The year of the creation of the Margel airborne forces. Vasily Margelov - biography, information, personal life


"Suvorov of the twentieth century" - this is how General of the Army Vasily Filippovich Margelov (1908 - 1990) began to be called during his lifetime by Western historians (for a long time it was forbidden to call this name Soviet in the press for reasons of secrecy).

Having commanded the Airborne Forces for a total of almost a quarter of a century (1954 - 1959, 1961 - 1979), he turned this branch of the military into a formidable strike force that knew no equal.

But Vasily Filippovich was remembered not only as an outstanding organizer by his contemporaries. Love for the Motherland, remarkable military abilities, steadfastness and selfless courage were organically combined in him with the greatness of the soul, modesty and crystal honesty, kind-hearted, truly fatherly attitude towards the soldier.

We turn over some pages of the book of his fate, worthy of the pen and the master of the detective genre, and the creator of the heroic epic ...

How a paratrooper got a vest

In the Soviet-Finnish war of 1940, Major Margelov was the commander of the Separate reconnaissance ski battalion of the 596th rifle regiment of the 122nd division. His battalion made daring raids on enemy rear lines, set up ambushes, causing great damage to the enemy. In one of the raids, they even managed to capture a group of officers of the Swedish General Staff, which gave grounds for the Soviet Government to make a diplomatic demarche about the actual participation of the supposedly neutral Scandinavian state in the hostilities on the side of the Finns. This step had a sobering effect on the Swedish king and his cabinet: Stockholm did not dare to send its soldiers into the snows of Karelia ...

The experience of ski raids on enemy rear lines was remembered in the late autumn of 1941 in besieged Leningrad. Major V. Margelov was assigned to lead the First Special Ski Regiment of sailors of the Red Banner Baltic Fleet formed from volunteers.

The veteran of this part N. Shuvalov recalled:

- As you know, sailors are a peculiar people. In love with the sea, they do not particularly favor their land counterparts. When Margelov was appointed commander of a regiment of marines, some used to say that he would not take root there, his “brothers” would not accept him.

However, this prophecy did not come true. When the regiment of sailors was built to be presented to the new commander, Margelov, after the command "Attention!" seeing many gloomy faces looking at him not particularly friendly, instead of the words of greeting “Hello, comrades!”, which are customary in such cases, without hesitation, he loudly shouted:

- Hello, buggers!

A moment - and in the ranks not a single gloomy face ...

Many glorious feats were accomplished by sailors-skiers under the command of Major Margelov. The tasks were set personally by the commander of the Baltic Fleet, Vice Admiral Tributs.

Deep daring raids by skiers across the German rear in the winter of 1941-42 were an unremitting headache for the command of Hitler's Army Group North. What was even worth the landing on the coast of Ladoga in the direction of Lipka - Shlisselburg, which alarmed Field Marshal von Leeb so much that he began to remove troops from Pulkovo to eliminate him, tightening the noose of the blockade of Leningrad.

Two decades later, the commander of the Airborne Forces, General of the Army Margelov, ensured that the paratroopers received the right to wear vests.

- The daring of the "brothers" sunk into my heart! he explained. - I want the paratroopers to adopt the glorious traditions of their older brother - the marines and continue them with honor. For this, I introduced the paratroopers vests. Only stripes on them to match the color of the sky - blue ...

When, at a military council chaired by the Minister of Defense, the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, Admiral of the Fleet of the Soviet Union S. G. Gorshkov, began to blame that, they say, paratroopers steal vests from sailors, Vasily Filippovich sharply objected to him:

- I myself fought in the Marine Corps and I know what paratroopers deserve and what - sailors!

And Vasily Filippovich fought famously with his "marines". Here's another example. In May 1942, in the Vinyaglovo area near the Sinyavinsky Heights, about 200 enemy infantrymen broke through the defense sector of a neighboring regiment and entered the rear of the Margelovites. Vasily Filippovich quickly gave the necessary orders and himself lay down behind the Maxim machine gun. Then he personally destroyed 79 Nazis, the rest were finished off by reinforcements that came to the rescue.

By the way, during the defense of Leningrad, Margelov always had an easel machine gun at hand, from which in the mornings he made a kind of shooting exercise: he “trimmed” the tops of trees in bursts. Then he mounted a horse and practiced cutting with a sword.

In offensive battles, the regiment commander more than once personally raised his battalions to attack, fought in the forefront of his fighters, dragging them to victory in hand-to-hand combat, where he had no equal. Because of such terrible fights, the Nazis nicknamed the marines "striped death."

Officer's ration - in a soldier's cauldron

Caring for a soldier has never been a secondary matter for Margelov, especially in a war. His former brother-soldier, senior lieutenant of the guard Nikolai Shevchenko recalled that, having accepted the 13th Guards Rifle Regiment in 1942, Vasily Filippovich began to increase its combat effectiveness by improving the catering of all personnel.

At that time, the officers in the regiment ate separately from the soldiers and sergeants. Officers were entitled to reinforced rations: in addition to the combined arms norm, they received animal butter, canned fish, biscuits or cookies, Golden Fleece or Kazbek tobacco (non-smokers were given chocolate). But, besides this, some battalion commanders and company commanders brought personal chefs with a common catering unit. It is not difficult to understand that some part of the soldier's cauldron went to the officer's desk. This was discovered by the regimental commander when bypassing the units. He always started it with an inspection of the battalion kitchens and a sample of soldiers' food.

On the second day of Lieutenant Colonel Margelov's stay in the unit, all of its officers had to eat from a common boiler along with the soldiers. The regiment commander ordered his additional ration to be transferred to a common boiler. Soon other officers began to do the same. “Batya set a good example for us!” - the veteran Shevchenko recalled. Surprisingly, Batey Vasily Filippovich was called in all the regiments and divisions that he happened to command ...

God forbid, if Margelov noticed that the fighter had leaky shoes or shabby clothes. Here the business executive received to the fullest. Once, noticing that the sergeant-machine-gunner at the forefront of the boot was “asking for porridge”, the regimental commander called the head of the clothing supply to him and ordered him to exchange shoes with this fighter. And he warned that if he saw this again, he would immediately transfer the officer to the front line.

Vasily Filippovich could not stand cowards, weak-willed, lazy people. Theft under him was simply impossible, because he punished him mercilessly ...

Hot Snow

Whoever read Yuri Bondarev's novel "Hot Snow" or saw the film of the same name based on this novel, let him know: the Margelovites were the prototype of the heroes that stood in the way of Manstein's tank armada, which was trying to break the encirclement around the 6th army of Paulus in Stalingrad. It was they who found themselves in the direction of the main attack of the fascist tank wedge and managed to prevent a breakthrough, holding out until reinforcements arrived.

In October 1942, Guard Lieutenant Colonel Margelov became the commander of the 13th Guards Rifle Regiment, which was part of the 2nd Guards Army, Lieutenant General R. Ya. Malinovsky, which was formed specifically to complete the defeat of the enemy, who had broken through into the Volga steppes. For two months, while the regiment was in reserve, Vasily Filippovich intensely prepared his fighters for fierce battles for the Volga stronghold.

Near Leningrad, he more than once had to engage in single combat with fascist tanks, he knew well their weak spots. And now he personally taught tank destroyers, showing armor-piercers how to dig a trench in full profile, where and from what distances to aim with an anti-tank rifle, how to throw grenades and Molotov cocktails.

When the Margelovites held the defense at the turn of the river. Myshkov, having taken on the blow of the Goth tank group, which was advancing from the Kotelnikovsky area to join the Paulus breakthrough group, they were not afraid of the newest heavy Tiger tanks, they did not flinch in front of the many times superior enemy. They did the impossible: in five days of fighting (from December 19 to 24, 1942), without sleep or rest, suffering heavy losses, they burned and knocked out almost all enemy tanks in their direction. At the same time, the regiment retained combat readiness!

In these battles, Vasily Filippovich was severely shell-shocked, but did not leave the line. He met the New Year of 1943 with his fighters, with a Mauser in his hand, dragging the attacking chains to storm the Kotelnikovsky farm. This swift throw of units of the 2nd Guards Army in the Stalingrad epic was put to a bold end: the last hopes of the Paulus army for the deblockade melted away like smoke. Then there was the liberation of Donbass, the forcing of the Dnieper, fierce battles for Kherson and the "Iasi-Chisinau Cannes" ... Thirteen thanks from the Supreme Commander-in-Chief were earned by the 49th Guards Kherson Red Banner Order of Suvorov Rifle Division - Margelov's Division!

The final chord is the bloodless capture in May 1945 on the border of Austria and Czechoslovakia of the SS tank corps, which broke through to the West to surrender to the Americans. This included the elite armored forces of the Reich - the SS divisions "Grossdeutschland" and "Totenkopf".

As the best of the best guards, Major General Hero of the Soviet Union V.F. Margelov (1944), the leadership of the 2nd Ukrainian Front entrusted the honor of commanding a front-line composite regiment at the Victory Parade in Moscow on June 24, 1945.

After graduating from the Higher Military Academy in 1948 (since 1958 - the Military Academy of the General Staff), Vasily Filippovich accepted the Pskov Airborne Division.

This appointment was preceded by a meeting between Major General V. Margelov and Minister of Defense of the USSR Marshal of the Soviet Union Nikolai Bulganin. There was another general in the office, also a Hero of the Soviet Union.

The Minister of Defense began the conversation with kind words about the Airborne Troops, their glorious combat past, and that a decision had been made to develop this relatively young branch of the military.

– We believe in them and consider it necessary to strengthen them with combat generals who distinguished themselves during the Great Patriotic War. What is your opinion, comrades?

He, the second general, began to complain about the wounds received at the front, said that the doctors did not recommend him to make parachute jumps. In general, he refused the proposal of the minister.

General Margelov, who had many wounds during three wars, including severe ones, and even in the legs, asked a single question in response:

- When can I go to the troops?

"Today," the Minister of Defense replied, and shook his hand warmly.

