, collapsed club, and nothing else, the rest is wasteland.

She and her husband live mainly off the farm - they have cows, pigs, rabbits, chickens, a horse - as a means of transport. In summer there is a vegetable garden. Therefore, they are provided with basic products, the rest is bought in Ache by selling meat.

“We don’t live on a grand scale, but it’s enough,” says Olga. According to her, in such a sparsely populated village it is not scary, on the contrary, there is no one else, there is peace and quiet.

But she doesn’t see any particular benefits from moving to Acha. “You can’t buy medicine in Acha, I recently had a toothache, we arrived in Acha, and there wasn’t even analgin there, so I had to treat myself with little flowers, folk remedies. The paramedic there is good - she’ll bandage it herself and pull out the tooth, but there’s a problem with medicines.” , says Olga.

Therefore, like the old-timers of the village, neither Olga nor her husband are going to leave Berezovka - they believe that it will not be better in any other place.

The villages of Voznesenka and Filoshenka arose earlier than other Russian settlements in the Novosibirsk region.

The list of the oldest villages in the Novosibirsk region turned out to be much wider than the top 10. There are at least about 20 of them. The lack of official chronology and confirmation of historical facts leave the issue open to study.

However, in most historical documents and encyclopedias the village Filoshenka The Vengerovsky district is named as the oldest Russian settlement on the territory of the modern Novosibirsk region, founded in 1418.

The second oldest settlement in the Vengerovsky district is the village Voznesenka- the town of Ton-Nur, founded during the Siberian Khanate. (The village began to be called Voznesenka in 1753).

Philoshenka - in honor of Philoshenka

Filoshenka is a village on the banks of the Aryntsass River, Vengerovsky district. The village of Aryntsass (aka Kanisaevskaya, Kuchumova, Dobrovolskaya), the village of Boleslaevka, the village of Kachugach, the villages of Aryntsass and Morozovo, the village of Ulutsk were part of the Filoshensky Village Council. Today, the municipality of the Filoshensky village council includes the village of Filoshenka and the village of Ulutsk.

The first resident of the village of Filoshenka, according to legend, was Filoha. Then four Chernikovs, Batelovs, and Zyryanovs arrived.

There is a legend that when surveyors designated a place for a village, the question arose of what to name the settlement. A dispute arose between Filoha and the Chernikovs. They decided that the village would be named after the one who brought the most alcohol to the people. Philoha won this dispute. The village began to be called Filoshenka. It is believed that the village of Aryntsass arose earlier than Filoshenka and by the time of settlement in Filoshenka, there were 12 households in Aryntsass.

According to the Memorial Book of the Tomsk Province (Tomsk, 1904), in the village of Filoshensky, formed in 1418 and located near the Aryntsass River, there were 69 households, 212 men and 224 women lived.

2010 Children of war in the village of Filoshenka

In the village of Filoshenke in 1911 there were 2 creameries and a trading store. It belonged to the private owner Bogdansky, then another shop opened - Martyn Stepanovich Apunik.

One creamery belonged to A.G. Freiman.

In 1926, the village council was organized. M. Korshunov became the first Chairman of the Council. The Filoshensky Village Council included the villages of Boleslaevka, Kachugach and Ulutsk. On the territory of the present Filosheni municipality there were originally two village councils: Aryntsas Village Council and Filoshena Village Council

In the same year, the first 1st level (3-year) school was opened. At first, the children were taught at home. Parents took turns allowing children to conduct classes in their home. The first teachers were the Romanovs. Then the children were taught by Lidia Vasilievna and Korney Nikitovich Novak.

Flower garden near the Philoshenskaya school

In 1927, the first school building was built.

Rally in honor of Victory Day, p. Filoshenka

In 1929, the first artel called “First Life” was formed in Filoshenka, the chairman of which was Martyn Stepanovich Apunik. In 1939, on the territory of Filoshenka, a collective farm named after. "18th Party Congress".

Labor training lesson at school

In 2000, the administration of the Filoshensky village council was renamed into the administration of the municipal formation of the Filoshensky village council. The head of the settlement is Alik Abtrakhimov. Today, 150 people live in the village of Filoshenka, there is a primary school, a first-aid post, and a post office.

