Biography. Tkachev Vyacheslav Matveevich - the first Russian military pilot, Knight of St. George Participation in the White movement

In the early spring of 1965, a lonely old man, whose name was Vyacheslav Matveevich Tkachev, died in a semi-basement communal apartment on the outskirts of Krasnodar. None of his neighbors knew that once this man wore golden general's shoulder straps and commanded the Russian Air Force on the fronts of the First World War, and then headed the aviation of the Russian Army of General Wrangel...

V.M. Tkachev was born on September 25, 1885 in the Kuban village of Kellermesskaya. A hereditary Cossack, he could, like most of his fellow villagers, become a dashing horseman. But his thirst for knowledge led him first to the Nizhny Novgorod Cadet Corps named after Count Arakcheev, and then to the Konstantinovsky Artillery School, because it was the artillerymen who were considered the most educated representatives of the officer corps. In 1906, Tkachev began serving in the 2nd Kuban Horse Battery. Then he decided to try his hand at teaching and became an officer-educator of the Odessa Cadet Corps.


In 1911, Vyacheslav Matveevich first saw an airplane flying over the city, and from then on he became “sick” of aviation for the rest of his life. He begged the command to allow him to take a flight training course at the Odessa flying club. Having received a diploma as a civilian pilot, Tkachev, on the recommendation of the then “curator” of Russian aviation, Grand Duke Alexei Mikhailovich, entered the Sevastopol Military Aviation School, which he graduated with honors a year later. In 1913, V.M. Tkachev served in Kyiv, in the 11th corps aviation detachment. His colleague and friend was the famous pilot P.N. Nesterov, who was the first to perform a “loop” on an airplane (later this aerobatic maneuver was named after him), and in August 1914, he performed the world’s first aerial ram.

By the beginning of the First World War, Tkachev was appointed commander of the 20th corps aviation detachment, stationed in the city of Lida. The main and, in fact, the only combat mission of airplanes in those days was reconnaissance. The detachment commander Tkachev not only sent his subordinates on missions, but he himself often made the most risky reconnaissance flights over enemy rear lines. In one of these long-distance raids, he discovered a large concentration of enemy troops, but on the way back, a fragment of an anti-aircraft shell pierced the oil tank of his plane. The oil began to leak, and this threatened to stop the engine, forced landing behind the front line and captivity. However, Tkachev, without being confused, managed to reach the tank with his foot, plug the hole with the toe of his boot and bring the airplane into his territory. For valuable intelligence delivered at the risk of his life, as well as for courage and resourcefulness, on November 24, 1914, he was the first among Russian aviators to be awarded an honorary award - the Order of St. George, 4th degree.

Tkachev (standing second from left) among the participants of the Odessa Aviation School, led by the commander of the OVO troops, Adjutant General N. P. Zarubaev and the president of the flying club A. A. Anatra, 1911

V.M. Tkachev in the cockpit of the Moran-Parassol reconnaissance aircraft, Russian-German front, winter 1914-1915

Esaul Tkachev with aviators of the 20th corps air squad in a hangar near the Moran-Parasol

Subsequently, Tkachev continued to participate in combat operations, acting skillfully and selflessly, as evidenced by combat reports:

“From June 4 to June 7, 1915, despite the obvious danger to life from the destructive fire of anti-aircraft batteries, V.M. Tkachev repeatedly made his way behind enemy lines, collecting important information. Having met a German airplane armed with a machine gun, he entered into a duel with it and put it to flight. On July 4, while carrying out aerial reconnaissance in the area of ​​the Lina and Styr rivers, he discovered the concentration of a strong German attack group.”

During the First World War, Tkachev proved himself to be a brave pilot and a skilled organizer, a theorist of the combat use of aviation. Thanks to the combination of these qualities, he became the commander of an air division, and in August 1916, already with the rank of lieutenant colonel, he headed the first Russian combat air group (abbreviated as the 1st BAG), which consisted of three fighter squadrons. The purpose of the group was to cover ground troops from enemy air raids, protect their reconnaissance aircraft and bombers from enemy air, and most importantly, destroy German-Austrian aircraft in the air.

And Tkachev’s group coped with this task brilliantly. Starting in September 1916, the Germans had to stop bombing Russian troops in the Lutsk area, where the 1st BAG was based, and our reconnaissance officers could freely carry out their tasks without fear of interception. In two months, the pilots of the air group shot down more than a dozen enemy airplanes, and for the rest they reliably “closed” the sky above the front.

At first, the group included not only fighters, which were still in short supply, but also two-seat reconnaissance aircraft armed with machine guns. On one of these machines, the Morana-Parasole, Tkachev, together with the flight nab Lieutenant Chrysoskoleo, won an aerial victory on August 14, 1916, shooting down the Austrian Aviatik B.II airplane. The success of the Russian pilots was confirmed by ground troops who recorded the crash of an enemy plane.

V.M. Tkachev in the cabin of the Nieuport IV with a high-explosive fragmentation bomb suspended under the fuselage

At the beginning of 1917, thirty-two-year-old Tkachev became the Aviation Inspector of the Southwestern Front. At the same time, his book “Material on Air Combat Tactics” was published - the first training manual in Russia for a front-line pilot and squadron commander. In this book, the author, based on the successful combat experience of the 1st BAG, formulated the fundamentals of the strategy and tactics of fighter aviation, and also described the most important practical techniques of air combat.

The pinnacle of V.M. Tkachev’s career during the World War was the position of head of the Field Directorate of Aviation and Aeronautics (PUAiV), which he accepted on June 9, 1917. This was the name given to the main headquarters of combat aviation, to which all air units concentrated on the Russian-German front, from the Black Sea to the Baltic, were subordinate. Vyacheslav Matveevich became the head of the PUAiV while still a lieutenant colonel, but already in August he was awarded the rank of colonel. Tkachev’s position also had another name - chief of aviation of the active army, abbreviated as airdarm.

During the period when Tkachev headed Russian front-line aviation, its highest achievements were noted. In just a few months, Russian pilots shot down more enemy aircraft than in the three previous years of the war. Undoubtedly, this is a considerable merit of their commander.

Like most officers, Tkachev was hostile to the October coup. This is not surprising, given that the seizure of power by the Bolsheviks entailed the disintegration of the army, a catastrophic decline in discipline and a wave of desertion. Cases of open disobedience to orders and even soldiers' reprisals against their officers became commonplace at the front.

It should be noted that aviation managed to maintain combat effectiveness much longer than other branches of the military. Even in November 1917, when infantrymen abandoned their trenches en masse and fled to the rear, aviators continued to fly missions and even shoot down enemy planes. However, the general disorganization inevitably affected the air units. It was painful for Tkachev to see what he devoted all his strength, knowledge and experience to perish.

The last straw that overflowed the colonel's patience was the arrival at his headquarters of the Bolshevik commissar Krylenko, who was absolutely ignorant of aviation, from the Baltic sailors, to whom Tkachev was supposed to surrender his powers. Vyacheslav Matveevich submitted his resignation from his position, left the Aviation Department and went to Kuban, leaving a note in which the following words were written:

“The seizure of Headquarters by the Bolsheviks put me in a hopeless situation. I was faced with a problem: to submit to Krylenko and thus take part in the state destruction that the invaders of power are bringing with them, or to throw myself at the mercy of the victors, expressing my disobedience to them. However, solving this issue in the first way could not take place, since, according to the information I had, I should have been arrested even regardless of whether I obeyed the impostor Krylenko or not. (...) I pray that for the future Russia at least a cell will be preserved, which will serve as the beginning for the future air fleet."