Margelov understood that he would have to start from scratch and how to comprehend the tricky landing science for a beginner. But he also knew something else: there is a special attraction in this kind of troops - audacity, a strong male adhesion.

Years later, he told the correspondent of the Krasnaya Zvezda newspaper:

Until the age of 40, I vaguely imagined what a parachute was, and I never dreamed of jumping in a dream. It turned out on its own, or rather, as it should be in the army, by order. I am a military man, if necessary, ready to go to hell. And so it was necessary, already being a general, to make the first parachute jump. The impression, I tell you, is incomparable. A dome opens above you, you soar in the air like a bird, - by God, I want to sing! I sang. But you won't go away on rapture alone. I was in a hurry, I didn’t follow the ground, as a result I had to walk for two weeks with a bandaged leg. Got a lesson. Parachuting is not only romantic, but also a lot of work and impeccable discipline...

Then there will be many jumps - with weapons, day and night, from high-speed military transport aircraft. During his service in the Airborne Forces, Vasily Filippovich made more than 60 of them. Extreme - at the age of 65.

Anyone who has never left an airplane in his life, from where cities and villages seem like toys, who has never experienced the joy and fear of free fall, a whistle in his ears, a stream of wind beating in his chest, he will never understand the honor and pride of a paratrooper, - Margelov will say something.

What did Vasily Filippovich see when he accepted the 76th Guards Airborne Division Chernigov? The material and technical base of combat training is at zero. The simplicity of the sports equipment was discouraging: two jumping boards, a cradle for a balloon suspended between two pillars, and the skeleton of an aircraft that vaguely resembled an airplane or glider. Injuries and even deaths are common. If Margelov was a novice in the landing business, then in the organization of combat training, as they say, he ate the dog.

In parallel with combat training, no less important work was underway to equip the personnel and the families of officers. And here everyone was surprised by the persistence of Margelov.

“A soldier must be well-fed, clean in body and strong in spirit,” Vasily Filippovich liked to repeat Suvorov's saying. It was necessary - and the general became a real foreman, as he called himself without any irony, and on his desktop, mixed with plans for combat training, exercises, landing, there were calculations, estimates, projects ...

Working in his usual mode - day and night - day and night away, General Margelov quickly ensured that his unit became one of the best in the airborne troops.

In 1950, he was appointed commander of the airborne corps in the Far East, and in 1954, Lieutenant General V. Margelov led the Airborne Forces.

And he soon proved to everyone that he was not a rustic servant, as some perceived Margelov, but a man who saw the prospects of the Airborne Forces, who had a great desire to turn them into the elite of the Armed Forces. To do this, it was necessary to break stereotypes and inertia, win the trust of active, energetic people, and involve them in joint productive work. Over time, V. Margelov formed a circle of like-minded people carefully selected and nurtured by him. And the outstanding sense of the new, combat authority and the ability of the commander to work with people made it possible to achieve the set goals.

Year 1970, operational-strategic exercise "Dvina". Here is what the newspaper of the Belarusian Military District “For the Glory of the Motherland” wrote about them: “Belarus is a country of forests and lakes, and it is incredibly difficult to find a landing site. The weather wasn't good, but it didn't give a reason for despondency either. Attack fighters ironed the ground, from the commentator's booth it sounded: "Attention!" - and the eyes of those present turned upward.

Here, large points separated from the first aircraft - these are military equipment, artillery, cargo, and then paratroopers rained down like peas from the hatches of the An-12. But the crown of the throw was the appearance in the air of four "Anteys". A few minutes - and now there is a whole regiment on the ground!

When the last paratrooper touched the ground, V.F. Margelov stopped the stopwatch on the commander's watch and showed it to the Minister of Defense. It took more than 22 minutes for eight thousand paratroopers and 150 units of military equipment to be delivered to the rear of the "enemy".

Brilliant results were also achieved at the major exercises Dnepr, Berezina, Yug... It has become common practice to raise an airborne assault force, say, in Pskov, make a long flight and parachute near Ferghana, Kirovabad or in Mongolia. Commenting on one of the exercises, Margelov told the Krasnaya Zvezda correspondent:

- The use of airborne assault has become practically unlimited. For example, we have this type of combat training: on the map of the country, a point is arbitrarily chosen where troops are dropped. Warrior parachutists jump into completely unfamiliar terrain: into the taiga and deserts, onto lakes, swamps and mountains ...

It was after the exercises "Dvina", declaring gratitude to the guardsmen for their courage and military skill, the commander, as if by chance, asked:

Margelov could be understood: there was a need to reduce the time for preparing airborne units for combat after landing. The landing of military equipment from one aircraft, and the crews from another led to the fact that the spread sometimes amounted to five kilometers. While the crews were looking for equipment, it took a lot of time.

A little later, Margelov again returned to this idea:

- I understand that it is difficult, but no one but us will do this.

Moreover, when - it was rather difficult to make a fundamental decision to conduct the first such experiment - Vasily Filippovich proposed his candidacy to participate in the first test of this kind, the Minister of Defense and the Chief of the General Staff were categorically against it.

However, even without this, there were legends about the courage of the commander. It manifested itself not only in a combat situation. At one of the festive receptions, where they could not help but invite the disgraced Marshal Georgy Konstantinovich Zhukov, Vasily Filippovich, stretched out at attention, congratulated him on the holiday. Zhukov, being the Minister of Defense, repeatedly observed the actions of the paratroopers in the exercises and expressed satisfaction with their high skill, admired their courage and courage. General Margelov was proud of the respect of such military leaders for himself, and therefore did not change his attitude towards honored people in favor of temporary workers and high-ranking sycophants.

The troops of "Uncle Sam" and the troops of "Uncle Vasya"

At the end of the spring of 1991, an official visit to the United States was made by USSR Minister of Defense Marshal of the Soviet Union D.T. Yazov.

Returning to Moscow, the minister met with officers of the Information Department of the Ministry of Defense.

Subsequently, reflecting on this meeting that lasted more than two hours in the hall where meetings of the Collegium of the Ministry of Defense usually took place, I came to the conclusion that communication with us, ordinary employees of the department, was primarily aimed at conveying to the general public through officers who, on duty, maintain contacts with the press, his very skeptical opinion about the merits of the military equipment of the richest power in the world and about the level of preparedness of the American "pros", which were then excitedly admired by the Ogonyok magazine and related publications.

During a visit to the military base at Fort Bragg, the Soviet Minister of Defense was invited to a demonstration exercise of one of the parachute battalions of the famous "devils' regiment" - the 82nd Airborne Division of the United States. This division became famous for participating in almost all post-war conflicts in which the United States intervened (Dominican Republic, Vietnam, Grenada, Panama, etc.). She was the first to land in the Middle East before the start of the anti-Iraq Desert Storm in 1990. In all operations, the "devils" were at the forefront of the attack as the most dexterous, courageous, invincible.

And it was these “understudies of Satan” who were instructed to surprise the Soviet minister with their class of training and fearlessness. They were parachuted in. Part of the battalion landed in combat vehicles. But the effect of the "show-off" turned out to be the opposite of what was expected, because Dmitry Timofeevich could not talk about what he saw in North Carolina without a bitter smile.

- What would I rate you for such a landing? - Asked, slyly narrowing his eyes, the Minister of Defense of the then Deputy Commander of the Airborne Forces for combat training, Lieutenant General E. N. Podkolzin, who was part of the Soviet military delegation.

“You should have torn off my head, Comrade Minister!” - Evgeny Nikolaevich minted.

It turns out that almost all American paratroopers thrown out of aircraft in combat vehicles received serious injuries and injuries. There were also those who died. After landing, more than half of the cars did not budge...

This is hard to believe, but even in the early 90s, the vaunted American professionals did not have the same equipment as ours and did not know the secrets of the safe landing of "winged infantry" units on equipment that were mastered in "Uncle Vasya's troops" (as fighters of the Airborne Forces called themselves, hinting at a special warmth of feelings for the commander) back in the 70s.

And it all began with the courageous decision of Margelov to put the responsibility of a pioneer on his shoulders. Then, in 1972, in the USSR, tests of the newly created Centaur system were in full swing - for landing people inside an airborne combat vehicle on parachute platforms. The experiments were risky, so they started on animals. Far from everything went smoothly: either the parachute canopy was torn, or the active deceleration engines did not work. One of the jumps even ended in the death of the dog Buran.

Something similar happened with Western testers of identical systems. True, they experimented on people there. A man sentenced to death was placed in a combat vehicle that was dropped from an airplane. It crashed, and for a long time the West considered it inexpedient to continue development work in this direction.

Despite the risk, Margelov believed in the possibility of creating safe systems for landing people on equipment and insisted on complicating tests. Since dog jumping went on normally in the future, he sought a transition to a new phase of R & D - with the participation of warriors. In early January 1973, he had a difficult conversation with the Minister of Defense of the USSR, Marshal of the Soviet Union A. A. Grechko.

- Do you understand, Vasily Filippovich, what you are going to, what you are risking? - Andrey Antonovich urged Margelov to abandon his plan.

“I understand perfectly well, that’s why I stand my ground,” answered the general. – And those who are ready for the experiment also understand everything perfectly.
On January 5, 1973, the historic leap took place. For the first time in the world, the crew was parachuted inside the BMD-1 on parachute-platform means. It included Major L. Zuev and Lieutenant A. Margelov - in the car next to an experienced officer was the youngest son of the commander, Alexander, at that time a young engineer of the scientific and technical committee of the Airborne Forces.

Only a very courageous person would dare to send his son to such a complex, unpredictable experiment. It was an act akin to the feat of Lieutenant General Nikolai Raevsky, when Kutuzov's favorite in 1812 near Saltanovka fearlessly led his young sons in front of the front of the battalions faltering from the French buckshot and with this amazing example breathed stamina into the discouraged grenadiers, held the position, deciding the outcome of the battle. Sacrificial heroism of this kind in world military history is a unique phenomenon.