For reference

The village has a 570-year history Shibkovo Iskitimsky district. There is a version that it got its name in honor of one of the first settlers, freedom-loving Novgorodians.

Date of village formation Verkh-Suzun In the Suzunsky district, the year 1526 is listed in all archival documents. The first settlers were fugitive peasants from the European part of Russia. Residents celebrated the 440th anniversary of their village in 2016 Boltovo. Among the old residents of the district and village Cue balls.

Around 1644, a village was formed on the Berd River Maslyanino.

In 1695, the zaimka was founded by the boyar's son Alexei Kruglik. Kruglikovo in the Bolotninsky district. In the Bolotninsky district the oldest villages are called Oyash, founded by the Tatars back in the 15th century, as well as Achu, Kornilovo, Krivoyash.

In the Toguchinsky district, the 485th anniversary of the village was celebrated in 2015 Kiik. And the first mentions of Toguchin date back to 1600.

The first Russian settlements on the territory of the modern Novosibirsk region include the village Genghis Ordynsky district. In 2010, the villagers celebrated his anniversary - the 390th anniversary.

In the photo: The central street of the village of Filoshenka. Monument of Glory to the Heroes of the Great Patriotic War in Filoshenka

Clockwork Orange 12-03-2011 23:06

Are there any abandoned villages in our region? I really want to go stalking, but I can’t find information anywhere.

BBC 12-03-2011 23:32

There are many villages marked "non-residential" on the map.
On the website www.mbo4x4.ru you can see the album “The Lost World”, it also seems like we went to an uninhabited village

den911 13-03-2011 06:34

I'll check in

Expertrr 13-03-2011 06:51

quote: Originally posted by den911:
I'll check in

swalker.ru

5025Stas 13-03-2011 07:32

I’ll note that in the Kuibyshev and Barabinsky districts there are definitely similar ones. Last summer I came across these, I won’t say the coordinates as it wasn’t before, all that was left of the villages were mounds where houses used to be, and a couple of destroyed stoves.
If it weren't for JPS, we might have driven past and wouldn't have noticed. Download the maps of the General Staff, there are a lot of things there and you will be happy.

Kuroshup 13-03-2011 07:41

Eat. I saw an abandoned village with preserved houses in the Krasnozero region. Now you can go to any village and make films about the war.

VOYAGE*R 13-03-2011 07:48

I heard that there is a small village behind Tolmachevo

shunter 13-03-2011 08:45

quote: Originally posted by 5025Stas:

Download maps of the General Staff, there is a lot there


MAGNUM 26 13-03-2011 08:48

Are you interested in completely abandoned villages?

Kuroshup 13-03-2011 09:24

At the entrance to Iskitim there is an abandoned, unfinished hospital of 5-6 floors. You can climb there too. It’s more difficult with villages, abandoned houses are quickly dismantled, and all that remains of the village are memories in the form of cellar holes, gardens and nettles. If there are houses left somewhere, it’s only because a man with a nerve can’t get there.

LE0NID 13-03-2011 09:38

If someone were to ride in a car as a stalker, he would sit on the tail, along with a camera and one of the guns (as an option)

ernesto-ch 13-03-2011 09:42

interesting topic

VOYAGE*R 13-03-2011 10:17

There are many abandoned villages closer to Altai, but there aren’t any in the NSO, or I don’t know...

Umbert 13-03-2011 11:41

here the topic was about old NSO cards. We open them, compare them with new ones, and are surprised. my favorite hunting grounds used to be populated much more seriously... another thing is that there really is nothing left there....
and many more abandoned villages in Altai. in the area of ​​the river I saw 1 reed (and I came across it while getting lost on horseback), another 1 on the Uba River... there are a lot of them everywhere...

5025Stas 13-03-2011 12:55

quote: Download maps of the General Staff, there is a lot there

Can I send you a link in a PM? Thank you!

For maps of the General Staff, type in Yandex or Google download maps of the General Staff for JPS for free without registration" must be marked for free because many offer for money. There is one thing, but if you use them in the ZhPS, be sure to correct it, otherwise with native binding files the real place will not coincide with the place on the map this is apparently protection from the Chinese or Pindos - if they attack, they will immediately get lost.
I spent a long time fiddling with reference points, but it turned out to be simpler, the coordinate grid drawn on the maps coincides with the real coordinates.
These cards really help out!!! ONE time I had to drive from Karasuk to Kuibyshev at night through forests on asphalt twice as far, there wouldn’t be enough gasoline.
If you can’t find it by searching, knock and we’ll look together

Rwester 17-03-2011 18:19

Children's games. Go to the Rechkunovsky sanatorium and feel like a stalker.

hunter_nsk 19-03-2011 22:39

Ooo! Let's. Can you send it to me by email?

