The most detailed guide around Circum-Baikal Railroad: Irkutsk, Listvyanka, Slyudyanka, Shelekhov. A. D. Katashevtsev
The most detailed guide around Circum-Baikal Railroad: Irkutsk, Listvyanka, Slyudyanka, Shelekhov
A. D. Katashevtsev
© A. D. Katashevtsev, 2023
ISBN 978-5-0060-0407-8
Created with Ridero smart publishing system
Guide Book Route Map
Guide Book Route Map
Introduction
The book is dedicated to the most complex steel line in Russia – the Circum-Baikal Railway (CBRR), which was built on the steep shore of Lake Baikal at the beginning of the 20th century by the best engineers of their era. It was there that I began my professional journey as a tour guide. Today this is the most intense excursion in the Irkutsk region in terms of the number of topics that it covers.
On the pages of this work, I would like to share my knowledge accumulated about these places. I will try to describe the history of the sights that we meet on our way as interestingly and briefly as possible. In addition to the main route of the Circum-Baikal Railway, attention is paid to remote areas of the city of Irkutsk, which for various reasons were not included in my first book, as well as to the favorite tourist centers of the Baikal region – Listvyanka and Slyudyanka.
The book reflects not only the main historical plots of the display objects, but also relevant information on archeology, botany, geology, geography, demography and logistics. The book is intended both for guests of the Irkutsk region who are interested in its history and nature, as well as for practicing specialists in the field of local history and excursion studies.
Focusing on the footnotes in the margins, you can easily move around both urban areas and along the railroad. I hope, thanks to these lines, you will love Irkutsk and Baikal the way I love them. I wish you pleasant reading and travel through the pages of the history of the Baikal.
Novo-Lenino Microdistrict
Frankly, I thought for a long time how and where to start our journey along the old Circum-Baikal Railroad (hereinafter CBR). I would like to go as accurately as possible along the old route of the Trans-Siberian Railway, as it used to pass through Irkutsk, in order to fully reflect all its features and details. Therefore, we will start our journey from the old Innokentyevskaya station (nowdays Irkutsk-Sortirovochny, Vokzalnaya st., 9A) in Novo-Lenino microdistrict of the city of Irkutsk, from where the CBR is historically counted.
Meeting of the first train at Innokentievskaya station, 1898
The first rails came here back in 1896 and helped to appear on this site a new working settlement on the lands of Irkutsk Ascension Monastery, the very one that is inextricably linked with the name of the first Irkutsk Saint – Innocent Kulchitsky. This is how the name of this initial station of the Circum-Baikal Railway came from. On July 27, 1898, the first train was met here in Irkutsk. Only three weeks later it will reach the main passenger station of the city.
The population of the village grew very quickly, and in five years more than a thousand people lived here. At the same time, people who were completely unrelated to the railway moved here. For example, in 1905, some of the soldiers who returned from the Russian-Japanese war settled here in dugouts, who immediately entitled the northern part of this settlement «Port Arthur» in memory of the fortress lost in the Far East. The city government fought against unauthorized constructioning for a long time, but in the end it simply renamed the area into Novo-Innokentievskaya Sloboda.
Innokentyevskaya station, early 20th century
During the Russian Revolution, from Decem-ber 14, 1917 to July 9, 1918, the Soviet of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Deputies was based at the station, until it was driven out by a detachment of Czech legionnaires. On February 14, 1920, this place became the scene of bloody battles with the units of the White General V.O. Kappel, retreating from Irkutsk to Baikal. Just a few months later, in April 1920, the district received its new name – Novo-Lenino.
Innokentievskaya station, early 20th century
On March 28, 1932, the construction of the largest aviation plant in Eastern Siberia began, opposite the railway lines, which launched the production of several dozen aircraft from almost all the russian leading design bureaus. During the World War II (hereinafter WWII), it handed over 2174 combat aircraft to the front. After the Great Victory, already in 1951, it gave the country the world’s first torpedo bombers Tu-14 with three turbojet engines. And in 1973, it was the first to start assembling the MiG-27 supersonic fighter-bomber, the first carrier of a new generation of high-precision weapons in the USSR. It was the only plant in the country where the design bureau of A.I. Mikoyan did not create a branch at the plant contrary to established practice. Today, in the best traditions of the past, the plant assembles the Yak-130, SU-30SM, as well as the long-awaited family of medium-range aircraft MS-21.
MS-21 taking off from Irkutsk-2 airport, 2017
In the area of the modern station, today there is a museum of the locomotive depot, which occupies a building from the tsarist era (Obraztsova St., 30). Near the station there is a memorial in memory of those who died in the WWII and an exposition of railway equipment. In the post-war years, Hero of the Soviet Union D.V. Zhilkin worked here as the head of the technical office. Nearby you can see the locomotive-monument L-3228, similar to those that today drive tourist trains along the СBR. There is also a track measuring trolley, an isolating removable tower, a universal sleeper changer machine MSHU-5, a single-winged semaphore and a hydrocolumn. Opposite, by the railroad tracks, a few years ago you could find an old water tower and a water-lifting building, but in 2010 they were dismantled.
Monument locomotive L-3228
On the other side of the road is Molodezhnaya Grove, which hides the buildings of an old medical town that appeared here in 1908. Among them, the building of the railway hospital (Obraztsova St., 27 K1), made according to the project of I.P. Mikhailovsky back in 1904. Today in this park you can find many sculptures, a sports ground for volleyball and tennis, and three children’s play areas. Here you can also see the monument to the engineer and revolutionary E.K. Špaček, recently moved here from the locomotive depot, who gave his life for the power of the Soviets. Being a Czech by nationality, he was hanged by his fellow tribesmen on a lonely pine tree on July 19, 1918, with a large gathering of people at the place where the Lokomotiv stadium is now.
Monument to the revolutionary E.K. Spachek
Among the dense vegetation from Rosa Luxembourg Street (Akademika Obraztsova Street, 27A) hides one of the most forgotten temples of Irkutsk – the chapel in the name of Panteleimon the Healer. It was built in 1906 and was originally intended for the funeral of the dead in the medical town. After the revolution, it was converted into a city morgue, as which it existed until 1980, when a tuberculosis laboratory was placed here. Today it is one of the most dynamically developing spiritual centers of Irkutsk. Since 2010, it is planned to build a full-fledged church.
Chapel in the name of Panteleimon the Healer
In addition to the hospital and the church, a one-class school was opened in this grove back in 1900 at the expense of the Ministry of Railways. In 1935, it became school number 38 in Irkutsk, and half a century later it received a modern building and a new number (Obraztsova St., 23). Here in the 1940s worked as the teacher of the Russian language