Maria Ivanovna Yermakova

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Marija Ivanovna Yermakova ( Russian Мария Ивановна Ермакова ; born Malygina, Russian Малыгина ; born on 21st June 1894 in Korovino , Ujesd Melenki , Vladimir province , Russian Empire , died on 28. March 1969 in Sverdlovsk (since 1991 again Yekaterinburg ), USSR ) was a Russian-Soviet teacher and director of several Sverdlovsk schools.

Life

Marija Malygina was born in 1894 in the village of Korowino ( ) in Tsarist Russia into a peasant family with many children. In June 1914 she graduated from the district high school with a degree as a primary school teacher. In 1916 the whole family first moved to the village of Verkhnyaya Kurja ( Russian Верхняя Курья ; today Motowilichinski Rajon, Perm , ); then to the village of Bisser ( Russian Бисер , ) in the Perm Governorate .

In Bisser she worked as a primary school teacher until 1926. Here she had married the revolutionary and co-organizer of the Bisserer cells of the Communist Party of Russia Pyotr Petrovich Ermakow ( Russian Пётр Петрович Ермаков , 1883-1945) in 1918 . After the October Revolution, Marija Yermakowa became First Secretary of the Communist Youth Union and a member of the Women's Committee. In October 1919 she joined the Communist Party of the Soviet Union .

In 1926 her husband got a new job and they moved to Troitsk ( ) in the Ural region , where she worked as a teacher and deputy director. In 1928 she completed an external course of study at the history faculty of a teaching institute. In 1929 the family moved to Sverdlovsk ( ). There Yermakowa worked at school No. 14, then was responsible for the seven-year vocational school and the school complex No. 11 (including kindergarten, elementary and secondary school). From 1934 to 1939 she worked as the head of School No. 5, where a new school building was built under her supervision.

Yermakova then worked from 1939 to 1940 as the deputy head of the public education department in Sverdlovsk Oblast, from 1940 to 1941 as head of secondary school teacher training, from 1941 to 1942 as head of children's house No. 2 and in 1942 as director of the film library. She returned to School No. 5 in 1942, continued her work at School No. 3 in 1944, then went to Elementary School No. 7, from where she retired.

In 1941, Yermakova completed four courses at the Sverdlovsk Pedagogical Institute. In addition to her teaching profession, she was involved in civil society. From 1926 to 1926 she was a member of the Troitsk City Council, from 1931 to 1937 a member of the plenum of the Sverdlovsk Regional Committee of the Education Union and from 1932 to 1938 a member of the Sverdlovsk City Council.

She died in 1969 and was buried in the Schirokoretschenskoe Cemetery in Sverdlovsk .

She was a bearer of the Order of Lenin (1949) and received several medals, such as “For excellent work” (1967) and “For valiant work in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945” (1945).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. No. 132. Jermakov P, Secretary of the Biserer Cell of the RKP. "Historical Sketch of the Biserer RKP cells / district Perm" Дело № 132. Ермаков П., секретарь Бисерской ячейки РКП / б / "Исторический очерк Бисерской ячейки РКП / б / Пермского уезда» и приложение к очерку . (No longer available online.) In: archive.perm.ru. Perm District State Archives ( Государственный архив Пермского края ), archived from the original on April 27, 2017 ; Retrieved June 26, 2017 (Russian). Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.archive.perm.ru
  2. Vladimir Borisov ( Владимир Борисов ): Bisser settlement (20th century) - history of the Bisser plant - history of the Alt Bisser settlement ( Поселок Бисер (XX век) - История Бисерсар (XX век) - История Бисерсора . Retrieved June 26, 2017 (Russian).