Umbert 20-03-2011 11:36

I want it too!

maximus77 20-03-2011 13:27

klest 20-03-2011 13:29

Now they are digging up so many treasures!!!

Amfibia-2 10-12-2011 13:10


Please provide links to maps of the General Staff. Thank you in advance [email protected]

Expertrr 10-12-2011 16:52

quote: Originally posted by Amfibia-2:

Please provide links to maps of the General Staff. Thank you in advance [email protected]

Don't do it either. you'll boil)))

And despite his young age, still some things in him remain in the same place. For example, abandoned buildings, abandoned by people and left to their own devices.

Many historians and stalkers still discover buildings built in the pre-revolutionary period. Magically, these houses stand untouched by bulldozers, but do not have their marks on the maps. This is the real historical value of the city, which may soon be completely lost if the authorities do not take control of these buildings.

The most famous abandoned place in Novosibirsk

Most of the Novosibirsk abandoned objects have either already been demolished (such as the famous mental hospital with its secret underground passages), or are popular not only with local stalkers, but also with airsoft fans, as well as vandals. Every year the condition of unique and historically interesting objects worsens. Therefore, many researchers do not disclose the passwords and appearances of abandoned places in Novosibirsk. However, there are places that are known to all residents of the city, for example, an abandoned unfinished building near the Ploshchad Marksa metro station.

The longest construction site in Novosibirsk, which is no less than 46 years old, is the Tourist Hotel, the gaping empty windows of which look straight out onto Karl Marx Square - the central part of the left bank. This long-term construction will remain in place for many years, since the restoration or demolition of the facility will cost the city a pretty penny.

1968 marked the beginning of the construction of a twenty-story prestigious hotel. The abandoned facility was supposed to house up to 800 rooms. For many years now, the hotel has been surrounded by a fence, but getting into the territory is not difficult. This abandoned building in Novosibirsk stands out very well against the background of the Festival shopping center, built exactly next to the Soviet giant from the past. There are also sad cases associated with the "Tourist", such as falls from heights. At one time, the roof of the hotel was used by amateurs of base jumping (rope jumping). At the moment, the unfinished building continues to sleep in eternal sleep, looking at the city with its languid gaze.

"Dark" tower of the city

The abandoned strange tower is actually a water tower. If you take a train passing through the Oktyabrsky district of the city, you will be able to see a small abandoned castle, since the tower looks exactly like the ruins of an ancient palace from the Art Nouveau era. The brick building was built in the early 20th century, around 1910. A remnant of the Tsarist Empire with a symbolic crown on its roof in the form of a tree. The entrance has been boarded up for quite some time.

This abandoned place in Novosibirsk can be found 500 meters from the Novosibirsk-Yuzhny railway station. The station itself, by the way, is also an object from the reign of Nicholas II. In those years it was called the Novonikolaevsk station, and the tracks of this territory belonged to the Altai railway. You can find it at the intersection of Kommunisticheskaya and Dekabristov streets in the Oktyabrsky district in Novosibirsk. The abandoned location is not marked as a tower on the maps.

Area of ​​lost ships

Zaton has always had a bad reputation for residents. But this is where the ship graveyard is located. The place itself is a small island with several roads leading to it. Tightly moored rusty barges are piled up so that you can walk along them to the main landfill.

Sometimes there are warning signs “No Trespassing”, and if someone is spotted by the local watchman, then get ready to immediately go home. To get on an unauthorized tour of old river barges, ships and conduct an original photo shoot, you need to get to the street. Portovaya, in the Leninsky district.

One of the interesting parts that make up the list of abandoned buildings is given over to former summer camps. Vostok-2 was founded with the support and assistance of the Siberian Aviation Research Institute named after. S. A. Chaplygina. The camp is located thirty kilometers from the city.