- A combat vehicle was dropped from the AN-12, five domes were opened, - Alexander Vasilyevich Margelov, now an employee of the Ministry of Foreign Economic Relations, recalled the details of the unprecedented jump. - Of course, it is dangerous, but one thing reassured me: the system has been successfully used for more than one year. True, no people. Landed normally. In the summer of 1975, on the basis of the parachute regiment, which was then commanded by Major V. Achalov, Lieutenant Colonel L. Shcherbakov and I inside the BMD and four officers outside, in the joint landing cabin, jumped again ...

Vasily Filippovich was awarded the USSR State Prize for this bold innovation.

The Centaur was replaced (not least thanks to the commander of the Airborne Forces, who stubbornly argued in the highest party and government authorities of the country that a new method of delivering fighters and equipment to the target, its early development to enhance the mobility of the "winged infantry") soon came a new, more perfect system "Reactavr". The rate of decline on it was four times higher than on the Centaur. In psychophysical terms, it is correspondingly more difficult for a paratrooper (a deafening roar and roar, a flame escaping from jet nozzles is very close). On the other hand, the vulnerability to enemy fire and the time from the moment of being thrown out of the aircraft to bringing the BMD into combat position were sharply reduced.

From 1976 to 1991, the Reactavr system was used about 100 times, and always successfully. Year by year, from exercise to exercise, the "blue berets" gained experience in its application, polished their own skills at various stages of landing.

Since 1979, Vasily Filippovich was no longer with them, having surrendered the post of commander of the Airborne Forces and transferred to the Group of General Inspectors of the Ministry of Defense. Eleven years later, on March 4, 1990, he passed away. But the memory of Paratrooper number one, his precepts to the blue berets are imperishable.

The name of Army General V.F. Margelov is worn by the Ryazan Higher Command School of the Airborne Forces, the streets, squares and squares of St. Petersburg, Ryazan, Omsk, Pskov, Tula ... Monuments were erected to him in St. Petersburg, Ryazan, Pskov, Omsk, Tula, the Ukrainian cities of Dnepropetrovsk and Lvov, Belarusian Kostyukovichi.

Paratroopers, veterans of the Airborne Forces every year come to the monument of their commander at the Novodevichy cemetery to honor his memory.

But the main thing is that the spirit of Margelov is alive in the troops. The feat of the 6th Airborne Company of the 104th Guards Regiment of the 76th Pskov Division, in which Vasily Filippovich began his career in the Airborne Forces, is an eloquent confirmation of this. He is also in other achievements of the paratroopers of recent decades, in which the "winged infantry" covered itself with unfading glory.

August 2, 1930 was the birthday of the Airborne Troops of the country. Then, for the first time in world history, parachute landing was used at the exercises of the Moscow Military District, which were attended by diplomats from Western countries.

Since then, 72 years have passed. During this time, the "winged infantry" covered itself with unfading glory on the battlefields of the Great Patriotic War, showed excellent skill and courage in a number of large-scale exercises, local conflicts, in the mountains of Afghanistan, during the first and second campaigns in Chechnya, in Yugoslavia ... In the ranks of the landing troops grew up a whole galaxy of remarkable military leaders. Among them, the first of the first is the name of the legendary commander of the Airborne Forces, Hero of the Soviet Union, General of the Army Vasily Filippovich Margelov, who created the modern Airborne Forces.

"Commander of a large caliber"

On September 28, 1967, Izvestia reported on its pages: “It must be said that the paratroopers are warriors of boundless courage and courage. They never get lost, they always find a way out of a critical situation. The paratroopers are fluent in various modern weapons, they wield them with artistic skill, each fighter of the "winged infantry" knows how to fight one against a hundred.

During the days spent at the exercise (we are talking about the big autumn exercise of the Soviet Armed Forces "Dnepr" in 1968. Then the landing of thousands of airborne troops took only a few minutes. - Auth.), We had to see a lot of skillful actions not only of individual soldiers and officers, but also formations, units and their headquarters. But, perhaps, the strongest impression left on the Airborne Forces, which is headed by Colonel-General V. Margelov (after completing successful exercises, he was awarded the rank of General of the Army. - Auth.), And the pilots of the Military Transport Aviation of Air Marshal N. Skripko . Their soldiers showed filigree landing technique, high training and such courage and initiative that one can say about them: they worthily continue and increase the military glory of their fathers and older brothers - the paratroopers of the Great Patriotic War. The relay race of courage and valor is in good hands.”

...Recently, I read in one of the magazines that scientists who study people have studied the biographies of about 500 graduates of one of the Russian military institutes and have established a direct dependence of the choice of a military specialty on the date of birth. According to it, pundits are ready to predict whether a given person will be military or civilian. In a word, human destiny is predetermined from the day of birth. I don't know if you can believe it?

In any case, the future successor of the glorious dynasty of the defenders of the Fatherland Margelov, Vasily Filippovich, was born at the beginning of the last century, on December 27, 1908 (according to the old style), in the city of Yekaterinoslav (now Dnepropetrovsk). All went to his father, Philip Ivanovich, who was distinguished by enviable strength and article, a participant in the German war of 1914, St. George's Cavalier. Margelov Sr. fought skillfully and bravely. In one of the bayonet battles, for example, he personally destroyed up to a dozen enemy soldiers. After the end of the first imperialist, he served first in the Red Guard, then in the Red Army.













Why not in your place?



- Well, well ... How are you doing?



Patriarch of the Elite Troops

And Vasily was, like a father, tall and strong beyond his years. Before the army, he managed to work in a leather workshop, as a miner, and a forester. In 1928, on a Komsomol ticket, he was sent to the Workers 'and Peasants' Red Army. So he became a cadet of the United Belarusian Military School in Minsk. Only one stroke. At the beginning of 1931, the school command supported the initiative of the country's military schools to organize a ski crossing from the places of deployment to Moscow. One of the best skiers, foreman Margelov, was assigned to form a team. And the February transition from Minsk to Moscow took place. True, the skis turned into smooth boards, but the cadets, led by the course commander and foreman, survived. They arrived at their destination on time, without sickness and frostbite, about which the foreman reported to the People's Commissar of Defense and received from him a valuable gift - a "commander's" watch.

How useful then a thorough sports hardening was already for Captain Margelov, the commander of a separate reconnaissance ski battalion of a rifle regiment, which took part in the winter war with the Finns! His scouts, together with the battalion commander, made daring raids on enemy rear lines, set up ambushes, inflicting sensitive damage on the enemy.

He met the Great Patriotic War with the rank of major. At first, I had a chance to lead a separate disciplinary battalion. The penitentiaries doted on their commander. They loved him for his courage and justice. During the bombings, they covered him with their bodies.

On the outskirts of Leningrad, Vasily Margelov commanded the 1st special ski regiment of sailors of the Baltic Fleet, then the 218th regiment of the 80th rifle division ...

Becoming a commander, for all subsequent years, decades, Vasily Filippovich never changed his rule - always and in everything to be an example for subordinates. Somehow, at the end of the front-line spring of 1942, about two hundred experienced enemy warriors, having infiltrated through the defense sector of a neighboring regiment, went to the rear of the Margelovites. The regiment commander quickly gave the necessary orders to block and liquidate the fascists who had broken through. Without waiting for the approach of the reserves, he himself lay down behind the easel machine gun, which he masterfully owned. Well-aimed bursts mowed down about 80 people. The rest were destroyed and captured by a company of submachine gunners, a reconnaissance platoon and a commandant's platoon that arrived in time.

It was not for nothing that in the mornings, when his unit was on the defensive, Vasily Filippovich, after physical exercises, invariably fired from a machine gun, could cut the tops of trees, knock out his name on the target. After that - a leg in the stirrup and exercises in the wheelhouse. Indefatigable strength played in his iron muscles. In offensive battles, he personally raised battalions on the attack more than once. Until self-forgetfulness, he loved hand-to-hand combat and, if necessary, not knowing a sense of fear, fought desperately with the adversary in the forefront of his fighters, like his father in the first German war. Margelov did not like it if one of his subordinates, when asked about this or that soldier, took up the list of personnel. He said:

— Comrade Commander! Alexander Suvorov knew all the soldiers of his regiment not only by name, but also by name. After many years, he recognized and named the names of the soldiers who served with him. With paper knowledge of subordinates, it is impossible to predict how they will behave during the battle!
In those years, the commander wore a mustache and a small beard. In incomplete 33 years, they called him Batya.

“Our Batya is a commander of a large caliber,” the fighters spoke with respect and love about him.
And then there was Stalingrad. Here Vasily Filippovich commanded the 13th Guards Rifle Regiment. When, during the fierce, bloody battles in the regiment, the battalions became companies, and the companies became incomplete platoons, the regiment was withdrawn to replenish the Ryazan region. The regiment commander Margelov, his officers thoroughly took up the combat training of the personnel of the unit. Prepare for the upcoming battles in good conscience.
And for good reason. “Myshkova, a river in the Volgograd region, the left tributary of the Don, at the turn of which, during the Battle of Stalingrad from December 19 to 24, during the Kotelnikov operation of 1942, the troops of the 51st and 2nd Guards armies repelled the blow of a strong grouping of Nazi troops and thwarted plans of the fascist German command for the deblockade of the enemy troops encircled near Stalingrad. This is from the Military Encyclopedic Dictionary, 1983 edition. “It would not be an exaggeration to say that the battle on the banks of this obscure river (Myshkov) led to the crisis of the Third Reich, put an end to Hitler’s hopes for an empire and was a decisive link in the chain of events that determined the defeat of Germany.” And this quote is from the book of the German military historian General F. Mellenthin "Tank Battles 1939-1945".
Do you remember the book of the front-line writer Yuri Bondarev "Hot Snow"? Front-line soldiers, participants in those battles, believe that the author truly reflected the heroic and at the same time dramatic picture of those fierce battles on the tributary of the Don.
So, the Margelov regiment was part of the 3rd Guards Rifle Division of Major General K. Tsalikov, the 13th Guards Rifle Corps of Major General P. Chanchibadze,
2nd Guards Army Lieutenant General R. Malinovsky. And as you know, the guard can die, but never surrender to the enemy!
Before the battle of the Guards, Lieutenant Colonel Margelov said to his subordinates:
— Manstein has a lot of tanks. His calculation on the strength of a tank strike. The main thing is to knock out the tanks. Each of us must knock out one tank. Cut off the infantry, force them to cling to the ground and destroy them.
... And it began. Predatory arrows on the German headquarters maps materialized into endless waves of enemy armor and fire, methodically rolling on the positions of our troops, shell explosions, the whistle of thousands of fragments looking for their prey. Armadas of German bombers were howling from the sky black with soot, trying with exemplary German pedantry and accuracy to deliver a multi-ton deadly load to the location of the guards. The Germans understood that if their monstrous armored fist got stuck in defense, then the consequences would be irreversible. More and more forces were thrown into battle. They tried to take our defending units, formations into tank pincers.
Margelov was where a threatening situation was created, where his battalion commanders, on their own, could not hold back the onslaught of the enemy.