The story of how Tkachev made his way “through seething Russia” from the former front to Kuban could become the plot for an adventure novel. He had to change into a soldier's uniform and was arrested twice, but both times he managed to escape. In March 1918, Tkachev reached Maykop, which was occupied by the Reds, and there he was arrested for the third time. Vyacheslav Matveevich spent more than four months in the city prison, until in August he and other prisoners were released by units of General Denikin’s Volunteer Army that entered the city.

V.M. Tkachev before the next combat mission

Filling up the Moran airplane with gasoline. Vyacheslav Tkachev stands on the right wheel.

Immediately after his liberation, Tkachev joined the White Army without hesitation. In the summer of 1918, the first White Guard aviation detachments began to be created in the territory of southern Russia occupied by volunteers. One of these detachments, the 1st Kuban, was headed by a former air force. At first, the detachment had only a few old, worn-out airplanes found in repair shops, but gradually the number of white aviation grew due to trophies and supplies of aircraft from England.

By May 1919, the 1st Kuban already had about a dozen combat-ready vehicles. This month the detachment underwent a baptism of fire in the battle near the village of Velikoknyazheskaya. The pilots, under the leadership of Tkachev, attacked the red cavalry of Budyonny and Dumenko with bombs and machine-gun fire, sowing panic and chaos in the enemy’s ranks. This allowed General Ulagai's white cavalrymen to easily break through the front and launch a rapid offensive towards Tsaritsyn. Tkachev, as happened before, personally took part in the battles. During the attack, he was wounded by a bullet fired from the ground, but managed to return to his airfield and land the car safely. After a short treatment, Vyacheslav Matveevich returned to duty.

In June 1919, the 1st Kuban air detachment was transferred to Tsaritsyn to provide air support to the White Army during the assault on the city. On June 30, the heavily fortified city, nicknamed “red Verdun,” was taken. The Reds retreated north to Kamyshin. The airplanes bombed and strafed the retreating enemy, inflicting heavy losses. Subsequently, the 1st Kuban detachment was replenished with people and aircraft, which made it possible to transform it into an air division. The new air unit was still commanded by Vyacheslav Tkachev.

The victory at Tsaritsyn did not become a turning point in the Civil War. In the fall, Denikin's army, advancing on Moscow, was defeated by superior Red forces. The Whites had to retreat further and further south, until in April 1920 they found themselves trapped on the Crimean Peninsula.

At this moment, the star of Tkachev’s air force rose again on the military horizon. General Wrangel, who replaced the retired Denikin, appointed him commander-in-chief of all white aviation on April 14. At the same time, the 34-year-old pilot was awarded the rank of major general.

Anatra "Anasal" aircraft of the Kuban air division, winter 1919-1920

This happened literally the next day after 12 airplanes under the command of Tkachev scattered a Red division that was trying to break through Perekop. In Crimea, Tkachev’s organizational and military talent was fully revealed. Under his leadership, the small number of White Guard pilots became a formidable force.

Tkachev devoted a lot of time to combat training of pilots, teaching them the ability to fly in formation and act harmoniously in a group, precisely following the orders of the commander. For better visibility in the air, command vehicles received special color designations (brightly colored hoods and wide stripes around the fuselages). In addition, each air squad received its own “quick identification elements” in the form of individually painted rudders (multi-colored stripes, black and white squares, etc.).

Tkachev among the pilots of the 1st Kuban Cossack air squadron he organized, 1919

Fighter Sopwith "Camel" of the Kuban division and English pilot Samuel Kincaid. fought together with the Kuban on the Volga in 1919

Tkachev developed a system for interaction between aviation and ground troops using visual signals; in those days there was no radio communication on airplanes. In particular, a technique was introduced to give signals to pilots from the ground using geometric figures made of white panels, clearly visible from a great height. For example, the letter “T” placed near the headquarters of a regiment or division meant that the unit commander required the pilot to immediately land to convey an important message. The shape of the figures changed periodically to prevent the Reds from using false signals to mislead the pilots or lure them into a trap.

The aviators, in turn, transmitted reports and orders to the ground using dropped pennants or various combinations of colored flares. And when local craftsmen installed radio stations on two aircraft in the Simferopol air fleet, the efficiency and efficiency of air reconnaissance increased even more. It should be noted that such a clear and well-functioning system of relationship “between heaven and earth” as the one organized by Tkachev did not exist either in other white armies or in the red ones.

Light bomber "De Havilland" OH. 9, which was in service with one of the aviation detachments of the Russian Army, commanded by V.M. Tkachev

No less attention was paid to strengthening military discipline, which had noticeably weakened after the heavy defeats of the White Army in the winter of 1919-20. Thus, according to the order of the air force, aviators who allowed themselves to appear at the airfield while drunk were subject to severe penalties (including demotion to privates and transfer to infantry).

White pilots had to combine organizational activities and training with almost continuous participation in battles. For example, in two days, June 7 and 8, they flew more than 150 reconnaissance and bombing missions, supporting the advance of the White Army. Taking into account the fact that Tkachev had only 35 airplanes under his command, some of which were faulty, each crew carried out at least three combat sorties per day. For these successful actions, Tkachev was one of the first to be awarded the Order of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker, established by Wrangel in 1920.

Russian Army pilots near the De Havilland with the original design on the hood, Crimea, 1920

By the end of June, the intensity of the fighting increased even more. The red cavalry under the command of Corps Commander Zhloba broke through the front and rushed to Perekop, threatening to cut off the White Guards who were fighting in Northern Tavria from the Crimea. Zhloba had over ten thousand cavalry, supported by artillery and armored vehicles. It seemed that it was impossible to stop them, since the White Guards on this section of the front did not have any reserves.

In this situation, Wrangel turned to aviation as his last hope. And the aviators did not disappoint. In the early morning of June 29, 13 De Havilland bombers, led by Tkachev himself, appeared over the red cavalrymen camped for the night. At the very first explosions of bombs, the horses scattered. Maddened by the roar, they threw off and trampled riders, overturned carts and artillery carts. Freed from the bomb load, the pilots showered the enemy with machine-gun fire.

When the planes flew away to replenish their ammunition, the Red commanders somehow managed to gather the surviving soldiers into a marching column, but then a new raid followed, followed by another. This is how Tkachev himself described one of the attack aircraft in a combat report:

“Under my leadership, a column of the Zhloba corps was attacked near the village of Waldheim. After the bombing, the Reds rushed into the field in panic. The pilots, having dropped to 50 meters, completely defeated the Reds, who fled to the east and northeast, with machine-gun fire. The entire field was covered with black spots of dead horses and people. The Reds abandoned almost all the carts and machine-gun carts they had.”

On June 30, the Zhloba Corps ceased to exist as an organized fighting force. Small groups of horsemen, hiding from airstrikes, scattered throughout villages and farmsteads, completely losing contact with the command. No more than two thousand of them were able to escape and go to their own. The rest either died or surrendered to the soldiers of Wrangel’s army who arrived in time to the breakthrough site.