The stronghold of pioneer childhood was located in the deep part of the local forest belt. When the Union collapsed in 1991, like many other camps in the country, Vostok was closed and abandoned to its fate. All camp buildings are built on one floor, the houses are wooden.

Now the main building stands in half form, part of it was dismantled, and part remains. It was here that evening concerts took place and there was a dining room. The sleeping buildings are in no less deplorable condition. Three buildings with completely rotten floors. Also on the territory there are vegetable storage facilities, a common shower room and small storage rooms. The camp also has its own water tower, which, of course, is also abandoned. By the way, the pioneer camp got its name from the Vostok-2 spaceship, the monument to which is located in the central part of the abandoned facility.

An interesting fact is that there is an active camp cozily adjacent to this place. Therefore, former pioneer camps are one of the most interesting abandoned places in Novosibirsk. The address can be found at the coordinates: 55°0"41"N 83°20"13"E.

From Ershovo today only the ruins of the former school remain, still remembering children's laughter.
A peeling and forgotten monument to Ershov freedom fighters, and a graveyard with a cemetery,
where else do children and grandchildren come to visit their ancestors? Thus the wheel of history turned
and the millstones of power that the village was founded in 1676, long before the emergence of Suzun
ceased to exist and was wiped off the face of the earth due to unprofitability and remoteness.

The village of Satym was born in the first decades of development of the right bank of the Ob. Its founders
like most Ob villages, there were former quitrent peasants, Cossacks and dragoons
children or retired Cossacks. Perhaps somewhere, someday, information about its first
residents, but neither I nor my friends have come across them yet.

The earliest that was found is Confessional painting of the Peter and Paul Church in the village of Chingiskoye on 1825.
The church has existed there since 1807. In it, at the arrival of the Kolyvan district, Chingis volost, there are
Villages affiliated with the church:
Abrashinskaya, Milovanova, Maletina, Sokolova, Klyuchi, Belopukhova, Stolbovaya, Dresvyanskaya, Nizhne-Kamenskaya,
Eresnaya, Bitkova, Artamonova, Ersheva,Krutinskaya.

Those. at the beginning of the 19th century, the village was already listed as Ershova, but on maps of the 18th century only the name Satym appears.

The construction of the church in Ershov began only in 1910, so in 1825 all Orthodox residents went to services in Chinggis.
New churches arose, parishes changed, and a couple of years later Ershovites could go to other nearby churches.
Since 1862, services were held in the Bitkovo church in the name of the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary. And since 1896 in Myshlanskaya
St. Michael's Church.

The first data that I came across from audits is dated 1859, but it is not a fact that this is the first available data about Ershov.
So by revision 1859 in the village of Ershovo there were 40 courtyards, in which 120 male and 131 female souls lived.

IN List of populated places in the Tomsk province for 1893 year in the Ershov village there are 243 residents, 53 peasant and 12 non-peasant households.

The next one is the same list for 1899 in the village of Ershovaya, Chingis volost, Barnaul district, the number of farms increased by more than
than twice as much as in 1959. There were 86 peasants and one non-peasant. I wonder what is causing the decrease in non-peasant households?
Of the residents, there were 234 men and 237 women. There was a literacy school.
The amount of land owned by the village was 6297 acres (by today's standards this is 6879.5 hectares.)


Perhaps this is what the estate of the former Ershov peasant looked like.

According to the following census in 1911 In Ershov there were already 98 households and 424 male and 420 female people lived.
The village began to be called a village because the construction of a church began.
Two small trade shops and one butter factory appeared.

Now 1914 year in Ershov. Data reference book on the Tomsk diocese. I give you a picture.
There are names of church employees.

The news of the revolution came to the Bitkovsky district quickly, but having survived the Kolchakism and the White Czechs, the first Soviet changes
the population felt it only in 1919-20. In 1920, the Ershovsky Rural Council of Workers, Peasants was organized
and Red Army deputies of the Bitkovsky volost of the Cherepanovsky district of the Siberian Territory.
In 1927, in Ershov, half the population was horseless and there were still several families of farm laborers who had not joined
in the agricultural artel and earning a living by being hired as workers.

