The people of the
Ural districts took the initiative to create the Urals voluntary tank corps which became an elite formation. Three tank brigades (including one from
Perm) and one motor-rifle brigade and other military units were included in its structure. Colonel Vadim Sokolov oversaw the formation of the unit. On 28 March 1943, Major General
Georgy Rodin took command. The formation was initially known as the '
30th Uralsky
Voluntary Tank Corps' and was formed in April 1943 in the
Ural Military District. Workers from the Ural tank factories were among its initial recruits. The Corps has the distinction of being entirely paid-for by the donations of the population of the Urals. This included its entire complement of
T-34 tanks built by the Urals factories. 23 March 1943 is considered the "birthday" of the 243rd Perm Tank Brigade. On 1 June 1943, units of the corps were despatched to the front line for the first time. The first action for the Urals Volunteer Tank Corps was at Oryol, the counterattack (
Operation Kutuzov) on the northern side of the
Kursk salient after the German defeat at the
Battle of Kursk proper. Historian
John Erickson wrote that, following a 'ragged' attack by 11th Tank and 6th Guards Mechanised Corps by
4th Tank Army on 26 July 1943, during which both corps were heavily battered by concealed German tanks and assault guns. The next day, the 30th Tank Corps 'pushed in with a fierce attack' but the tank army 'covered only about one mile in all'. On 25 October 1943 it was honoured and renamed the '
10th Guards Uralsky
Voluntary Tank Corps'. The corps then fought in battles at
Bryansk,
Lower Silesia, Upper Silesia,
Proskurovo-
Kamenetc-
Podolsk,
Lvov-Sandomir and during the
Vistula-Oder,
Berlin and
Prague Offensives. On 16 March 1944, Major General Yevtikhy Belov became the corps commander. On 22 October 1944, Belov became deputy commander of the
4th Tank Army and Colonel Nil Chuprov replaced him in command. Chuprov was wounded on 10 February 1945 and replaced by Belov. The corps was awarded the
Order of the Red Banner, the Order of
Suvorov and the Order of
Kutuzov. The
62nd Guards Perm-Keletcky Tank Brigade, which had earlier received an honorific named for
Kielce, was in addition awarded the
Order of Bogdan Khmelnitsky for heroism shown in battle. The corps finished the war in what is now
Poland, and briefly became part of the
Northern Group of Forces. == Cold War ==