The defeat of Zhloba's cavalry was the highest achievement of white aviation in its entire history. Even Soviet military science recognized this fact, and using its example, cadets of the Red Army flight schools studied the tactics of aircraft against cavalry. In fact, for the first time, the aviators had a decisive influence on the entire course of the war, because if Zhloba had managed to break into the practically unprotected Crimea, the Reds would have won victory in July 1920.

But thanks to the pilots, Crimea survived, and the war continued. At the beginning of August, the Reds crossed the Dnieper in the Kakhovka region and, without wasting a minute, began to build powerful defense lines on the captured bridgehead. When the Whites, having brought up reserves, tried to counterattack, it was already too late - Kakhovka was covered with a network of trenches and wire fences, bristling with artillery batteries and machine-gun nests. The counterattack failed, and the White Guards had to retreat with heavy losses.

Wrangel again threw airplanes into battle, but here the Tkachevites suffered failure for the first time. Against deep trenches, dugouts and well-protected artillery positions, the machine guns and small bombs that were in service with the white aviation were powerless. Air raids did not produce any results. Then the white pilots began to bomb the crossings along which the Kakhov group was being supplied, but in response the red pilots began to deliver ammunition and reinforcements to the bridgehead at night.

Meanwhile, the strength of the White Guard Air Force was gradually dwindling, not so much because of losses, but because of accidents and breakdowns of vehicles that were extremely worn out by continuous combat work. If by the beginning of September Tkachev had about 30 airplanes left, then a month later he had less than 20. With such forces it was impossible to resist the Red Army, and no replenishment was expected, since the Western allies stopped supplies in the summer.

The rest is known: on October 28, the Reds launched a powerful attack from the Kakhovsky bridgehead in the direction of Perekop. There was nothing to parry him with. The Whites had to hastily retreat to Crimea. At the same time, they destroyed almost all of their planes at front-line airfields, which, due to their disrepair, could no longer take off.

On November 11, the fortifications of the Turkish Wall fell, and on the morning of the 15th, the last steamship with soldiers of the White Army and refugees set sail from the Sevastopol pier.

The civil war ended, and for Vyacheslav Tkachev a long period of life in a foreign land began. He and his comrades were evacuated first to Galipoli, and then moved to Yugoslavia. There, Tkachev, like many other emigrants, was unable to find work in his specialty. He changed several professions: he served as a consultant at the headquarters of the Yugoslav army, worked in a private Danube river shipping company, until he finally found his new calling in pedagogy, becoming the head of extracurricular education at a Russian gymnasium in Belgrade.

Memorial plaque on the house in which the last years of V. M. Tkachev’s life passed

In 1933 V.M. Tkachev, together with engineer N. E. Kadesnikov, founded the “Russian Falcons” society in the city of Novi Sad, a youth military-patriotic organization. The society was engaged in the spiritual and physical education of the younger generation, teaching them to remember and love their abandoned homeland. In the same year, Tkachev’s book “Memo to the Russian Falcon” was published, addressed to members of this organization.

When Yugoslavia was occupied by Nazi troops in May 1941, many Russian emigrants, such as atamans Krasnov and Shkuro, began to collaborate with the Nazis. However, Vyacheslav Matveevich flatly refused to put on a German uniform. However, in December 1944, shortly after the liberation of Belgrade by the Red Army, he was arrested by SMERSH of the 3rd Ukrainian Front and deported to the USSR, separated from his wife, who remained in Yugoslavia.

As a former White Guard and an implacable enemy of Soviet power, he was sentenced to 10 years in the camps. General Tkachev served his sentence “from bell to bell” and was released in 1955. After 35 years of wandering, he returned to his native Kuban and settled in Krasnodar, getting a job as a bookbinder in an artel of disabled people.

His wife, who had moved to Paris by that time, wrote him a letter inviting him to emigrate again, promising to obtain permission to leave through the Soviet embassy. However, Vyacheslav Matveevich replied:

“It was too hard for me to return to my homeland, and I don’t want to lose it again”

Tkachev devoted the last years of his life to perpetuating the memory of his military friends - the pilots of the First World War. He managed to write and publish the book “Russian Falcon” about P.N. Nesterov, but the main work of his life is the book “Wings of Russia: memories of the past of Russian military aviation 1910-1917.” never had time to be published during the author’s lifetime.

V.M. Tkachev died on March 25, 1965 and was buried at the Slavic cemetery in Krasnodar. In 1994, a memorial plaque was installed on the house where the famous pilot’s life ended. The Commander-in-Chief of Russian Aviation, General P. S. Deinekin, arrived at its opening, and during the ceremony, pilots of the Russian Knights aerobatic team flew in the sky above the city in a clear parade formation.

"Flying Cossack" Vyacheslav Tkachev.