IN “List of populated places in the Siberian Territory”, compiled already in Soviet times in 1928 the following data is available:
The village of Ershovo (Satym) of the Bitkovsky district of the Kamensky district, model 1676, on the Karakan River has 372 farms and 1898 people.
It is 19 km away from Bitki. from Cherepanov 101 km.
In Ershov there is a village council, a school, and a grocery store.
The village belonged to the Bitkovsky district, they also went to the doctor and the post office there.
Four kilometers from the village there was a cordon of the Chingis forestry, built in 1914, on which two houses
There lived 9 people engaged in the care and release of the forest.

Sales of grain and purchases of Ershovites.

If the Bitkovites sold their agricultural products in Kamen and purchased goods for the population in Novosibirsk, then the Ershovites strangely did the opposite
grain was sold to Novosibirsk, and purchases were made in Kamen.
On this occasion, I have more than once had questions about how the district’s villages were distributed according to sales and purchases on the RIC lists.
Bedrino, for example, carried out purchases and sales in Zavod-Suzun. Zakovryazhino did the same in Cherepanovo. Flat rented out and purchased everything in Bitki,
and Rozhdestvenka again produced everything in Novosibirsk. I don't see any system.

Suzunsky and Bitkovsky districts existed in parallel for a long time and developed independently. March 2, 1932
Suzunsky and Bitkovsky districts were merged and Ershovo became part of the newly organized Lushnikovsky district, which existed for less than a year
and was renamed Suzunsky.

I have not yet been able to establish the names of the very first agricultural cooperatives and communes in Ershov. But such data is for those interested in Ershov’s history
can be ordered from the district archive. Links to archives are at the end of this material.
The first collective farms I established existed since 1935 and were called “Country of Soviets” and “New World”, later in December 1950 they were united
to one collective farm named after Andreev. Most likely named after the Soviet pilot, Hero of the Soviet Union Ivan Andreev.
By 1938, 95.4% of the Ershov peasants had joined collective farms, there were no more horseless people, and according to regional statistics, there were livestock for every peasant family.
7-8 goals each! Life seems to have become better, but the statistics here are false, since it is not the private livestock of the peasants that is taken into account, but the one they used to organize
collective farms were handed over to collective management. And which, despite all the brightness and utopianism of the idea, never became their own.

The decline of one of the oldest villages in Siberia, the village of Ershovo, began at the very end of the 50s, when the Andreev collective farm was closed (1958) and became a department
collective farm named after Lenin in Myshlanka. In 1967, the village council also disappeared. By the decision of the regional executive committee of June 8, 1967, the Ershovsky Village Council was renamed
Myshlansky with the center in the village of Myshlanka.
One of the last managers of the collective farm department in Ershov (3rd brigade) was Kim Nikolaevich Podgorny, sent there by the party cell from Myslanka,
where he was in charge of the post office. After him, Alexander Voronkov and Nikolai Testov also held this position, but the need for this department was slowly and persistently
disappeared, there were fewer and fewer people in the village. However, the four-year Ershov primary school continued to operate. In high school the Ershovskys
The children were already studying at the Myshlan eight-year school. Antonina Karpenko recalls that back in the 70s, their Ershovskys were often teased there:
-Hey, Satym! Where is the smoke coming from?
Because of this, fights often occurred between the Ershov and Myshlan children. And some hostility has persisted to this day.

September 1, 1977, after the collective farm meeting, by popular decision and order of Chairman Vorotnikov, all the last milk cows
were driven in a large herd to Myshlanka. The brick walls of the farms were completely empty. After the closure of the collective farm in Ershov, people began to move to the surrounding
villages, closer to civilization and work. Some moved to Artamonovo, some to Bitki, a couple of families settled in Chinggis, some even moved to the Urals and Uzbekistan.
Thirty to forty families moved to Myshlanka. There they are no longer called Satym in the old fashioned way, and few people are interested in their Ershov origin...

By 1979, the collective farm department was officially closed, which had become completely unprofitable even in those Soviet times with “free” state support.
Accountant Antonina Sharapova recalls that when Ershov was closed and documents were transferred to Myshlanka, she found two old seals in the table,
the first Ershovsky agricultural artels “Country of Soviets” and Andreev’s agricultural artel, which were transferred to Myshlanka.
In 1981, there was not a single living soul left in the village; the empty houses were slowly sold off and taken to other villages. And in the cash-strapped 90s, the place
the villages were completely plowed up and even the boundaries of the estates were no longer visible. In the plowed areas of Ershov's houses, a man's companion grew - tall, stinging nettles,
and the young man, ignorant of the past history, burned by it, will think in his hearts: “Where did you come from here!”
On the map of 1987 (see above) there is no longer a trace of the village, only the Artamonovsky ravine and the Ershovo tract remind of something distant and gone.

