, 14 June 1944 Under the organization of 1939, each rifle
division had a howitzer
regiment with a 152-mm howitzers
battalion (12 pieces). In July 1941 these regiment were cancelled. Same fate befell 152-mm howitzers battalions of motorized and armored divisions.
Estonia used 4 M1909s on
2 railway artillery platforms in the
Estonian Armored Train Regiment from 1934 to 1941. The Estonian artillery pieces would later be captured and used by the USSR in the Second World War after the USSR
invaded and occupied the Baltic States. Corps artillery units didn't employ 152-mm howitzers early in the war (they did use howitzer-guns ML-20); but from late 1943 the recreated corps artillery included a regiment consisted of five batteries (totaling 20 pieces), equipped, along with other types, with 152-mm howitzers. By 1 June 1944, there were 192 such pieces in corps artillery. Reserve of the Main Command included howitzer regiments (48 pieces) and heavy howitzer
brigades (32 pieces), sometimes organized into artillery divisions. The howitzer was used by the RKKA in the
Battle of Khalkhin Gol and in the
Winter War. At the outbreak of the
German-Soviet War the M1909/30 was still the most numerous 152-mm howitzer in Soviet service. On 1 June 1941, the RKKA possessed about 2,500 pieces, about twice as much as the newer
M-10s, which were soon removed from production. Although from 1943 the M1909/30 was again being gradually replaced, this time by
D-1, it was still in service by the end of the war. A number of guns of this type fell into the hands of
Wehrmacht in 1941–42; these were adopted as
15,2 cm sFH 445(r). Germans also produced ammunition for these guns. Most of the pieces were assigned to coastal artillery.
Finnish Army captured 14 pieces during the
Winter War, and 85 more early in the
Continuation War. The guns were actively used in combat. As a training weapon, the M1909/30 remained in Finnish service until the 1980s. ==Summary==