In many ways he was the first. The first civilian and military pilot from the Cossack class. The first Russian aviator to fly one and a half thousand miles. The first pilot of Russia is the Knight of St. George, the creator of Russian fighter aviation, the founder of Russian air combat and reconnaissance, the first commander of aviation of the Russian Empire with the rank of general.
The only White Guard general sentenced to 10 years in correctional camps in the USSR, as well as the only general who wrote and published a number of books under Soviet rule.
But, despite many merits, the name of this man was erased for many years from the history of Russian military aviation, to which he gave most of his life. This unique person was our fellow countryman, a native of the village of Kelermesskaya, General of Aviation Vyacheslav Matveevich Tkachev.
Outstanding flight.
The Tkachev Cossacks became known in the Kuban from the middle of the 18th century. The grandfather of the future general of aviation, centurion Vasily Tkachev, flashed his daring in 1829 during the capture of the Turkish fortress of Anapa and was awarded personal nobility. In 1852, during the defense from the highlanders of the village of Sagat-Girey, his father, Matvey Tkachev, distinguished himself. During the Crimean War, he became a Knight of St. George and rose to the rank of military foreman. As a nobleman, after the end of the Caucasian War, he received a plot of land of 182 acres in the Kelermesskaya yurt, on which the current Tkachev farm later arose.
On September 24 (October 6), 1885, Matvey Vasilyevich and Anastasia Ivanovna Tkachev had a son, who was named a rare name at that time - Vyacheslav.
Having received his primary education at home, a Cossack boy from the Maikop department of the Kuban region, at the age of ten, successfully passed the entrance exam to the Nizhny Novgorod Count Arakcheev Cadet Corps. There he became friends with the mischievous Pyotr Nesterov, with whom he would later develop a close friendship. In 1906, Vyacheslav Tkachev graduated from the Konstantinovsky Imperial Artillery School and served in the 2nd Kuban Battery. Then he is transferred as an officer-educator to the Odessa Cadet Corps.
There in 1911 he graduated from a private aviation school, and a year later, on the recommendation of Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich, centurion Tkachev was sent to the Sevastopol officer school of the aviation department of the air fleet. At school he became the best student with the most credits. For his brilliant studies he was awarded the Order of St. Anne, 3rd degree.
After graduating from Sevastopol school, Vyacheslav Tkachev lives in Kyiv. He is friends with Pyotr Nesterov and Igor Sikorsky. In 1913, Tkachev on the Nieuport made a record flight Kyiv - Odessa - Kerch - Taman - Ekaterinodar. For this flight, the Kyiv Aeronautics Society V.M. Tkachev was awarded a gold medal with the inscription: “For the outstanding flight of 1913.” For several days he demonstrated aerial flights on a Nieuport airplane. For three days Tkachev demonstrated his flying skills in the skies over Yekaterinodar. Townspeople closed their shops, employees took time off from work. At this time, he visited his mother and relatives in Kelermesskaya.
In air battles.
On the day Russia entered the First World War, V.M. Tkachev was appointed commander of the 20th corps aviation detachment in Lida. With the outbreak of war, he became an aerial reconnaissance aircraft, flying across the front line to the rear of the Austro-Hungarian army. During one of the flights, his airplane was fired upon, puncturing the oil tank. The oil burned the courageous aviator, but he managed to reach his men. Having landed, V.M. Tkachev jumped on his horse and went to a nearby town to transmit intelligence to headquarters. Returning to the airplane, he saw that the advancing Austrians were about to capture it. He found a cart, loaded the airplane onto it and took it to the rear.
For this reconnaissance, Tkachev was awarded the St. George Cross, IV degree, and became the first Russian pilot - Knight of St. George. In December 1914, V.M. Tkachev became the first Russian pilot to shoot down an enemy aircraft in an air battle. Moreover, he shot down a German Albatross with a pistol. After this battle, machine guns were installed on Russian airplanes. In total, V.M. Tkachev had at least five enemy aircraft shot down.
In August 1916, Tkachev led the 1st fighter air group, which included the 2nd, 4th and 19th air squadrons. Under his leadership and with his direct participation, a fighter aviation group and three new aviation detachments were created. Tkachev personally conducted deep rear reconnaissance of the enemy, achieving great results.
At the beginning of 1917, Colonel Tkachev was appointed commander of an air division, then - aviation inspector of the Southwestern Front. In March 1917, with the rank of colonel, he was appointed to the highest post of inspector general of aviation, and from June 6 - head of the Field Directorate of Aviation and Aeronautics at the headquarters of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief, essentially the head of Russian aviation. In 1917, Tkachev completed work on the first manual in the history of Russian aviation, “Materials on Air Combat Tactics.” In this document, as the subsequent course of events showed, he laid the foundation for the development of fighter aviation tactics in Russia. At the end of the war, he was awarded the golden Arms of St. George.
In the fire of the Civil War.
After the October Revolution, Vyacheslav Tkachev supported the white movement. In December 1917, fearing reprisals from revolutionary-minded soldiers and sailors, V.M. Tkachev fled from the Headquarters of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief in Mogilev to Kuban. At the beginning of 1918, he joined the white partisan detachment of Colonel Kuznetsov as an ordinary soldier, operating against the troops of the North Caucasus Soviet Republic in the Maykop region. He was captured and barely escaped execution, being saved by fellow countrymen who stood up for him.
In the summer of 1918, he created the first air detachment in the Kuban as part of Denikin’s Volunteer Army. Until May 1919, Vyacheslav Matveevich commanded the 1st Kuban Cossack Aviation Division. On May 8, 1919, he was appointed head of the air detachment of the Caucasian Army, and on May 19, he was promoted to major general. After successful actions near the village of Velikoknyazheskaya, he took part in the battles in the Tsaritsyn direction in June–July 1919.
In April 1920, he became the chief of aviation of the Armed Forces of the South of Russia, and then the chief of aviation of the Russian Army under General Wrangel. At the same time he was awarded the Order of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker, 2nd degree.
Far from my native land.
After the evacuation from Crimea, Russian military pilot V.M. Tkachev emigrated to Yugoslavia. For some time he worked as an editor of an aviation magazine, then in a private shipping company. Developed a number of manuals and manuals for Yugoslav aviation. While living in Yugoslavia, he showed great concern for the welfare of Russian pilots. At the headquarters of the Yugoslav Aviation Inspectorate, where he serves, his friendship develops with the last chieftain of the Maykop department, F.Ya. Danilov, numerous fellow Kuban citizens. In 1922, he received the rank of lieutenant general and the position of inspector general, and in 1927 he became the first and only aviation general of the Russian Army.
After his resignation in 1934, Vyacheslav Matveevich settled in Novi Sad and began teaching at the Russian men's gymnasium. In 1937, Tkachev officially received Yugoslav citizenship.
Facing a difficult choice.
Like many of the Russian emigrants, V.M. Tkachev perceives the German attack on the USSR as a chance to change power in his homeland.
In 1941, he became a marching ataman of the Kuban Cossack army in Yugoslavia, and participates in the formation of Cossack units of the Russian Security Corps in Serbia.
“I had to endure a lot of disappointments in the white camp. I did not find what I expected... It was not selfish considerations, not political convictions, but only a sense of patriotism that pushed me back in 1917 onto the anti-Soviet path. And as a result, I lived as an emigrant in Yugoslavia for 24 years, homesick for my homeland,” he later wrote in his diary.
When the Red Army approached Belgrade, he refused to evacuate. On October 20, 1944, Vyacheslav Matveevich was arrested by SMERSH of the 3rd Ukrainian Front. He was sent to Moscow, to Lubyanka, where on August 4, 1945, by the verdict of a military tribunal, he was sentenced to 10 years under Article 58.
His wife was not deported to the USSR, and a few years after the war she ended up near Paris in a nursing home.
After serving 10 years in the Gulag camps, on February 11, 1955 he was released without the right to live in big cities. Having received USSR citizenship, he settled in the Kuban, Krasnodar, where he worked in the artel of disabled bookbinders named after. Chapaev for 27 rubles 60 kopecks. He worked part-time - he wrote notes for newspapers, the book “Russian Falcon” about his friend Nesterov. In 1956, his wife found him, called him to her place, and it seemed like there was even an opportunity to leave, but he wrote to her: “The Motherland has been given to me too dearly, you’d better move to me.” So they never met again.
According to eyewitnesses, in the last years of his life he grieved for his wife. On March 24, 1965, at the age of 80, Vyacheslav Matveevich Tkachev, a Kuban Cossack, military pilot, lieutenant general, died in Krasnodar and was buried in the Slavic cemetery.
During his long life, V.M. Tkachev was awarded the orders of St. Stanislav 2nd and 3rd classes, St. Anna 2nd, 3rd and 4th classes, St. George 4th class, St. Vladimir 4th class with swords and bow, golden Arms of St. George, French "Cross de Guerre" ", Order of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker.
Thirty years after the death of Vyacheslav Matveevich Tkachev, the Motherland gave the Russian pilot what he deserved. On September 23, 1995, in connection with the 110th anniversary of his birth, at house No. 82 on Shaumyan Street in Krasnodar, where he lived in recent years, the Commander-in-Chief of the Russian Air Force, Colonel General of Aviation Pyotr Deinekin, solemnly unveiled a memorial plaque to the Kuban Cossack aviator.
And in July 2010, at the Holy Protection Church in the village of Kelermesskaya, local Cossacks unveiled a memorial plaque to the eminent fellow aviator.