Guards Major General Chanchibadze:

- Margelov, how many of you do you need to look for? Where are you sitting now?
- I am not sitting. I command from the command post of the battalion commander-2!
Why not in your place?
“My place is here now, comrade number one!”
- I ask again, where is your mesto ?!
I am in command of the regiment. My place is where my regiment needs me!
- Well, well ... How are you doing?
— The regiment stands on its lines. Not going to give them up.

Embittered by failures, enraged by the stubbornness, skill and courage of the Soviet soldiers, the enemy furiously dug the ground with steel tracks, breaking through. But all the efforts of the combined army group "Goth" were in vain, it was defeated and forced to retreat.

The further combat path of Vasily Filippovich Margelov and his units lay already to the west. In the direction of Rostov-on-Don, the breakthrough of the impregnable Mius Front, the liberation of the Donbass, the crossing of the Dnieper, for which the division commander, Colonel Vasily Margelov, was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union. Pushing off with their foot from the Stalingrad land, the Margelovites, as Vladimir Vysotsky sang, "the axis of the earth ... moved without a lever, changing the direction of the blow!"
The soldiers of his 49th division brought freedom to the inhabitants of Nikolaev, Odessa, distinguished themselves during the Iasi-Kishinev operation, entered Romania, Bulgaria on the shoulders of the enemy, successfully fought in Yugoslavia, took Budapest and Vienna. The unit of the Guards, Major General Vasily Margelov, ended the war on May 12, 1945 with the brilliant bloodless capture of the selected German SS divisions "Dead Head", "Great Germany", "1st SS Police Division". What is not the plot for a full-length feature film?
During the Victory Parade on Red Square in Moscow on June 24, 1945, the combat general led one of the battalions of the combined regiment of the 2nd Ukrainian Front.

Patriarch of the Elite Troops

During the Great Patriotic War, the Airborne Troops fought heroically at all its stages. True, the war found the Airborne Forces at the stage of reorganizing brigades into corps. The formations and units of the winged infantry were manned, but did not have time to fully receive military equipment. From the very first days of the war, paratroopers fought bravely at the front along with soldiers of other branches of the armed forces, and offered heroic resistance to the well-oiled Nazi machine. In the initial period, they showed examples of courage and perseverance in the Baltic States, Belarus and Ukraine, near Moscow. Soviet paratroopers participated in fierce battles for the Caucasus, in the Battle of Stalingrad (remember the House of Paratrooper Sergeant Pavlov), smashed the enemy on the Kursk Bulge ... They were a formidable force at the final stage of the war.

Where to use well-trained, cohesive and fearless commanders and fighters of airborne formations and units in the war was decided at the very top, at the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command. Sometimes they were the lifesaver of the high command, which saved the situation at the most decisive or tragic moment. The paratroopers, who were not accustomed to waiting for the weather by the sea, always showed initiative, ingenuity, and onslaught.
Therefore, taking into account the rich front-line experience and the prospects for the development of this type of troops, the Airborne Forces were withdrawn from the Air Force in 1946. They began to report directly to the Minister of Defense of the Soviet Union. At the same time, the post of commander of the Airborne Forces was reintroduced. In April of the same year, he was appointed Colonel-General V. Glagolev. After the end of the Great Patriotic War, General Margelov was sent to study. For two intense years, under the supervision of experienced teachers, he studied the intricacies of operational art at the Academy of the General Staff (in those years - the Higher Military Academy named after K.E. Voroshilov). After graduation, he received an unexpected proposal from the Minister of the Armed Forces of the USSR and Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers N. Bulganin - to take command of the Pskov Airborne Division. They say that it was not without the recommendation of Marshal of the Soviet Union Rodion Yakovlevich Malinovsky, at that time the commander-in-chief of the troops of the Far East, the commander of the troops of the Far Eastern Military District. He knew Margelov well from his front-line affairs. And at that time, the Airborne Forces needed young generals with combat experience. Vasily Filippovich always made decisions promptly. And this time he did not force himself to be persuaded. A military man to the marrow of his bones, he understood the importance of the mobile Airborne Forces in the future. Yes, and fearless officers and paratroopers - he repeatedly admitted this to his relatives - reminded him of the front-line years when he commanded a naval regiment in the Baltic Fleet. Not without reason later, when General Margelov became commander of the Airborne Forces, he introduced uniform blue berets and vests with stripes of the color of the sky and tireless sea waves.

Working in his usual mode - day and night - a day away, General Margelov quickly ensured that his unit became one of the best in the landing troops. In 1950, he was appointed commander of the airborne corps in the Far East, and in 1954, Lieutenant General Vasily Filippovich Margelov became commander of the Airborne Forces.
From Margelov's brochure "Airborne Troops", published by the publishing house of the Znanie society a quarter of a century ago: And I still never cease to be amazed at how a warrior transforms after the first jump. And on the ground, he walks proudly, and his shoulders are widely deployed, and there is something unusual in his eyes ... Still: he made a parachute jump!
To understand this feeling, you must stand at the open hatch of the aircraft over a hundred-meter abyss, feel the chill under your heart in front of this incomprehensible height, and decisively step into the abyss as soon as the command: “Let's go!”
Then there will be many more difficult jumps - with weapons, day and night, from high-speed military transport aircraft. But the first jump will never be forgotten. A paratrooper, a strong-willed and courageous person, begins with him.
When Vasily Filippovich retrained from an infantry commander to an airborne division commander, he was not even forty. How did Margelov start? From skydiving. He was not advised to jump, after all, nine wounds, age ... During his service in the Airborne Forces, he made more than 60 jumps. The last of them at the age of 65. In the year of the 90th anniversary of the birth of General of the Army Margelov, “Red Star” in the article “Legend and Glory of the Landing Forces” wrote about him: “Being the eighth commander of the Airborne Forces, he nevertheless earned himself a respectful reputation in these troops as the patriarch of the landing business. During his command of the Airborne Forces, five ministers of defense were replaced in the country, and Margelov remained indispensable and irreplaceable. Almost all of his predecessors have been forgotten, and the name of Margelov is still on everyone's lips today.
“Oh, how difficult it is to cross the Rubicon so that a surname becomes a name,” the poet remarked. Margelov crossed such a Rubicon. (He made his branch of the armed forces elite.) Having quickly and energetically studied airborne business, military air technology and military transport aviation, having shown outstanding organizational skills, he became an outstanding military leader who did an extraordinary amount for the development and improvement of the Airborne Forces, for the growth of their prestige and popularity in the country, in order to instill love for this elite branch of the military among the draft youth. Despite the enormous physical and psychological stress of the airborne service, young guys dream of the Airborne Forces, as they say, they sleep and see themselves as paratroopers. And in the country's only forge of officer landing personnel - the Ryazan Higher Command School twice Red Banner named after General of the Army V.F. Margelov, recently transformed into the Institute of the Airborne Forces, the competition is 14 people per place. How many military and civilian universities can envy such popularity! And all this was laid down under Margelov ... "
The Hero of Russia, Lieutenant-General of the Reserve Leonid Shcherbakov, recalls:
- In the seventies of the last century, Army General Vasily Filippovich Margelov set himself the difficult task of creating highly mobile, modern Airborne Troops in the Armed Forces of the country. A rapid rearmament began in the Airborne Forces, airborne combat vehicles (BMD) arrived, on their basis reconnaissance, communications and control equipment, self-propelled artillery, anti-tank systems, engineering equipment ... Margelov and his deputies, heads of services and departments were frequent guests at factories, training grounds, in training centers. The paratroopers daily "disturbed" the ministries of defense and the defense industry. Ultimately, this culminated in the creation of the best landing equipment in the world.
After graduating from the Academy of Armored Forces in 1968, I was assigned to a test job at the Research Institute of Armored Vehicles in Kubinka. I had a chance to test many samples at the test sites of Transbaikalia, Central Asia, Belarus and in the middle of nowhere. Somehow we were instructed to test the new equipment of the Airborne Forces. I worked with colleagues day and night, in various modes, sometimes prohibitive for technology and people.
The final stage is military trials in the Baltics. And here the divisional commander, catching my white envy of the paratroopers, offered to jump with a parachute after the combat vehicle.
Passed pre-jump training. Take off early in the morning. Climb. Everything was going well: the BMD got out of the plane and fell into the abyss. The crew followed. A sudden strong wind blew us to the boulders. The joyful feeling of flying under the dome ended with pain in the left leg - a fracture in two places.
Gypsum, autographs of paratroopers on it, crutches. In this form, he appeared before the commander of the Airborne Forces.
- Well, did you jump? Margelov asked me.
- Jumped, comrade commander.
- I'm taking you to the landing. I need such ones, - Vasily Filippovich made a decision.
At that time, there was an acute issue of reducing the time for bringing airborne units to combat readiness after landing. The old landing method - military equipment was thrown from one aircraft, crews from another - is pretty outdated.
After all, the spread on the landing area was large, sometimes reaching five kilometers. While the crews were looking for their equipment, time was running out like water in the sand.
Therefore, the commander of the Airborne Forces decided that the crew should be parachuted along with the combat vehicle. This was not the case in any army in the world! But this was not an argument for Vasily Filippovich, who believed that there were no impossible tasks for the landing force.
In August 1975, after the landing of equipment with dummies, I, as a driver, together with the son of the commander Alexander Margelov, were entrusted with testing the joint landing complex. They named him "Centaur". The combat vehicle was mounted on a platform, behind it was attached an open vehicle for crew members with their own parachutes. Without means of rescue inside the BMD, testers were located on special, simplified space chairs for astronauts. We have completed the task. And this was a major step towards a more complex experiment. Together with the son of the commander, Alexander Margelov, we tested a parachute-reactive system, which was already called "Reaktavr". The system was located at the stern of the BMD and went to the take-off airfield with it. She had only one dome instead of five. At the same time, the height and speed of landing decreased, but the landing accuracy increased. There are many advantages, but the main disadvantage is huge overloads.
In January 1976, near Pskov, for the first time in world and domestic practice, this “reactive” landing was carried out with a huge risk to life, without personal means of rescue.
"And what happened next?" the discerning reader will ask. And then in each airborne regiment, in winter and summer, crews landed inside combat vehicles on parachute and parachute-rocket systems, which became perfect and reliable. In 1998, again near Pskov, a crew of seven people in standard seats descended from the skies inside the then newest BMD-3.
For the feat of the seventies, twenty years later, Alexander Margelov and I were awarded the title of Hero of Russia.
I will add that it was under General of the Army Margelov that it became a common practice to raise an airborne assault, say, in Pskov, make a long flight and land near Fergana, Kirovabad or in Mongolia. It is not without reason that one of the most popular decodings of the abbreviation of the Airborne Forces is “Uncle Vasya’s Troops”.

