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Draft:Semyon Vasilyevich Konovalov

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Semyon Vasilyevich Konovalov
Семен Васильевич Коновалов
File:Семён Васильевич Коновалов.jpg
Personal details
BornFebruary 15, 1921
Village of Yambulatovo (now Verkhneuslonsky District),
Died4 April 1989 (68 years old)
Kazan, Tatarstan (now part of Russia)
Resting placeArsk cemetery, Kazan
NationalityUSSR
AwardsHero of the Soviet Union "Gold Star" (1943)[7]; Order of Lenin (1943); Patriotic Victory Medal, 1st class (in 1985); Order of the Defense of Stalingrad
Military service
Years of service1939-1956
RankLieutenant Colonel
Battles/warsThe Great Patriotic War

Semyon Vasilyevich Konovalov (Russian: Семен Васильевич Коновалов) (15 February 1921 – 4 April 1989) was a Soviet tank commander and a WWII veteran. On July 13, 1942, during the Voronezh-Voroshilovgrad campaign, in a single battle, he commanded his KV-1 tank crew to destroy a total of 16 Nazi tanks and self-propelled guns.

Biography

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Origin

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He was born on February 15, 1921 into a peasant family in the village of Yambulatovo in the Sviyazhsky region of the Tatarstan Autonomous Soviet Republic. Before the war, Konovalov was educated in high school. He then worked at the post office before joining the Red Army in 1939.

According to some documents, he is Russian, others say he is a Chuvash. Many modern researchers favor the latter hypothesis.

Service

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In the summer of 1941, after graduating from the Kuibyshev Infantry School with the rank of lieutenant, he was transferred to the front as a tank platoon commander in an independent tank company of the 125th Border Guard Rifle Division, stationed in Lithuania. His squadron was armed with high-speed BT-7 tanks, but was inferior to German tanks in both armor and armament. During the fierce battles, in August 1941, Konovalov was seriously wounded and taken to the rear hospital in Vologda. At the end of October, Konovalov recovered and was sent to a training center in Arkhangelsk to work as a trainer. Despite this, Konovalov regularly sent his achievements back to the front, saying that he did not belong there, and wanted to fight the Nazis. In April 1942, he received the permission to go to the front, and was transferred to the battlefield, this time serving as the commander of a platoon of the Kliment Voroshilov heavy tanks of the 5th Guards Tank Brigade. In June 1942, he was transferred to a similar position in the 15th Tank Brigade of the 9th Army.

Notable Battles

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Facing a Panzer division alone; 13th July 1942

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In mid-July 1942, the German 14th and 22nd Panzer Divisions completed a deep penetration breakthrough, encircling the 9th and 38th Armies and part of the Soviet 24th Army. The Germans attempted to destroy the encircled Soviet groups, and then developed an offensive in the direction of Stalingrad and the Caucasus. In those fierce battles, the 15th Tank Brigade had to constantly fight dense defensive battles. By 13 July, Lieutenant Konovalov's platoon was left with only one KV-1 tank under his own command, which itself had suffered extensive damage through the battles.

By the morning of 13th July, with the crew's combined efforts (including Commander Konovalov, main driver Kozyrentsev, co-pilot Cherevinsky, gunner Akinin, gunner Gerasimchuk and radio operator Dementyev) the tank was back in service condition. At that time, the 15th Tank Brigade received orders to move to a new defensive line to block the German advance. However, when it reached the area near the Nizhnemityakin farm in the Tarasovsky district of the Rostov region, the tank malfunctioned due to a faulty fuel supply system. The brigade commander Pushkin decided that it was impossible to wait for Konovalov's crew, as this jeopardized the completion of combat missions. The brigade continued to move, leaving the KV-1 tank to repair itself with the assistance of technician Serebryakov.

To the crew's relief, the tank was revived. However, as they prepared to move out, two German armored reconnaissance vehicles appeared. Neither side expected to see the other, and in the heat of the moment Konovalov's crew was able to fire first and destroy one of the vehicles. The second vehicle was able to escape, which meant the main German force would soon arrive. Konovalov decided to lay an ambush, he ordered the vehicle into a ravine in a position where majority of the hull was shielded . After a short wait, a column of 75 Panzers appeared, moving towards the village of Nizhnemityakin. Konovalov waited for the Panzers to approach within 500-600 meters range. Taken by surprise, the column quickly lost 4 Panzers.

Believing they were the victim of a large formation of Soviet tanks' ambush, the Germans quickly withdrew to reinforce, and shortly reappeared, this time with 55 tanks. The KV-1, still concealed, went on to take out another 6 tanks. The Germans, still unaware of the position of the Soviets, retreated once more. At the third attempt, the Germans realized they were being ambushed by a lone tank, and all firepower was focused on Konovalov's KV. Despite this, the Soviet crew managed to destroy 6 more tanks, an armored fighting vehicle and 8 troop trucks, before running out of ammunition and being shot down by anti-tank guns.

On 14 July, scouts ordered by the brigade commander Pushkin discovered the remains of the burnt KV-1, along with the bodies of several crew members and the destroyed German units. According to reconnaissance reports, in total, Konovalov's crew eliminated 16 tanks, 2 armored vehicles and 8 German troop trucks in the battle of 13 July 1942. Believing the crew to be dead and based on the achievements verified and reported by the scouts, Colonel Pushkin proposed to posthumously award Lieutenant Konovalov the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

However, after the tank caught fire, Konovalov and his surviving comrades had managed to escape through the tank's bottom hatch.  On their fourth day en route to the unit, they encountered a crew of Panzer IV tanks who were stopping to rest. The Soviets eliminated the German crew, captured the tank and returned to the Soviets without being mistakenly shot at by friendly forces. Having been separated too far from the formation of the 15th tank brigade, Konovalov and his comrades were enrolled in another tank unit.

Fighting aboard the captured Panzer

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The German encirclement near Millerovo was quite thin, allowing the 9th Army to partially break through the encirclement. During the three-month battle to break through the encirclement, Lieutenant Konovalov's crew fought on the captured Panzer IV. To avoid confusion, a red star was painted on the turret.  During this time, his crew is credited with eliminating four more German tanks, damaging many others and destroying five German anti-tank guns.

Return to the previous unit

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It wasn't until November 4, 1942, that Konovalov was again wounded. At this time, his old unit received news that he was still alive. On March 31, 1943, according to the decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, Semyon Vasilyevich Konovalov was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union, the Order of Lenin and the Order of the Gold Star (No. 1019).  After receiving the reward, Konovalov took a leave of absence to share his life with his mother. When he got home and knocked on the door, his mother burst into tears and said, "Go away! My Semyon has died, this is his death notice... ".

After returning home for a few days, he returned to the front.

Konovalov went through the battles of Stalingrad, Kursk, and ended his service in the war in Germany as the commander of a tank battalion.

Post-war

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In 1946, Konovalov was transferred to the reserve ranks, and in 1950 he was again commissioned into the Soviet Army. In 1952, he graduated from the Leningrad Senior Officers' Armored School. Since 1956, he has been a lieutenant colonel in the reserves, and later discharged. After his discharge, he lived in the city of Kazan and worked in an electronics factory.

He died on 4 April 1989 and was buried in Kazan, at the Arsk cemetery He was the last person alive in the crew on July 13, 1942. All remaining members were either killed in action or went missing throughout the war.

Awards

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