SerbiaUSSR

Type of army Years of service Rank Commanded

20 KAO, 11 AD

Job title Battles/wars Awards and prizes

Foreign

Retired

Vyacheslav Matveevich Tkachev(1885-1965) - Major General of Aviation, outstanding military pilot, Knight of St. George.

Origin

Vyacheslav was born on September 24 (October 6), 1885 in the village of Kelermesskaya, Maikop department of the Kuban region (present-day Adygea) in the family of a military foreman. Father, Matvey Vasilyevich, received the Order of St. George, 4th degree, during the Crimean War of 1853-1856 and rose to the rank of military foreman. Grandfather Vasily distinguished himself in 1829 during the capture of the Turkish fortress of Anapa and was awarded personal nobility.

Biography

On August 30, 1904, he entered service after graduating from the Nizhny Novgorod Cadet Corps and was enrolled as a cadet of private rank as a volunteer of the 1st category in the Konstantinovsky Artillery School.

On June 30, 1906, after graduating from college, he was released as a cornet into the 2nd Kuban Cossack artillery battery, and in the summer of 1908 he was transferred to the 5th Kuban Cossack battery. On May 6, 1909, by the highest order, he was promoted to centurion for his length of service.

On September 6, 1910, Centurion Tkachev was appointed officer-educator in the Odessa Cadet Corps. Having seen the flights of an airplane in the Odessa sky, he becomes interested in aviation and, with the permission of his superiors, enters a private aviation school, where he studies in his free time.

Tkachev (standing second from left) among the participants of the Odessa Aviation School, led by the commander of the OVO troops, Adjutant General N. P. Zarubaev and the president of the flying club A. A. Anatra, 1911

In 1911 he graduated from the aviation school of the Odessa Aero Club. Having received a diploma as a civil pilot, Tkachev seeks in October to be sent to study at the Sevastopol Officer School of the Aviation Department of the Air Fleet (OSHA OVF).

Military pilot

On December 11, 1912, he passed the exam for the rank of pilot at the OSHA Allied Fleet and on January 5, 1913, was assigned to the 7th Aeronautical Company. After the disbandment of the 7th Aeronautical Company in June 1913, he took part in the formation of the first large aviation unit of the Russian army - the 3rd Aviation Company in Kyiv, where he then served in the 11th Corps Aviation Detachment together with Pyotr Nesterov. On October 5, 1913, by the highest order, he was promoted to captain with seniority from April 22, 1913.

Pilot-aviator sotnik Tkachev

On October 12 (25), 1913, he made a record flight on the Nieuport along the route Kyiv - Odessa - Kerch - Taman - Ekaterinodar with a total length of 1500 miles. Despite the unfavorable autumn weather and other difficult conditions, Tkachev brilliantly completed this task, for which the Kiev Aeronautics Society awarded him a gold badge “For the most outstanding flight in Russia in 1913.”

On March 10, 1914, he was seconded to the 4th Aviation Company upon its formation, and on the same day, Poedesaul Tkachev was appointed commander of the XX Aviation Detachment, attached to the headquarters of the 4th Army. In the initial period of the war, Tkachev made several very important reconnaissance flights for the Russian command, for which, by Order of the Army of the Southwestern Front dated November 24, 1914, No. 290, he was awarded the Order of the Holy Great Martyr and Victorious George, IV degree (the first among pilots).

Commander of the XX KAO Esaul Tkachev

In December 1914, on the South-Western Front, the commander of the aviation detachment, V.M. Tkachev, carrying only a Nagan pistol, was the first among Russian pilots to attack the German Albatross airplane and, by his actions, forced the enemy to retreat.

In the period from June 4 to June 7, 1915, despite the obvious danger to life from the destructive fire of anti-aircraft batteries, he repeatedly made his way behind enemy lines, collecting important information. Having met a German airplane armed with a machine gun, he entered into a duel with it and put it to flight.

On July 4, 1915, while conducting aerial reconnaissance in the area of ​​the Lina and Styr rivers, he discovered the concentration of a strong German attack group.

On August 1, 1916, V. M. Tkachev shot down the Austrian Aviatik airplane, and the aircraft and both pilots fell into the hands of Russian soldiers.

In 1916 - military foreman and chief of the 11th air division (from April 21, 1916), and then - aviation inspector of the Southwestern Front (from September 3, 1916). Awarded the Golden Arms "For Bravery" (September 10, 1916).

On January 11, 1917, by the highest order of December 20, 1916, he was renamed from military sergeant major to lieutenant colonel with enlistment in the engineering troops. After the February Revolution, Tkachev took the post of head of the Aviakants (Aviation All Materials).

On June 9, 1917, Tkachev was appointed head of the Field Directorate of Aviation and Aeronautics at the Headquarters of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief, abbreviated as aviadarm (aviation of the active army, from June 26, 1917), essentially the head of Russian aviation.

In 1917, Tkachev completed work on the first manual of its kind in the history of the development of Russian aviation - “Materials on Air Combat Tactics,” compiled on the basis of combat practice in the Lutsk region in the fall of 1916. In this document, as the subsequent course of events showed, he laid the foundation for the development of fighter aviation tactics in Russia.

On November 19, 1917, having learned about the upcoming occupation of the Commander-in-Chief Headquarters by arriving Petrograd soldiers led by the new Supreme Commander-in-Chief, Warrant Officer Krylenko, Tkachev submitted his resignation, and the next day, without waiting for an answer, he voluntarily left for the front. In the note he left, he addressed the Chairman of the Aviation Council with a final appeal, which essentially became a requiem for the Russian Air Force:

To the Chairman of the Aviation Council.
The seizure of Headquarters by the Bolsheviks put me in a hopeless position. I was faced with a problem: to remain in my position, to submit to Krylenko and thus take part in the state destruction that the invaders of power are bringing with them, or to throw myself at the mercy of the victors, expressing my disobedience to them. However, resolving this issue in the first way could not have taken place at all, since according to the information I had, I should have been arrested even regardless of whether I obeyed the impostor Krylenko or not. Thus, with the advent of the Bolsheviks at Headquarters, I was lost to aviation. Considering it my moral duty to the Motherland in its difficult days of trials to work, fighting with all our might and means against the terrible poison carried by the criminals of the people and the state - the Bolsheviks, and not sit under arrest, I submitted a report on November 19 to the Chief of Staff with a request to dismiss me from my position position and the appointment as my deputy of one of the following candidates: Colonel Konovalov, Stepanov or Kravtsevich and, having temporarily handed over the position to Colonel Nizhevsky, on November 20 I left Headquarters, submitting a report on leaving for the front. In the person of the Aviation Council, I repent to all my dear aviation for my suffering now. I can be reproached for leaving my responsible post in a difficult moment, but by doing this I accelerated my departure only by a few hours. I ask the Aviation Council to come to the aid of my deputy with all its authority and possible means to save aviation from complete collapse. I pray that for the future renewed Russia at least a cell will be preserved, which will serve as the beginning for a future powerful air fleet.
Signed by Colonel Tkachev.

Participation in the White movement

In December 1917, V. M. Tkachev, fearing reprisals from revolutionary-minded soldiers and sailors, fled to Kuban, with two arrests and escapes along the way.