In the ranks - sons and grandchildren


Recalls retired Major General Gennady Margelov:
- During the war, until 1944, I lived with my grandparents - the parents of my father Vasily Filippovich Margelov. During the evacuation, a junior sergeant once came to us. I still remember the last name - Ivanov. Well, he won me over with his stories about serving in his father's division. I wasn't even thirteen then. He was going to return to the unit. He left the house in the morning, and I was with him, as if to school. Himself in the other direction ... and - to the station. We got on the train and went. And so he fled at the age of 12 from the fifth grade to the front. We arrived at the division. Father did not know that I had arrived. We met face to face and did not recognize each other. It is not surprising, because they had seen each other before the Finnish War, when he wore one "sleeper" in his buttonhole. From the first days of the Great Patriotic War he was at the front. There was no time for vacation.

And so I ended up in my father's division near Kherson in the Kopani region. It was then the end of February, in some places there was still snow. Mud. I ran away from home in holey felt boots. So he caught a cold, his whole face was in boils, he even saw poorly. I ended up in a medical battalion, treated myself.
And then the dad calls: “Well, did you rest in the medical battalion?” Me: "That's right!" - "Then go to study in the training battalion."
I arrived, as expected, reported to the battalion commander. There were three companies in the battalion: two rifle companies and a company of heavy weapons. So they sent me to a platoon of anti-tank rifles.
Well, PTR is PTR. We had guns of two systems: Degtyarev and Simonov. I got Simon's. The Germans were not as afraid as this gun: the soldiers were healthy, and I was very small, I thought that the recoil after the shot would throw me somewhere. Later, when they were already put into combat formation and the foreman first gave me a rifle, it turned out that it was longer than me. Replaced with a short cavalry carbine.
During the fighting in Odessa, two comrades and I (one was a year older, the other a year younger, the sons of the division chief of staff, Colonel V.F. Shubin) left with battalion scouts to beat the Germans on the streets of the city. What is a fight in the city? Sometimes you don’t understand where yours are and where your enemies are. In general, I was alone ... In one of the houses I came across a wine cellar. And suddenly, out of nowhere, a hefty German with a machine gun! Of course, he would have “mowed” me with a burst at the moment, yes, apparently, he got a Fritz of wine from the barrels, which is why he hesitated. I shot him with my carbine. But for my sortie I received from my father three days in a guardhouse, because it was forbidden for me to arbitrarily go to the front line. He served, however, only a day. The Shubin brothers received combat medals each. Always in our family, the demand from the Margelovs was strict.
When the division was already beyond the old Romanian border, in the town of Chobruchi, the commander called me and showed me the magazine "Red Army" (which later became the "Soviet Warrior"). And there, on the cover, there is a photo of the Suvorovites of the Novocherkassk SVU on the stairs at the main entrance. So beautiful!..
- Well, are you going to study? - asked the battalion commander.
“I’ll go,” I answered, fascinated looking at the photo, not knowing that the battalion commander was following the order of the division commander.
This is how the Great Patriotic War ended for me, the guards of Private Gennady Margelov, and the service in the training battalion of the 144th Guards Rifle Regiment, Colonel A.G. Lubenchenko, a service that was considered the most honorable even for adult soldiers, since the training battalion trained sergeants and was the last reserve of the division commander. Where it was difficult, the training battalion entered the battle.
I met Victory Day already in the Tambov SVU. Being a Suvorovite, he made several parachute jumps in Pskov in the 76th Airborne Division, commanded by his father, Major General V.F. Margelov. Moreover, the first two jumps - without the knowledge of the father. The third was in the presence of his father and the deputy commander of the corps for airborne training. After landing, I reported to the deputy commander: “Suvorovets Margelov made another, third jump. The materiel worked perfectly, I feel good!” My father, who was preparing to hand me the badge of a first-class parachutist, was extremely surprised and even said a couple of “warm” words. However, he soon came to terms with this “misconduct” and proudly said that his son was growing up as a real paratrooper.
After graduating from SVU in 1950, I became a cadet at the Ryazan Infantry School, after graduating from which I was sent to the Airborne Forces of the Far Eastern District.
In the airborne troops, he went from platoon commander to chief of staff of the 44th training airborne division. He jumped with a parachute, as I reported at the interview for admission to the Academy of the General Staff, "from Berlin to Sakhalin." There were no more questions.
After graduating from the academy, he was appointed commander of the 26th motorized rifle division, which was located in the city of Gusev. Since 1976, he served in Transbaikalia as First Deputy Commander of the 29th Combined Arms Army. He celebrated his fiftieth birthday in the position of head of the Military twice Red Banner Institute of Physical Culture in Leningrad. He graduated from the service as a senior lecturer in the Department of Operational Art of the Academy of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the USSR.
The second son of Vasily Filippovich, Anatoly, also devoted his whole life to protecting the Motherland. A graduate of the Taganrog Radio Engineering Institute, he worked in the defense industry for decades. A doctor of technical sciences in his thirties did a lot to develop new types of weapons. On account of the scientist more than two hundred inventions. When meeting, he likes to emphasize:
- Private reserve, Professor Margelov.
The deputy director of the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service, Colonel-General Vitaly Margelov, recalls:
- After the evacuation, together with my mother and brother Anatoly, we lived in Taganrog. I still remember well how in 1945 we went with Tolik to the Oktyabr cinema, which was next to our house. And there, in the documentary chronicle, they show the Victory Parade. For us boys, it's a breathtaking sight. Marshals Zhukov and Rokossovsky on white horses. On the podium of the Lenin Mausoleum, Stalin himself. The front-line generals, officers, soldiers are marching in front, military orders and medals sparkle on their uniforms ... You can’t take your eyes off. And suddenly I see my father in the front columns. From delight as I will shout to the whole hall:
- Dad, dad...
The hushed spectators perked up. Everyone began to look with great curiosity who was making noise. Since then, the ushers began to let my brother and me into the cinema for free.
For the first time in a general's uniform, my father saw me at his birthday party. I was delighted, of course, with my career growth, but I tried not to show it. When we were left alone, he asked me about the service, gave a number of "diplomatic" advice from his rich practice.
There is such a tradition in our Margelov family, inherited from our father: do not spoil your sons, do not patronize them and respect their life choices.
... The younger twin brothers Margelov, Alexander and Vasily, were born on October 21 in the victorious 1945. Our newspaper wrote many times about the Hero of Russia, reserve colonel Alexander Margelov, who served in the landing troops. About his courage and fearlessness, shown during the test of the Reaktavr. After completing his service, he remained faithful to the Airborne Forces and the memory of his legendary father. In his apartment with his brother Vasily, he opened a home office-museum of Army General Vasily Filippovich Margelov.
“I note that the gift of the current owner of the Arbat apartment (Alexander Vasilyevich lives with his family in his father’s apartment) is not only military-technical, but also artistic. No wonder the house is full of books on various fields of knowledge. He called the first descent system inside the BMD on a multi-dome parachute "Centaur" - for he noticed that when the car moves in a stowed position, the driver is visible to the waist, resembling a mythical creature, only in a modern version, ”wrote in his article“ Military -home museum" Petr Palamarchuk, published in 1995 in the magazine "Rodina". Since then, the museum has been visited by over a thousand people, among whom were prominent statesmen, politicians of our country, near and far abroad. Delighted by the exhibits they saw, they left their entries in the visitor's book.
During his life, Alexander Margelov performed many deeds worthy of respect. Among them is the creation of the documentary book "General of the Army Margelov", which was published in Moscow in 1998. He prepared the next edition of the book, which is due to be published this fall, in collaboration with his brother Vasily, a reserve major, an international journalist who currently works as the first deputy director of the Directorate of International Relations of the Voice of Russia RGC. By the way, Vasily's son, reserve junior sergeant Vasily Margelov, named after his grandfather, served urgently in the Airborne Forces.
It should be noted that all the sons of Vasily Filippovich jumped with a parachute and proudly wear landing vests.
Army General Margelov has many grandchildren, there are already great-grandchildren who continue and are preparing to continue the family traditions - to serve the Motherland with dignity. The eldest of them, Mikhail, son of Colonel General Vitaly Vasilievich Margelov, Chairman of the Federation Council Committee on International Affairs, Deputy Head of the delegation of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.
Mikhail graduated from the Faculty of History and Philology of the Institute of Asian and African Countries at Moscow State University named after M.V. Lomonosov. He is fluent in English and Arabic, was the head of the Office of the President of the Russian Federation for Public Relations.

