Battle of Antrea
Battle of Antrea | |
---|---|
Part of the Jääski, Finland | |
Result | Red withdrawal |
Russian Volunteers
Aarne Sihvo
Battle of Antrea was a
It was fought by the
Units
Whites
The White Army in Antrea Front included the paramilitary
Reds
The Red units were composed of the Red Guards from Viipuri area and further from the
The Reds were commanded from by the Red Guards general staff in Viipuri, but they also had a local base in Kavantsaari. The commander-in-chief in Kavantsaari was the little-known factory worker A. Backman. Even his accurate identity is not clear, but Backman was presumably captured and then killed by the Whites in early May.[5]
The battles
White retreat from Viipuri
Three days before the start of the War, the Whites attempted to take Viipuri under their control but failed. The 300-men unit fled the town and headed south across the ice of
The early stage
As the war started in 27 January, the Viipuri Reds advanced towards Antrea along the Viipuri-Joensuu railway. In 1 February they took the railway station in Tali, 10 kilometres north of Viipuri, and the next day the Karisalmi station 5 kilometres further north. In 9 February the Reds took the Kavantsaari railway station after a minor battle with the Whites. A day later the Reds lost it, but the next day they got reinforcements and took the station back again. 11 February the Reds also attacked the station of Hannila, but failed. Instead, they took the villages of Seistola and Ahvola located few kilometres west of the railroad. Ahvola was an important highway crossing of the Viipuri–Imatra and the Viipuri–Antrea highways.[2]
In 12 February, the White commander Herman Wärnhjelm ordered his men to retreat from Hannila across the Vuoksi river but the captain Aarne Sihvo refused to follow the order. Instead, Sihvo ordered his men to attack Ahvola, which the Whites then took. They also made a failed attack against Kavantsaari. Wärnhjelm was now dismissed and replaced by Sihvo. The Reds in turn, lost a large number of their strength in the following days as the Russian volunteer brigades left the Antrea Front. Some minor attacks were still made, but after 24 February the front line was formed and the battle turned into trench warfare. The two sides now had approximately 1,500 men in Ahvola and a few hundred more in their other positions.[2]
Ahvola and Pullila
Since the late February, the battle concentrated to the village of Ahvola, about five kilometres west of the railway. The Reds attacked against the White lines daily at 9 AM and then pulled back to their own trenches as the sun set.[1] During this nine-week period, both sides lost approximately 20 men dead or wounded each day. The village of Pullila, five kilometres east of the railway, was held by the Reds. The Whites unsuccessfully attacked the village a couple of times.[2]
Battles along the railway
The five-kilometre part of the railway between Kavantsaari and Hannila was controlled by armoured trains so there was little infantry activity. The Reds had a Russian armoured train Ukrainsky Revolutsiya which the Bolsheviks had previously used in Ukraine. The other Red armoured train was Panssarijuna No. 4 (Armoured Train No. 4), made in the Fredriksberg Works in Helsinki. The Whites had an armoured train called Karjalan pelastaja (The Saviour of Karelia). It was nicknamed after the first battles in Hannila, where the train managed to hit the Reds back. The train itself was ″home made″, the Whites had armoured open wagons with bricks and planks and equipped it with a mountain gun and machine guns. The trains made some attacks against each other but usually without heavy losses. The major incident was in 23 March as the Ukrainsky Revolutsiya entered just 250 metres from the White lines and bombed the Hannila station for 20 minutes. The Whites managed to hit the train with a grenade but the Ukrainsky Revolutsiya was able to pull back with some help of Panssarijuna No. 4 and was then sent to Petrograd for repairs.[4]
The White Offensive
In 23 April, the Whites launched their decisive offensive against Viipuri with 15,000 men. The Antrea Whites now encircled the railway 30 kilometres east via the village of
Aviation
Whites
Two German imported DFW C.V reconnaissance planes were flown to Antrea in late March under the command of the Danish lieutenant Knud von Clauson-Kaas. The planes were not used in action as the Swedish pilots refused to fly in demanding conditions. On 10–11 April, six Russian pilots defected Soviet Russia and joined the Finnish Whites with a Grigorovich M-9 flying boat, two Nieuport 10 reconnaissance planes and two Nieuport 17 fighters. The pilots were supporters of the Russian White movement. From 13 April, the Russian pilots made reconnaissance flights, bombed the Red positions and dropped propaganda leaflets. The planes operated from the Antrea Airfield in the ice of lake Päähkjärvi. This is considered to be the beginning of the Finnish Air Force.[7]
Reds
The Reds had two Russian Nieuport flying boats which were flown by three Russian pilots. They operated from the ice of the Pantsarlahti Bay in Viipuri. The planes made at least four reconnaissance and bombing flights between late February and the end of March.[8]
Culture
The Finnish composer Leevi Madetoja lost his brother during the Battle of Antrea as Yrjö Madetoja (b. 1885) was presumably captured and killed by the Reds in Kavantsaari 9 April. Madetoja composed a three-movement piano suite, The Garden of Death, Op. 41, for the memory of his lost brother.[9]
References
- ^ a b Seitsonen, Oula; Kunnas, Liisa. "Ahvola 1918: Archaeological Reconnaissance of a Finnish Civil War Battlefield". Journal of Conflict Archaeology. 2009 (2): 58, 63–68. Retrieved 14 December 2016.
- ^ a b c d e Susitaival, Paavo (1937). Ahvola. Porvoo: WSOY.
- ISBN 978-952-59762-6-7.
- ^ a b "ARMOURED TRAINS: Battles along the Railways in 1918". Jaeger Platoon: Finnish Army 1918–1945 Website. 30 August 2009. Retrieved 14 December 2016.
- ^ "Punainen hallinto kesti Viipurissa pisimpään". Finland 100 (in Finnish). 2016. Retrieved 14 December 2016.
- ^ Rauhalahti, Markku (1934). "Antrean Ahvolan taistelut". Vapaussodan perinne. Archived from the original on 22 March 2016. Retrieved 14 December 2016.
- ^ Berner, Aarne (1934). Ilmavoimien osallistuminen Suomen vapaussotaan vuonna 1918. Helsinki: Otava.
- ^ Berner, Aarne (1934). "Air Force Participation in Finnish War of Independence in Year 1918. Chapter III. Red Air Activity in Finland y. 1918" (PDF). Retrieved 14 December 2016.
- ISBN 978-348-71512-8-1.