At the beginning of 1918, he participated as a private in the battles of the white partisan detachment of Colonel Kuznetsov against the troops of the North Caucasus Soviet Republic. The detachment was supposed to cover the crossing of the Kuban of the main forces under the command of V.L. Pokrovsky, but due to the prevailing circumstances it was surrounded, and Vyacheslav Matveevich was captured by the Reds. From March to August 1918, Colonel Tkachev was in Maykop prison, and on September 7, the Bolsheviks were driven out of Maykop, after which Tkachev was placed at the disposal of the Regional Government. Since the Whites had practically no aviation, Vyacheslav Matveyevich was sent to Ukraine, to Hetman Pavlo Skoropadsky, as a military foreman of the Kuban Emergency Mission. History is silent about how successful this mission was, but, in any case, he managed to get something from aviation property, since after returning to Ekaterinodar he began forming the 1st Kuban air detachment, and from December 12 he was appointed commander of the newly created Kuban aviation squad. The detachment by that time already had 8 aircraft with the corresponding number of pilots, and about 150 serving enlisted personnel. He fought with the Red Army, was wounded near Tsaritsyn, recovered, and returned to duty.

Tkachev among the pilots of the 1st Kuban Cossack air squadron he organized, 1919

In May 1919, Tkachev's air detachment supported Wrangel's Caucasian Volunteer Army in battles with the 10th Army of the Red Army.

The air squad, under the command of a proven pilot, Colonel Tkachev, worked energetically and accurately: not a single enemy movement went unnoticed. Wherever the Commander went, wherever he stopped, birds of the air were looking for him everywhere according to the St. George standard. One after another, the pilots descended to headquarters, reported information about the enemy, and, having received a new mission, took off again.

The commander of the Caucasian Army highly appreciated Tkachev’s abilities and on May 8, 1919, he was appointed head of the air detachment of the Caucasian Army, in addition, he was actually subordinated to the 4th Volunteer Aviation Detachment, the 4th Don Aircraft Division and even the 47th Air Division, which consisted of English volunteers, and 19 May was promoted to major general, although this rank was officially confirmed only at the beginning of 1920. In 1920, Tkachev commanded an air detachment of the Kuban Army, while at the same time being (since 1919) a member of the Kuban regional government for internal affairs.

In April 1920, V. M. Tkachev was appointed chief of aviation of the Armed Forces of the South of Russia, and after the resignation of the commander of the Volunteer Army Denikin on April 28, 1920 - chief of aviation of the Russian Army, Lieutenant General Wrangel. There is a version, confirmed on the part of the Whites by a flight report, and on the part of the Reds by oral accounts of participants in the events, that during one of the battles of this company, V. M. Tkachev met in the air with the commander of the 213th Kazan detachment of the 13th Army, Peter Mezheraup. This happened near Melitopol. Tkachev, leading a group of 6 DH-9s (de Havilland), was attacked by a pair of Nieuports, one of which was piloted by Mezheraup. After an air battle that lasted for 45 minutes (Tkachev’s plane was damaged in 5 places), both sides left the battle and headed to their bases.

V. M. Tkachev was awarded by the allies for military valor with the English military order DSO (English: Distinguished Service Order). And on June 22, 1920, one of the first representatives of the White movement was awarded the Order of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker, 2nd degree.

In exile

After the collapse of the White movement, General Tkachev, instructing his students, said: “ An aviator will not remain idle, but keep in mind: we must join the aviation of a state that will never fight with our Motherland" Vyacheslav Matveyevich was forced to emigrate first to Turkey, from where he moved to Serbia and served for some time in the aviation inspection of the Kingdom of SHS. Since the Russian Army was not formally dissolved, Tkachev’s career continued: in 1922 he received the rank of lieutenant general and the position of inspector general, and in 1927 he became the first and only aviation general.

In Yugoslavia, V. M. Tkachev shows great concern for the organization of Russian pilots, being from 1924 to 1934 the chairman of the air fleet society of the 4th department of the Russian All-Military Union (ROVS). He works in the Russian Sokol organization (which aims at the physical and spiritual improvement of the Russian people as part of a single Slavic world), other emigrant organizations, and serves at the Yugoslav Aviation Inspectorate Headquarters.

Tkachev V.M. (standing second from left) among the board members of the Union of Russian Falconry headed by R.K. Dreyling. Yugoslavia, 1937

After his resignation in 1934, Vyacheslav Matveevich settled in Novi Sad, teaching at a Russian men's gymnasium. Here he becomes the founder and first head of the Sokol Society. In 1937, Tkachev officially received Yugoslav citizenship. From 1938 to 1941, he was the editor of the magazine “Paths of the Russian Falcon”, the organ of the Regional Union of the Russian Falcon in Yugoslavia.

In 1941, he became a marching ataman of the Kuban Cossack Army and participated in the formation of Cossack units of the Russian Corps. At the parade on October 29, 1941, dedicated to the arrival of the Guards Division in Belgrade, he addressed the Cossacks with the following words: “ The arriving Guards Division accomplished a feat unprecedented in the history of nations, preserving itself during 20 years of emigrant timelessness. A heightened sense of duty, devotion and loyalty to their standards, as a symbol of the lost Motherland, wrote an immortal page in the history of the Russian Army and the Cossacks».

At the beginning of World War II, Vyacheslav Matveevich moved to Belgrade, where he began teaching air force tactics at the Higher Military Scientific Courses of General N.N. Golovin, organized in Belgrade, where officer cadres of the Russian Corps were trained. According to contemporaries, the course of lectures he gave was “particularly solid and valuable.”

Later, he withdrew from anti-Soviet activities, withdrew from participation in numerous emigrant organizations, showed demonstrative non-cooperation with the fascists who occupied the country and worked as a teacher in schools. From the diary of V. M. Tkachev: “ I had to endure a lot of disappointments in the White camp. I didn't find what I expected. But the die was cast. And as someone who had absorbed the spirit of discipline from childhood, I submitted to the authorities in the South of Russia and conscientiously carried out all the instructions given to me. Thus, it was not selfish considerations, not political convictions, but only a sense of patriotism that pushed me back in 1917 onto the anti-Soviet path. And as a result, I lived as an emigrant in Yugoslavia for 24 years, homesick for my homeland.».

Homecoming

When Soviet troops approached Belgrade in October 1944, V. M. Tkachev flatly refused to evacuate. I decided for myself: it’s better to shoot our own people than to seek refuge in the enemy’s camp. On October 20, 1944, Vyacheslav Matveevich was arrested by SMERSH of the 3rd Ukrainian Front. He was sent to Moscow, to Lubyanka, where on August 4, 1945, by the verdict of a military tribunal, he was sentenced to 10 years under Article 58. His wife was not deported to the USSR, and several years after the war she ended up near Paris in a nursing home.