The same faculty was successfully graduated in 1970 by his uncle, Vasily Vasilyevich.
Mikhail's brother, Vladimir, served in the border troops ...
* * *
For almost a quarter of a century, Vasily Filippovich Margelov commanded the Airborne Forces. Many generations of winged guards grew up on his example of selfless service to the Fatherland. The Ryazan Institute of the Airborne Forces, the streets of Omsk, Pskov and Tula bear his name. Monuments were erected to him in Ryazan, Omsk, Dnepropetrovsk, Tula. Officers and paratroopers, veterans of the Airborne Forces every year come to the monument to their commander at the Novodevichy cemetery in Moscow to pay tribute to his memory.
During the Great Patriotic War, a song was composed in the division of General Margelov. Here is one of her verses:
The song praises the Falcon
Brave and daring...
Is it close, is it far
Margelov's regiments marched.
They are still going through life, his regiments, in the ranks of which are his sons, grandchildren, great-grandchildren and tens, hundreds of thousands of people who cherish in their hearts the memory of him, the creator of the modern Airborne Forces.

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December 27, 1908 was born Commander of the Airborne Forces, General Vasily Margelov.

"Demobilization Album" is a special thing. Those who have served in the military know that it takes months to create this kind of masterpiece. Photos with colleagues who would not have been approved by the command, funny pictures, all kinds of curlicues and decorations - the soldiers spare neither time nor effort to prepare such beauty. Portraits of fathers-commanders are usually not placed in the "demobilization album". But the Soviet paratroopers, preparing albums for "demobilization", knocked down to get a good dress photo of the general with all the regalia. This general was Vasily Filippovich Margelov, the legendary "Uncle Vasya", a man whose name is inextricably linked with the landing.

"Uncle Vasya's troops" - this is how the paratroopers themselves decipher the abbreviation of the Airborne Forces.

General Margelov was not the founder of the landing troops. He made his first parachute jump when he was 40 years old. But it was he who made the paratroopers a real army elite.

Markelov — Margelov

Vasily Margelov was born on December 27, 1908 in Yekaterinoslav, in a working class family. His real name is "Markelov" - he became Margelov due to an error in the documents.

Before being drafted into the army, Vasya Margelov managed to graduate from the school of rural youth, work as a loader, carpenter, apprentice in a leather workshop, horse-racer, forester.

But the main business of life for Margelov was military service. After the call, he was sent to study at the United Belarusian Military School (OBVSh) named after. CEC of the BSSR in Minsk. After graduating in 1931, Vasily Margelov was appointed commander of a machine-gun platoon of the regimental school of the 99th rifle regiment of the 33rd Belarusian rifle division.

Swedish "trophy"

During the Polish campaign of the Red Army in 1939, he headed the reconnaissance of the 8th Infantry Division. But the real baptism of fire for Margelov was the Soviet-Finnish war of 1939-1940, during which he commanded a separate reconnaissance ski battalion of the 596th rifle regiment of the 122nd division.

It was hard for the Soviet troops to fight against the "flying" units of Finnish skiers. But Margelov's reconnaissance battalion was an exception - he himself could instill fear in the Finns. During one of the operations, his fighters captured the officers of the Swedish General Staff. Sweden was not officially at war with the USSR, but actively helped the Finns with volunteers and materials. Here the Swedish officers "helped".

"Comrade Captain 3rd Rank"

Before the Great Patriotic War, Margelov held an unusual position - he commanded the 15th Separate Disciplinary Battalion. The first "disbats" in the USSR were formed in 1940, and at first they were serving sentences for ordinary and junior commanding officers, sentenced by a military tribunal to imprisonment for a term of six months to two years for unauthorized absences.

At the very beginning of the war, Vasily Margelov commanded the 3rd Infantry Regiment of the 1st Motorized Rifle Division, the backbone of which was made up of former "disbats".

In November 1941, Major Margelov was appointed commander of the 1st Special Ski Regiment of sailors of the Baltic Fleet. Sailors are a special caste, and they sometimes look askance at the "land" officers. But Margelov's subordinates were imbued with respect, calling him the naval equivalent of the title - "comrade captain of the 3rd rank." According to legend, it was then that the future commander of the Airborne Forces became attached to the soul of the vests, which were later introduced into the uniforms of the paratroopers.

Vasily Margelov, 1963. Source: Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation

During the Great Patriotic War, Vasily Margelov was commander of a rifle regiment, chief of staff and deputy commander of a rifle division. In 1944, he assumed the post of commander of the 49th Guards Rifle Division of the 28th Army of the 3rd Ukrainian Front.

For the crossing of the Dnieper and the liberation of Kherson, the divisional commander was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union. In September 1944, Colonel Margelov was awarded the rank of Major General.

It can be found in the photographs of the Victory Parade - Vasily Margelov commanded a combined regiment of the 2nd Ukrainian Front.

After the war, he graduated from the Voroshilov Higher Military Academy, and in 1948 became commander of the 76th Guards Chernihiv Red Banner Airborne Division.

Paratrooper is cool

Margelov by this time had a rich and glorious biography behind him, the landing force had 18 years of history. But that was a new starting point.

The landing units of the 1940s could solve a rather limited range of tasks. The available transport aircraft made it possible to drop relatively small groups of paratroopers with small arms into the indicated areas. The paratroopers were required to seize a bridgehead, terrify behind enemy lines and fight until the main forces approach, while suffering significant losses.

General Margelov believed that the paratroopers were capable of solving much more serious tasks. This requires good training and appropriate technical equipment.

In late Soviet times, when the word “paratrooper” was used, citizens imagined a tough man in camouflage uniform, breaking bricks with the edge of his palm and mastering hand-to-hand combat techniques no worse than a Japanese ninja. Such skills among the Soviet paratroopers appeared thanks to the training system introduced by General Margelov.

Technique for "winged infantry"

He was not afraid of borrowing. Once, having seen a rugby game in the cinema, known for tough power moves, Margelov ordered it to be included in the physical training complex for paratroopers.

In 1954, all the Airborne Forces were given under the command of the innovator. And General Margelov began to change the picture as a whole.

He haunted weapons designers, demanding that modifications of automatic weapons be created taking into account the specifics of the landing force. He sought combat vehicles from tank builders, which would be “sharpened” for “winged infantry”. Aircraft designers especially got it - Margelov demanded from them transport workers who could parachute entire regiments along with equipment within a few minutes.

The most surprising thing is that Vasily Margelov received all this - machine guns with a folding butt, airborne combat vehicles (do not try to call BMD a tank with paratroopers), An-12, An-22 and Il-76 transport aircraft.

Thanks to the appearance of parachute platforms, it became possible to parachute artillery, engineering equipment and much more along with the fighters. But Margelov wanted more.

Paratroopers at the exercises "Dvina". Photo for memory with the commander of the Airborne Forces Vasily Margelov (center). 1970 Photo: RIA Novosti / Lev Polikashin

"First Cosmonaut of the Airborne Forces"

“If armored vehicles land far from the soldiers, what is the use of it,” the general reasoned, “It is necessary that the vehicles go into battle in a minute. And this means that they need to be parachuted along with the crews.

For a long time, this thought seemed crazy. Engineers did not guarantee the survival of the fighters. But the commander of the Airborne Forces got his way.

On January 5, 1973, a BMD-1 with two crew members in the cockpit took place at the Slobodka airborne parachute track near Tula. One of the testers was senior lieutenant Alexander Margelov- The commander's son. General Margelov monitored the operation from the command post. A pistol lay next to him - in case of failure and the death of his subordinates, the commander of the Airborne Forces was going to pass judgment on himself. But the landing was successful.

Subsequently, Margelov Jr. will be called "the first cosmonaut of the Airborne Forces." Twenty years later, for participation in the tests, he will be awarded the title of Hero of Russia.

“Fly agarics don’t show me anymore!”

Thanks to Vasily Margelov, the Airborne Forces have turned into an army elite, into a powerful shock fist that they have to reckon with all over the world. In a matter of hours, thousands of fighters and hundreds of armored vehicles can be deployed over vast distances, and immediately begin to solve problems of any complexity.

Even in the Hollywood action films of the Cold War era, paratroopers have become a symbol of the "red threat".

The number of legends about General Margelov himself is such that it is already impossible to understand them - where is the truth, and where is a beautiful fiction.

They say that initially the paratroopers were allowed to wear crimson berets, the same as, for example, in Britain. Margelov, having once looked at the passage of his fighters in this form, said: “Don’t show me fly agarics again!”. As a result, the commander achieved the introduction of blue berets.

In the 1970s, filmmakers were making a film about the paratroopers, Blue Lightning. The director with a film crew came to the training ground to look at how the soldiers of the Airborne Forces are training. Naturally, the creator of the picture did not miss the opportunity to consult with General Margelov, who was also present there. The commander said: "You show me a paratrooper in the film in such a way that any woman on the street would give him!". After these words, one of the ladies who were part of the film crew, not accustomed to such directness, fainted.

Vasily Margelov bypasses the formation of paratroopers. A photo: Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation

Indisputable authority

Vasily Margelov left the post of commander of the Airborne Forces in January 1979, at the age of 70. But for the Soviet paratroopers, Vasily Filippovich remained the main person, guru, indisputable authority.

He died in March 1990, without seeing the collapse of the USSR and the collapse of the Airborne Forces he created.

Traditions are strong. General Margelov is honored today not only in Russia, but also in all countries of the post-Soviet space. Even in Ukraine, where they remember that "Uncle Vasya" was born in this republic.

Vasily Filippovich Margelov(Ukrainian Vasil Pilipovich Margelov, Belarusian Vasil Pilipavich Margelav, December 27, 1908 (January 9, 1909, new style), Yekaterinoslav, Russian Empire - March 4, 1990, Moscow) - Soviet military leader, commander of the airborne troops in 1954-1959 and 1961-1979, Hero of the Soviet Union (1944), laureate of the State Prize of the USSR.
The author and initiator of the creation of technical means of the Airborne Forces and methods of using units and formations of the airborne troops, many of which personify the image of the Airborne Forces of the USSR Armed Forces and the Russian Armed Forces, which currently exists. Among the people related to these troops, he is considered Paratrooper No. 1.