Today, a traveler or driver will still see the foundations of brick cowsheds, the ruins of the Ershov elementary school, an orphaned monument to those who laid down their lives in the struggle for light.
the future for the Ershovites, whose names no one remembers either. Ershovo is now used as summer grazing land for livestock. The cows kiss the summer kakan water,
they wag their tails and of course they don’t know, and it doesn’t matter at all that here, on this land, measured human life has flowed for many centuries, the swimmers shouted
children, weddings took place, scandals and disputes grew, innocent blood was shed, ordinary Siberian people were born and died.

Ershovo. Retro photographs sent by Pavel Podgorny.


1926 Resident of the village of Ershovo Zyryanov Egor Fedorovich (second from left)


1930s. The village of Ershovo. The beginning of the Soviet era. People called this part of the village Maxim.
Perhaps Maxim is the name of the site from the 30s, since today's former residents
Ershov does not remember such a name.


Ershovskaya elementary school. 1948. Among the students are teachers Alexey Alekseevich Chernovsky and Tomilov (I no longer remember his name)


Morning in Ershov, collective farmers at the store. 1972.


Women mowing, photograph taken in the 70s.


Lake Ershovskoye and its resident on a raft.


Photo by Antonina Karpenko. Nadya Litavrina, sister Lyuba and me in the middle.
Ershovo 1976. This was probably the last time I was in Ershov, which was still alive.


Resident's house Ershovo A.A. Vasilyeva. Winter 1976

What does Ershovo look like today? Yes, that's it!


Not a log, not a pebble.

Village Brownie's Cry

At the unmown boundary
The old maple is stooping,
The cranes reached out
To warm places.
Not a single living soul -
The streets are empty
Only a well crane
I couldn't fly away.

Homemade wine
Drinking doesn't stop
It’s amazing sometimes
Silhouette in the fields.
I run out onto the hill...
And this maple is swaying,
Yes well crane
He bows to me.

I love my village so much
For simplicity, for silence,
Where is the ancient poplar above the river
Still striving for heights.

Where on Saturdays everyone went to the bathhouse,
They drank vigorous kvass from the glacier,
Where pies were baked with mushrooms
In the heat, they are slightly tired.

Where are the kids in a noisy gang?
Splashed by the river all day,
Where behind the abstruse conversation
Old men were smoking terry.

Where in the evenings at the well
The women chattered about their own things,
The path winds through the thick grain
The two of you can't miss each other there.

Where even the sky is not the same
And the stars - here they are, look!
Take off the treasured ladle with your hand
And scoop up infinity.


This was our house where we lived with our parents. My older sister Lyudmila stands exactly in his place.


The road leading to childhood.


Here at the Ershov elementary school I studied from grades 1 to 4...

I'm proud of the village
grandson, remember this:
I was strong
only just because -
Growing up in the village
my roots
And no wear and tear -
to my tree!


And here were our vegetable gardens. Behind the gardens there was and still is a lake with crucian carp.

I remember, I see in a dream,
Everything is covered with water lilies.
The sky is filled with stars above you,
Yes, the moon burns in the water.

Childhood is so far away now
Can't bring him back
But here's a lake to see
I would be very, very happy.

Maybe we'll get together somehow
And we'll go with the whole family.
And I'll see what's left
I'll share it with you later.


The Karakan River near Ershovo.


Village river.

You are a village river,
Where childhood memories are reflected.
I'm coming from far away
Once again I say goodbye to you.

I flew from distant places,
To the willow bushes above the water,
Breathe the familiar air of places,
Be yourself a little.

Please forgive me
I am now a city dweller,
I dream of clouds at night,
And thin cobwebs of thread,

Flying above you at noon,
Touching the water flow.
Daisies hidden by grass
And two birch trees in the distance.

My favorite river
I'll be back again
To you alone from far away,
Forgive me, accept me, anyone...