Awards

  • Order of St. Stanislaus, 3rd degree (6 May 1910)
  • The Order of St. Anne, 3rd degree (February 14, 1913) was awarded by the highest order for graduating from the OSA of the Allied Military Fleet
  • Order of St. George, 4th degree (July 2, 1916) " By the highest order of February 3, 1916... The award was approved on November 24, 1914... of the Order of the Holy Great Martyr and Victorious George of the Kuban Cossack Battery to Podjesaul Vyacheslav Tkachev for the fact that on August 12, 1914 he carried out a bold and decisive aerial reconnaissance in the area of ​​Lublin - Belzice - Opole , Yuzefovka - Annapol - Borov - Goscera - Dovo - Urzhendova - Krasnik - Lublin, penetrated the rear and flanks of the enemy position and, despite the actual enemy fire on the apparatus, which accompanied it throughout the flight and damaged the vital parts of the apparatus, with exceptional resourcefulness, with valiant presence of mind and selfless courage, he fulfilled the task assigned to him to reveal the forces and determine the direction of movement of the enemy columns, promptly delivered the information obtained by reconnaissance of primary importance and thereby contributed to the adoption of strategic decisions that led to decisive success over the enemy».

Vyacheslav Matveevich Tkachev(1885-1965) - aviation general, military pilot, Knight of St. George.

Origin

Vyacheslav was born on September 24 (October 6), 1885 in the village of Kelermesskaya, Maikop department of the Kuban region (present-day Adygea) in the family of a military foreman. Father, Matvey Vasilyevich, received the Order of St. George, 4th degree, during the Crimean War of 1853-1856 and rose to the rank of military foreman. Great-grandfather Podesaul Andrei Tkachev, being part of one of the Don Cossack regiments operating in the Kuban, participated in the capture of the Turkish fortress of Anapa by Russian troops on June 22, 1791, and was awarded for outstanding military merits by Catherine II with the conferment of hereditary nobility.

Biography

On August 30, 1904, he entered service after graduating from the Nizhny Novgorod Cadet Corps and was enrolled as a cadet of private rank as a volunteer 1st category in the Konstantinovsky Artillery School.

On June 30, 1906, after graduating from college, he was released as a cornet into the 2nd Kuban Cossack artillery battery, and in the summer of 1908 he was transferred to the 5th Kuban Cossack battery. On May 6, 1909, by the highest order, he was promoted to centurion for his length of service.

On September 6, 1910, Captain Tkachev was appointed officer-educator in the Odessa Cadet Corps. Having seen the flights of an airplane in the Odessa sky, he becomes interested in aviation and, with the permission of his superiors, enters a private aviation school, where he studies in his free time.

In 1911 he graduated from the aviation school of the Odessa flying club. Having received a diploma as a civil pilot, Tkachev seeks to be sent to study at the Sevastopol Officer School of the Aviation Department of the Air Fleet (OSHA OVF) in October.

Military pilot

On December 11, 1912, he passed the exam for the rank of pilot at the OSHA Allied Fleet and on January 5, 1913, was assigned to the 7th Aeronautical Company. After the disbandment of the 7th Aeronautical Company in June 1913, he took part in the formation of the first large aviation unit of the Russian army - the 3rd Aviation Company in Kyiv, where he then served in the 11th Corps Aviation Detachment together with Pyotr Nesterov. On October 5, 1913, by the highest order, he was promoted to captain with seniority from April 22, 1913.

On October 12 (25), 1913, he made a record flight on a Nieuport along the route Kyiv - Odessa - Kerch - Taman - Ekaterinodar with a total length of 1500 miles. Despite the unfavorable autumn weather and other difficult conditions, Tkachev brilliantly completed this task, for which the Kiev Aeronautics Society awarded him a gold badge “For the most outstanding flight in Russia in 1913.”

On March 10, 1914, he was seconded to the 4th Aviation Company upon its formation, and on the same day, Poedesaul Tkachev was appointed commander of the XX Aviation Detachment, attached to the headquarters of the 4th Army. In the initial period of the war, Tkachev made several very important reconnaissance flights for the Russian command, for which, by Order of the Army of the Southwestern Front of November 24, 1914, No. 290, he was awarded the Order of the Holy Great Martyr and Victorious George, IV degree (the first among pilots). Returning from a reconnaissance flight with valuable information, Tkachev arrived under gunfire. One of the bullets pierced the oil tank. Realizing that he would not be able to reach his own people, the pilot slid to the floor, closed the hole with his foot and in this position reached the Russian positions. Having landed the airplane on a field and taking a horse, he galloped to the nearest settlement where there was a telephone and transmitted intelligence information. Then, saving the airplane from the advancing Austrians, Tkachev loaded it onto a peasant cart and took it out from under the nose of the advancing enemy.

In December 1914, on the South-Western Front, the commander of the aviation detachment, V.M. Tkachev, carrying only a Nagan pistol, was the first among Russian pilots to attack the German Albatross airplane and, by his actions, forced the enemy to retreat.

In the period from June 4 to June 7, 1915, despite the obvious danger to life from the destructive fire of anti-aircraft batteries, he repeatedly made his way behind enemy lines, collecting important information. Having met a German airplane armed with a machine gun, he entered into a duel with it and put it to flight.

The famous Russian pilot Vyacheslav Matveevich Tkachev was born on September 24, 1885 in the village of Kelermesskaya, Maikop department of the Kuban region.
After graduating from the Nizhny Novgorod Cadet Corps, from 1904 to 1906 he studied at the Konstantinovsky Artillery School.
06/30/1906 released into the 2nd Kuban Cossack battery.
03/16/1909 transferred to the 5th Kuban Cossack battery.
From 29.08 to 13.10.1909 - i.d. battery clerk.
From 09/18/1909 to 04/07/1910 - head of the training team.
From 22.06 to 15.08.1910 - i.d. manager of the farm.
09/06/1910 seconded to the Odessa Cadet Corps “to occupy the position of officer-educator.”
On 06/01/1912, at his own request, he was sent back to the unit.
09/28/1912 sent to Aviation Officer School of the Air Fleet Department.
12/17/1912 passed the exam for the rank "military pilot".
01/01/1913 seconded to 7th Aeronautical Company.
From 05/02/1913 - in the 2nd detachment of the company (from 06/23/1913 - 11th Aviation Detachment).
06/27/1913 seconded to 3rd Aviation Company.
In October 1913, for the purpose of training in the duration of flights and orientation in unfamiliar terrain, he made a flight Kyiv-Odessa-Kerch-Taman-Ekaterinodar, with a total length of 1500 miles.
From March 10, 1914 - chief 20th Corps Aviation Detachment.
In March 1916, he handed over command of the detachment and left for Kiev to form 11th Aviation Division, temporarily assigned to the 3rd Aviation Company.
From 03/25/1916 - temporarily acting commander of the 11th aviation division.
From 04/21/1916 - commander 11th Aviation Division.
From 09.09.1916 - acting Aviation inspector of the armies of the Southwestern Front.
From December 24, 1916 - Aviation inspector of the armies of the Southwestern Front.
On January 11, 1917, he was renamed from military sergeant major to lieutenant colonel with enlistment in the engineering troops.
06/09/1917 appointed to perform the duties of the head of the Field Directorate of Aviation and Aeronautics at the Headquarters of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief.
He created the first manual in the history of Russian military aviation on air combat tactics (Material on air combat tactics. Pg., 1917).
At the end of November 1917, he left his headquarters in Mogilev and went to Kuban.
At the beginning of 1918, he joined the white partisan detachment of Colonel Kuznetsov as an ordinary soldier, operating against the troops of the North Caucasus Soviet Republic in the Maikop region. He was captured and barely escaped execution, being saved by the Kuban Cossacks who interceded for him. With the arrival of the AFSR in Kuban, in March 1919 it was formed in Ekaterinodar 1st Kuban Aviation Detachment.
05.20 - 21.1919 with a detachment participated in an operation in the area of ​​​​the village of Velikoknyazheskaya, where, together with the aviation detachment of the Don Army, he acted against units of the 10th Red Army and the cavalry divisions of S.M. Budyonny and V.M. Dumenko.
05/30/1919 wounded by a rifle bullet from the ground during one of the attacks near the village of Ivanovka.
In June 1919 he was promoted to major general. After successful actions near the village of Velikoknyazheskaya, he took part in the battles in the Tsaritsyn direction in June-July 1919.
From 04/01/1920 - Chief of Aviation of the All-Russian Socialist Republic.
From 04/14/1920 - Chief of Aviation of the Russian Army, General P.N. Wrangel.
While at his post, he paid a lot of attention to the interaction of aviation with ground units. He developed a number of new tactics that were successfully used in practice. He introduced a new system of identification marks on combat vehicles, which made it possible to better coordinate group actions of aviation. During the breakthrough of the front in northern Tavria by the cavalry strike group of D.P. Zhloba, who threatened to capture Melitopol, he developed an operation plan to contain the red cavalry with the help of aviation.
From June 15 to June 21, 1920, acting in close cooperation with the ground units of the Russian Army, in the area of ​​the villages of Waldgeim, Chernigovka, Gnadenfeld and Mikhailovka (in the valley of the Yushanly River), he managed to completely demoralize the strike group of D.P. Zhloba, as a result of which it was almost completely destroyed.
After the evacuation from Crimea, Russian military pilot Tkachev emigrated to Yugoslavia. For some time he worked as the editor of the aviation magazine “Aircraft Glasnik”, then in a private shipping company, and was a consultant to the aviation inspection of the Kingdom of CXC. Developed a number of manuals and manuals for Yugoslav aviation. Analyzing the experience of using aviation in the Civil War, he published the work: Issues of tactical use of aviation in maneuver warfare // Military collection. Book 1. Belgrade, 1921.