Biography

The legendary commander of the Airborne Forces, "paratrooper number 1" was born on December 27 (January 9), 1908 in Yekaterinoslav (now Dnepropetrovsk). Father Philip Ivanovich Markelov is a metallurgical worker. Margelov “received” his surname because of a mistake made by an official in his party card - his surname was written down with a “g”. Mother Agafya Stepanovna.

In 1913, the Margelov family returned to the homeland of Philip Ivanovich - to the town of Kostyukovichi, Klimovichi district (Mogilev province). The mother of VF Margelov, Agafya Stepanovna, was from the neighboring Bobruisk district. According to some information, VF Margelov graduated from the parochial school (TsPSh) in 1921. As a teenager, he worked as a loader and carpenter. In the same year, he entered a leather workshop as an apprentice, and soon became an assistant master. In 1923, he entered the local Hliboprodukt as a laborer. There is information that he graduated from the school of rural youth, and worked as a forwarder for the delivery of postal items on the Kostyukovichi-Khotimsk line.

Since 1924 he worked in Yekaterinoslav at the mine named after. M. I. Kalinin as a laborer, then as a horse-racer.
In 1925 he was sent back to Belarus as a forester in the timber industry. He worked in Kostyukovichi, in 1927 he became chairman of the working committee of the timber industry, was elected to the local Council.

Service

In September 1928, Margelov was drafted into the Workers 'and Peasants' Red Army and, on a Komsomol voucher, was sent to study as a red commander at the Joint Belarusian Military School (OBVSh) named after the Central Executive Committee of the BSSR in Minsk.
Cadet Margelov from the first months of study was among the excellent students in fire, tactical and physical training. Was enrolled in a group of snipers. He enjoyed well-deserved prestige among his schoolmates, was distinguished by zeal in his studies. From the second year he was appointed foreman of a machine-gun company. After some time, his company became one of the foremost in both combat and physical training.

At the beginning of 1931, the school command supported the initiative of the country's military schools - to organize a ski crossing from the places of deployment to Moscow. One of the best skiers, foreman Margelov, was assigned to form a team. And the February transition Minsk - Moscow took place. True, the skis turned into smooth boards, but the cadets, led by the course commander and foreman, survived. They arrived at their destination on time, without sickness and frostbite, about which the foreman reported to the people's commissar of defense and received from him a valuable gift - a "commander's" watch.

In April 1931 - graduated from the Minsk Military School (the former United Belarusian Military School (OBVSh) named after the Central Executive Committee of the BSSR) "first class" ("with honors"). Appointed commander of a machine-gun platoon of the regimental school of the 99th rifle regiment of the 33rd rifle division (Mogilev). From the first days of command of a platoon, he established himself as a competent, strong-willed and demanding leader. After some time, he became a platoon commander of a regimental school in which junior commanders of the Red Army were trained.

In May 1936 he was appointed commander of a machine gun company. Within the walls of the school, he formed as a military teacher, taught classes in firearms, physical training and tactics.

From October 25, 1938 - Captain Margelov commanded the 2nd battalion of the 23rd rifle regiment of the 8th rifle division named after. F. E. Dzerzhinsky of the Belarusian Special Military District. He headed the reconnaissance of the 8th Infantry Division, being the chief of the 2nd division of the division headquarters.

From October 1939 - battalion commander.

In the Soviet-Finnish war of 1940, Major Margelov was the commander of the Separate reconnaissance ski battalion of the 596th rifle regiment of the 122nd division. His battalion made daring raids on enemy rear lines, set up ambushes, causing great damage to the enemy. In one of the raids, they even managed to capture a group of officers of the Swedish General Staff, which gave grounds for the Soviet Government to make a diplomatic demarche about the actual participation of the supposedly neutral Scandinavian state in the hostilities on the side of the Finns. This step had a sobering effect on the Swedish king and his cabinet: Stockholm did not dare to send its soldiers into the snows of Karelia.

The experience of ski raids on enemy rear lines was remembered in the late autumn of 1941 in besieged Leningrad. Major V. Margelov was assigned to lead the First Special Ski Regiment of sailors of the Red Banner Baltic Fleet formed from volunteers.

1941st. Soldiers of the Wehrmacht march through the cities and villages of the Soviet Union. The enemy is on the outskirts of Moscow and Leningrad. Vasily Filippovich is fighting on the Volkhov front near the "northern capital". Margelov was appointed to command a battalion of "penalty men", most of whom had a criminal past.

At the beginning, they didn’t understand normally, but after cuffs and cracks, they began to listen to the commander. And when they felt his care on themselves, they saw how he sheds blood on an equal basis with them, they respected him and loved him with all his heart. It used to happen that several people covered their commander at once during an artillery shelling. God forbid, to be hooked by a fragment!

Later, he received command of a regiment formed from the sailors of the Baltic Fleet. The Marines received the news of the appointment of an "infantry" officer to the post of commander of the regiment with caution and surprise. Already in battles, joint work and sweat, they learned what kind of person he was. Learned and forever soul attached.

Seeing with what trepidation the sailors treat their traditions and uniforms, Vasily Filippovich allowed his subordinates to keep their naval uniforms. On the march, drill review, preparation of defensive positions, the Red Navy wore field uniforms, but before the attack ...

Throwing off their field uniforms on the snow and remaining in the same vests and navy trousers - bell-bottoms, famously breaking their peakless caps, they silently advanced with unfolded chains on the firing positions of the Germans. Breaking through the wall of fire, tearing the vests on the “thorn” of the barriers, shouting “Polundra!” they threw machine-gun "nests" with grenades, sowed death on fascist positions with a bayonet and a butt, a knife and hands. "Black Death", "sea devils", as soon as the Nazis did not call them.

And under the command of Margelov, the Marines inflicted twice as much damage on the invaders, had a strong moral and psychological impact on the personnel of the German units. Panic began when the Nazis learned that Margelov's sailors had been transferred to their site. It is in memory of the unparalleled heroism and courage of his marines, in tribute to their respect for their military symbols, that Vasily Filippovich would later introduce a new element of the “vest” uniform for fighters of another fleet - the air fleet.

With great regret and displeasure, the Baltics learned that their commander was being assigned to another regiment, a rifle regiment, near Stalingrad. But an order is an order. And some time later, Vasily Filippovich was already in command of a division, which crushed the Nazi units with great success.

Forcing a water barrier, especially such as the Dnieper River, is not an easy task. And if we add to this the reinforced defense of the enemy with a well-established fire system, then it is practically impossible. But it is necessary to force: an order. Vasily Filippovich could not thoughtlessly throw his subordinates forward to complete the task. He was not such a person, he did not command fools. He always gave orders properly and kept people firmly in subjection. Success in military affairs is free, the mind only suggests the best path to success.

Only after the enemy’s fire system was identified on the opposite bank, the crossing facilities were prepared, the combat missions were clarified and worked out with the commanders of the division’s units, and trainings were conducted with the personnel, Margelov gave the order to force his formation.

He himself, among the division's scouts, was the first to cross the river, made clarifications on the newly discovered firing points and, together with the fighters, held the captured bridgehead, covering the crossing of his units. In the future, developing success, on the shoulders of the fascists crazy with fear, the Margelov division enters and liberates the city of Kherson, for which it receives the name "Kherson" as a reward. For a successful operation, Vasily Filippovich is awarded the Gold Star of the Hero of the Soviet Union.

Fights in Moldova, Romania, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia, Hungary, Austria. The Nazis have less and less controlled territory. Forces and means are melting away. Pal Berlin. The remnants of the defeated German army retreat to the west. Three selected SS divisions retreated to the offensive sector of the Margelov formation. The Americans were advancing from the west.

Vasily Filippovich receives an order to prevent the surrender of the SS men to the Americans. It was May, Germany and its allies capitulated, everyone had a joyful sense of accomplishment, Victory and an early return home. He did not want to throw his subordinates into hell, and the SS men knew how to fight, so he decided on a risky act.

Having given the necessary orders, he drives by car to the location of the German units and straight to the headquarters. I entered the building, introduced myself and, through an interpreter, in an ultimatum form, offered the commanders of the SS divisions to surrender. German officers looked at the desperate Russian general with undisguised amazement, but realizing that resistance would only lead to unnecessary human casualties, they decided to surrender.

After the war in command positions. Since 1948, after graduating from the Military Academy of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the USSR named after K. E. Voroshilov, he was commander of the 76th Guards Chernigov Red Banner Airborne Division.

In 1950-1954 - commander of the 37th Guards Airborne Svir Red Banner Corps (Far East).

From 1954 to 1959 - Commander of the Airborne Forces. In 1959-1961 he was appointed with a demotion, First Deputy Commander of the Airborne Forces. From 1961 to January 1979 - returned to the post of Commander of the Airborne Forces.
On October 28, 1967, he was awarded the military rank of General of the Army. He led the actions of the Airborne Forces during the invasion of Czechoslovakia.

Since January 1979 - in the group of general inspectors of the USSR Ministry of Defense. He went on business trips to the Airborne Forces, was the chairman of the State Examination Commission at the Ryazan Airborne School.

During his service in the Airborne Forces, he made more than 60 jumps. The last of them at the age of 65.

“The one who has never left an airplane in his life, from where cities and villages seem like toys, who has never experienced the joy and fear of a free fall, a whistle in his ears, a stream of wind beating in his chest, he will never understand the honor and pride of a paratrooper…”

General's big family

In August 2002, in Pskov, the grandson of the famous General Margelov, Mikhail Margelov, a politician, chairman of the Federation Council Committee on International Affairs, answered questions from A. Mashkarin, a correspondent for the Pskov Province:

“Vasily Filippovich Margelov is a legendary figure. And the attitude to his name is appropriate. The burden of responsibility for the name of your grandfather does not oppress you?