My daughter Yulia is in Ershov, which she has never seen and will never see again.


Here we swam and carried buckets of water for the garden and bathhouse.


This monument to the heroes of the civil war was opened in 1967.

We used the memories of Antonina Karpenko (Koenig), archival photographs sent by Pavel Podgorny,
modern photographs of Yulia Fedotova (Koenig), archival data found by Sergei Kalyakin,
poems about the village by different authors.

Bitkovsky district land department of the Bitkovsky district executive committee
West Siberian Territory (-1932)
F.19, 119 units. chronicle, 1924-1932, op. 1
The inventory includes general office work, documents on land management of the villages of Ershovo, Gorbunikha,
Artamonovo, Fedorovka village, minutes of the meeting of the agricultural
inspections, documents on the organization of agricultural cooperatives in 1924-1929. District administration.


district of the Novosibirsk region, village. Ershovo ( - )
F.125, 16 items, 1950-1958, op. 1
Kolkhoz named after Andreev Ershovsky Village Council of Suzunsky
district of the Novosibirsk region was created in , the date is set according to
fund documents.
Liquidated on , the date is established according to the documents of the fund.


district of the Novosibirsk region, village. Ershovo ( - 1950)
F.102, 7 units. chronicle, 1935-1950, op. 1.2
Collective farm "New World" of Ershovsky Village Council of Suzunsky
district of the West Siberian Territory organized in , date
established according to fund documents.

workers of the Novosibirsk region from December 28. 1950 No. 488
liquidated

Op.2 – on personnel
Minutes of general meetings of collective farmers, personal accounts for
wages 1935


district of the Novosibirsk region, from Ershovo ( - )
F.103, 8 items, 1935-1950, op. 1
Collective farm "Country of Soviets" of the Ershovsky Village Council of Suzunsky
district of the West Siberian Territory created in , the date is set according to
fund documents.
Liquidated on , the date is established according to the documents of the fund.
Op.1 – general office work
Minutes of general meetings of collective farmers, board meetings,
documents on the division of collective farms, annual accounting report.

district of the Novosibirsk region. Executive committee ( -
1967)
F.43, 103 items, 1929-1963, op. 1,2,3
Ershovsky rural council of workers, peasants and
Red Army deputies of the Bitkovsky volost of the Cherepanovsky district
The Siberian Territory was founded in , the date is established according to documents
archive.
In accordance with the resolution of the Presidium of the Siberian
revolutionary committee (protocol No. 36(143) of 09/12/1924)

Red Army deputies of the Bitkovsky district of the Siberian Territory
In accordance with the resolution of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of September 26, 1927
renamed the Ershovsky Rural Council of Workers, Peasants and
Red Army deputies of the Suzunsky district of the Novosibirsk district
Siberian region
In accordance with the Decree of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of July 30, 1930
transformed into the Ershovsky Rural Council of Workers, Peasants and
Red Army deputies of the Suzunsky district of West Siberian
the edges.

By resolution of the Presidium of the West Siberian Regional
executive committee dated 03/05/1932 No. 2369, in accordance with
By resolution of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of 03/02/1932 Bitkovsky and Suzunsky districts
merged into one Lushnikovsky district, renamed Ershovsky
rural council of workers, peasants and red army deputies
Lushnikovsky district of the West Siberian Territory.

From 12/10/1932 again
the formed district was renamed Suzunsky.

In accordance with the Constitution of the USSR of 1936, it was established
name Ershovsky Rural Council of Working People's Deputies
Suzunsky district of the West Siberian Territory.

By resolution of the Central Executive Committee of the USSR dated September 28, 1937, it was transformed into
Ershovsky Rural Council of Workers' Deputies of the Suzunsky District
Novosibirsk region. Executive committee.

By decision of the executive committee of the Suzunsky District Council of Deputies
workers dated March 30, 1967 No. 83 Ershov Village Council
liquidated
Documents for 1920-1928 were not received for storage.
Op.1 – general office work
Op.2 – on personnel
Op.3 – household books
Minutes of meetings of members of the village council, presidium, deputy
groups, minutes of sessions, decisions of the executive committee.
Wage statements for 1931-1934.
Household books for 1929, 1934 -1963.

Note: household books p. Ershovo has been located in
Myshlansky Village Council Foundation.