Vyacheslav Matveevich Tkachev with his wife in exile.


Lived in Novi Sad, then in Zemun. During the Second World War, he was the head of extracurricular education of Russian youth at male and female gymnasiums in Belgrade.
On October 30, 1944, with the entry of Soviet troops into the territory of Yugoslavia, he was arrested by the USSR Ministry of State Security and transported to Moscow through Bucharest.
12/07/1944 transferred to the jurisdiction of the GUKR "SMERSH" NPO of the USSR. Accused of “sympathy for the world bourgeoisie, terrorism and participation in an anti-Soviet organization”.
In August 1945, the first Russian military pilot to receive the Order of St. George was sentenced by a Special Meeting at the USSR Ministry of State Security to 10 years in labor camp. He served in the Gulag camps (Siblag, Ozerlage and the Camp Department of the Mordovian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic) until 02/05/1955, when he was released "with redemption in rights", without the right of residence in big cities. He settled in Krasnodar, where he lived with his niece. He worked in the artel of disabled people named after. V.I. Chapaev as a bookbinder. Despite his miserable existence, he continued research into the history of aviation in Russia.
Author of the books: “Russian Falcon” (about P.N. Nesterov), “Wings of Russia” (about the origins of Russian aviation and its participation in the First World War), excerpts from which were published in the magazine “Kuban” in 1962.
From 06.06.1961 to 25.05.1963 he studied in the reading room of the Central State Military Historical Archive (since 1992 - RGVIA), identifying documents on the topic: “The Past of Russian Aviation 1910-1917.”.
The first Russian pilot ace, Vyacheslav Matveevich Tkachev, died on March 25, 1965 in Krasnodar. He was buried at the Slavic cemetery in Krasnodar.

Ranks and titles

Khorunzhiy - 06/30/1906
Sotnik - 05/06/1909
Military pilot - 12/17/1912
Podesaul - 10/05/1913
Esaul - 02/15/1915
Military foreman - 12/03/1916
Colonel - 08/25/1917

Awards

Golden token of the Kyiv Aeronautics Society with the inscription: "For the most outstanding flight in Russia in 1913"- 1913

Orders:
Order of St. Stanislaus, 3rd degree - VP dated 05/06/1910;
Order of St. Anne, 3rd degree - VP dated February 14, 1913;
Order of St. George, 4th degree - VP dated 02/03/1915 “for the fact that on August 12, 1914, he carried out a bold and decisive aerial reconnaissance in the area of ​​Lublin-Bełżice-Opole-Józefov-Anopol-Borov-Gosceradow-Urzhendov-Krasnik-Lublin, penetrated the rear and flanks of the enemy’s position, and despite in response to actual enemy fire on the vehicle, which accompanied it throughout the entire flight and damaged the vital parts of the vehicle, with exceptional resourcefulness, valiant presence of mind and selfless courage, he completed the task assigned to him to reveal the forces and determine the direction of movement of the enemy columns, and on time delivered the information obtained by reconnaissance to the primary importance and thus contributed to the adoption of strategic decisions that led to decisive success over the enemy";
Order of St. Vladimir, 4th degree with swords and bow - VP dated 02/26/1915 “for differences in actions against the enemy during the fighting from September 27 to October 21, 1914”;
Order of St. Anne, 4th degree with the inscription “For bravery” - VP dated 08/01/1915 "for distinction in cases against the enemy during the fighting from December 1, 1914 to June 1, 1915";
Order of St. Anne, 2nd class with swords - VP dated 12/10/1915 "for distinction in cases against the enemy at the headquarters of the Riga fortified region";
Order of St. Stanislaus, 2nd degree with swords - VP dated 12/24/1915 "for distinction during the fighting from October 21 to December 1, 1914"
St. George's weapon - PAF dated 05/08/1917 “for the fact that, as the commander of the 11th aviation division with the rank of captain, during the battles near Tarnopol on May 25, 1916, despite the destructive fire of enemy anti-aircraft guns, he repeatedly broke into the enemy’s rear, carried out reconnaissance there and promptly gave valuable information about the enemy; at the same time, on the same May 25th, having met with the enemy’s “Albatross”, armed with a machine gun, he entered into battle with it and forced the enemy to flee. On June 19, 21 and 27, 1916, in the area of ​​Lipa and Styri, he obtained and promptly delivered to army headquarters information of particular importance about the concentration of a strong enemy strike group in this area, which threatened to break through our front in the direction of Lutsk, thanks to which the enemy was completely defeated by timely measures. On June 27, during reconnaissance, Lieutenant Colonel Tkachev’s apparatus was damaged by an exploding enemy shell, especially the right wing, which could have become deformed during the flight.”.

French "Cross de Guerre" - 11/15/1917
During the Civil War, he was awarded the Order of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker - Order of the Commander-in-Chief of the Russian Army No. 3294 of June 22, 1920.

We express our deep gratitude grandson of aviator Bogdashevsky - Viktor Vladimirovich BEREZIN for kindly providing a photo of A.M. Tkachev from the family archive. in exile.