The load is really quite heavy. With his fame, grandfather set a high bar, a bar of responsible behavior that must be met. I will give a few examples. The main reason that I did not choose a military career for myself was precisely the surname. Perhaps it would be impossible to achieve what my grandfather did, but I don’t want to be in second or third roles. My cousin Vasily Margelov served in the Airborne Forces, but he served under his mother's surname - to avoid parallels, comparisons with his grandfather.

In our family, such a phenomenon as blat is not accepted. It did not exist in Soviet times, and it does not exist now. The fact that my father entered the Faculty of Law of Moscow State University, my grandfather, who was already the commander of the Airborne Forces at that time, only learned from his son himself. The fact that I became the head of the public relations department of the President of Russia Boris Yeltsin and at the age of 33 received the rank of minister, my father, who was on a business trip abroad at that time, learned from his personnel officers. He was very surprised. I didn't ask him for help.

Such a strange family tradition for the general's children and grandchildren. Perhaps this is due to the fact that grandfather always made his way. This does not mean that there is no mutual assistance in our family, but it has always been human, not career. In our country, no one has ever been a “golden” youth and did not feel like they were born with a silver spoon in their mouth.

You didn't become a soldier. Has anyone else in your family followed your grandfather's example?

We have a lot of people in uniform. The eldest of the grandfather's sons, Gennady Vasilievich, was a Suvorovite, a participant in the Great Patriotic War, now a retired major general, his last place of service was the head of the Military Physical Education Institute. Lesgaft in Leningrad.

Anatoly Vasilyevich Margelov, next in age after Gennady, although he formally did not wear shoulder straps, all his life he was engaged in missile guidance systems, he has two hundred and fifty inventions and discoveries. He is an honored inventor of the USSR.

My father, Vitaly Vasilyevich, is a colonel general, deputy director of the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service.

Then come Alexander Vasilievich, retired colonel of the Airborne Forces, Hero of Russia, tester of landing equipment, and Vasily Vasilyevich, retired major, served in the Middle East for a long time, Arabist.

Many people know who your grandfather was. And who was your grandmother, the wife of General Margelov?

My grandfather's life was such that he had three wives. First wife, mother of Gennady Vasilyevich, second Feodosia Efremovna, my grandmother, mother of Anatoly Vasilyevich and Vitaly Vasilyevich. The last wife is Anna Alexandrovna, mother of Alexander Vasilyevich and Vasily Vasilyevich.

My grandmother became my grandfather's wife when she was a graduate student at Minsk State University. She worked all her life as a school teacher, taught biology.

Do you have any childhood memories of your grandfather?

When my father and his family were on a business trip in Tunisia (I was four years old), we went on his first vacation. They came to my grandfather's house, he lived on Smolenskaya street in Moscow. And I was afraid of my grandfather - he had such a thunderous voice, roaring, roaring. And suddenly I saw the magazine "Funny Pictures" in his house and asked with surprise: "And whose is this?" Then, in the corridor where I was looking at the magazine, my grandfather came in and said: “So I ordered it for you!”

Only many years later did I understand what it meant for this thunderous man, who with his paratroopers kept half of Europe and North America at bay, to think about a grandson who should be prescribed "Funny Pictures"!

There are a lot of memories of my grandfather, but this is perhaps the most emotionally strong.

Did Vasily Filippovich have any attitudes in life that he bequeathed to his sons and grandchildren?

Here is the formula: raise a son, build a house, plant a tree. My grandfather had his own specific phrase. He believed that in order for a man to become a real man, you need to know all the hardships of this life: at least once to starve, at least once in your life to be wounded and at least once in prison (meaning not for a criminal offense, but a guardhouse ).

After thirty-seven and a half years, I really believe that there are bumps that need to be filled in order to understand what is good and what is bad.

Is the spirit of Margelov still alive in the modern Airborne Forces?

Alive. And not only in the Russian Airborne Forces, but also in the former republics of the Soviet Union.

There is also abroad. When Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez visited Moscow last winter and was in the Federation Council, I met with him. And when he compared the names - Margelov and Margelov - it turned out that Hugo was also a paratrooper colonel. Chavez said that the Venezuelan paratroopers know my grandfather, and a portrait of Vasily Filippovich Margelov hangs in the Military Museum of Venezuela. They consider him the theoretician of the airborne troops.

With his first wife, Maria, Vasily Filippovich signed two years before graduation from a military school. In September 1931, their son Gennady was born. However, due to the nomadic commander's life, their happiness did not work out. Maria is gone.

Margelov met his second wife, Feodosia, in Minsk, where she worked as a teacher. They got married in 1935, when Feodosia Efremovna was already a student at the Belarusian State University. In this marriage, Anatoly and Vitaly were born. But the family was not destined to survive. First, they were separated by a campaign in Western Belarus, then the Finnish War, and the Great Patriotic War completely separated them. In other words, war is war...

There, during the fighting near Leningrad, Margelov met his third wife, Anna Aleksandrovna Kurakina. This event took place at the end of 1941.

Their love went through all the trials and tribulations of life, leaving in the end a big trace of it in the memory of their descendants.

Anna Alexandrovna was born on January 23, 1914 in a large peasant family in the village of Morskoye, Myshkinsky district, Yaroslavl region. She worked in a printing house, graduated from the workers' faculty and only then entered the medical institute, which she graduated just before the war, in 1941. Then there were courses for surgeons at the Military Medical Academy and the front.

In the war, Anna Aleksandrovna served as a company commander, intern of the 1st Surgical Department of the Army Field Hospital for the Lightly Wounded of the 54th Army, head of this department, and then in various positions in the 8th Separate Medical and Sanitary Battalion, next to her husband.

In the initial period of the war, she had a chance to operate on the regiment commander Margelov, who was wounded in the leg, and who would have thought: in 1943 they would register a marriage at the front, and in 1947, already in civilian life, as expected, in the registry office. In total, she operated on her husband twice in a combat situation.

The military doctor-surgeon of the guards captain of the medical service Anna Aleksandrovna finished the war with two orders (of the Patriotic War of the second degree and the Red Star) and many medals, among which was "For Military Merit". The regiment called her "Mother" and thanked her very much for her kind and skillful hands.

The eldest son Gennady (from his first marriage) lived in Kostyukovichi with the parents of Vasily Filippovich. At the age of twelve he fled to his father at the front. First, Vasily Filippovich attached his son to a reserve training battalion, and then, showing the cover of the Red Warrior magazine, which depicted a smiling Suvorovite, invited him to enter the Suvorov School.

Anna Alexandrovna prepared him, and he entered the Tambov School.

In 1959, already being a paratrooper officer, he entered the Academy. Frunze. During his service in the Airborne Forces, he made more than three hundred parachute jumps. Graduate of the Academy of the General Staff. He commanded a motorized rifle division, was the deputy commander of the army in Buryatia. Recent positions: Head of the Military Institute of Physical Education in Leningrad and Senior Lecturer at the Academy of the General Staff. Cavalier of the Orders of the Red Star and "For Service to the Motherland in the Armed Forces of the USSR" third degree. Now Major General G.V. Margelov lives in St. Petersburg. He has two sons.

Son Anatoly (from his second marriage) graduated from the institute in Taganrog. He worked as a researcher at the Defense Research Institute, where he defended both candidate and doctoral dissertations. He is the author of more than two hundred inventions, Doctor of Technical Sciences, Professor. Anatoly Vasilyevich has a daughter and a son.

Son Vitaly - Anatoly's brother. In 1958 he entered the law faculty of Moscow State University. Lomonosov. After graduating, he worked for the KGB. Today he is Colonel General, Honorary Chekist, holder of the Order of Military Merit. He has four sons.

Son Alexander (from his third marriage) in 1970 graduated from the Moscow Aviation Institute. Ordzhonikidze. After graduation, he worked as an engineer at the Central Design Bureau of Experimental Engineering in the city of Korolev. From 1971 to 1980 he served in the Scientific and Technical Committee of the Airborne Forces. During this period, he graduated from the Airborne School and the Military Academy of Armored Forces as an external student. He has 145 jumps to his credit. He made two flights inside the BMD and one together with the BMD. Hero of Russia, Colonel, Commander of the Orders of the Red Banner and the Red Star.

Son Vasily - Alexander's brother. Successfully graduated from the Institute of Oriental Languages ​​at Moscow State University. He mastered the Arabic language very well. For about eight years he served as an officer in the GRU General Staff. Of these, six years in Arab countries. Reserve Major. He has a son.

All together, the sons of Margelov gathered only twice. The first time at a service dacha in the village of the Ministry of Defense Vnukovo, and the second time at the funeral of his father. Nevertheless, they developed very friendly relations, because with such a person as Vasily Filippovich, it could not be otherwise!

In the summer of 1984, answering a correspondent's question about his sons, General Margelov said literally:

The eldest, Gennady, a general, is said to be stepping on his father's heels. Vitaly is a colonel, Alexander is a colonel, Vasily is a major. Only Anatoly did not become a military man. Everyone, except for him, jumped with a parachute ... "

Vasily Filippovich was very proud that all of them were directly related to the army.

After the war, Anna Alexandrovna followed her husband, working first as an otolaryngologist, and then, due to an unsuccessful operation, she had to quit.

War, endless travels, unrest and turmoil finally undermined her health. Anna Alexandrovna left on January 30, 1993.

Shortly after her death, her younger sons found a bundle of yellowed letters. As they write, from them they “received amazing confirmation of what a faithful and loving heart beat under the military commander’s tunic during the harsh years of the war, and even more so after the Victory. How young hearts, despite all the hardships, longed for love and a small world for two, how they longed for each other, although their meetings were not so frequent, and sometimes they did not know whether the next meeting would be ... Death constantly hovered over them, tearing out their friends and relatives, and, perhaps, that is why their love was so bright, which they could carry together until the end of their days. Any man, any woman can dream of such a strong back as mother was for her father, and such a strong support as father was for mother.

This text is an introductory piece.

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