At the outbreak of war with Germany the 191st was in the reserves of Leningrad Military District (redesignated as
Northern Front on June 24), along with the
177th Rifle Division, 8th Rifle Brigade, and several fortified regions. The division was still in the process of being completed at this time. The District commander, Lt. Gen.
M. M. Popov, had prepared a defense plan on May 25 which proposed the formation of five "covering regions", each manned by the forces of its own Army. Under this plan, as originally formulated, the 191st and 177th, plus the
70th Rifle Division and most of
1st Mechanized Corps, were retained as Popov's reserve, although these additional forces had been reassigned by the outbreak of the war. After its breakneck advance through the Baltic states, Army Group North began moving again early on July 9 from the
Pskov and
Ostrov regions. It was now 250km from Leningrad. In anticipation, on July 4 Army Gen.
G. K. Zhukov ordered Popov to "immediately occupy a defense line along the
NarvaLugaStaraya RussaBorovichi front." Popov officially formed the Luga Operational Group on July 6, and as of July 10 it consisted of the 191st and 177th Divisions as well as the 1st
Narodnoe Opolcheniye Division and four machine gun-artillery battalions. By July 14 the Group had been considerably reinforced with the
41st Rifle Corps, 1st Mountain Rifle Brigade, two more
Opolcheniye divisions, and other forces. Popov also placed the two tank divisions of
10th Mechanized Corps in Front reserve to provide armor support. The construction of the actual defense line had begun on June 29, using construction workers and civilians from Leningrad, although when the 177th Division arrived south of Luga itself on July 4 it was so incomplete that an additional 25,000 labourers had to mobilized. The 191st occupied the Kingisepp sector of the line. Meanwhile, the German advance from Pskov, while slower than through the Baltics due to rugged terrain and summer heat, was still gaining some 25km per day. The
XXXXI Panzer Corps advanced on Kingisepp, and on July 13 a combat group of
6th Panzer Division captured a small bridgehead over the Luga River. After securing additional footholds southeast of Kingisepp the panzers' advance was stalled for six days by fanatical Soviet resistance. In response to a letter from the
STAVKA dated July 15, Popov split the Luga Group into three separate and semi-independent sector commands on July 23. The Kingisepp Sector, under command of Maj. Gen. V. V. Semashko, consisted of the 191st and
90th Rifle Divisions, two
Opolcheniye divisions, and several other assets. On the same day, Hitler reiterated his goal of taking Leningrad before marching on Moscow. Beginning on August 8, the Northern Group of Army Group North was to attack from the Poreche and Sabsk bridgeheads over the Luga, through Kingisepp toward Leningrad. On August 11, after three days of heavy fighting which cost the attackers 1,600 casualties, the XXXXI Panzers and
XXXVIII Army Corps were able to penetrate the defenses of 90th Rifle and 2nd
Opolcheniye Divisions along the Luga at Kingisepp, Ivanovskoe, and Bolshoi Sabsk. The
8th Panzer Division was now committed, which cut the Kingisepp
Krasnogvardeisk rail line the next day. Kingisepp itself fell on August 16. Most of the defenders fell back to the Krasnogvardeisk Fortified Region, but by now the 191st had been transferred to 8th Army, and it, plus the five other worn-down divisions of that Army threatened the left flank of XXXXI Panzers, forcing it to suspend its attacks on Krasnogvardeisk.
Oranienbaum Bridgehead To resolve this situation, the German
18th Army's XXVI and
XXVIII Army Corps attacked northward toward the
Gulf of Finland between August 22-25. By September 1, 8th Army had been forced back to new defenses in a tight bridgehead south of
Oranienbaum, which would be held by Soviet forces until 1944. The assault left 8th Army in a shambles. The Army commander reported to Popov on August 25 that "[t]he main danger now in the command and control of units is the absence of almost 100 percent of our regimental commanders and their chiefs of staff and battalion commanders." Leningrad was cut off on September 8. Meanwhile, 8th Army defended the bridgehead with the 191st,
118th,
11th, and
281st Rifle Divisions, facing XXXVIII Corps. The attack began on September 9. According to A. V. Burov's war diary, "Battle is also raging south of
Kolpino and along the Oranienbaum axis." The 191st was facing the
291st Infantry Division west of
Ropsha. The division was pushed northwest of that place, but managed to hold there. General Zhukov had arrived at Leningrad on September 9, and his deputy, Maj. Gen.
I. I. Fedyuninskii, soon reported that the morale of 8th Army, as well as the
42nd and
55th Armies, was cracking. On September 14, Zhukov decided to go over to the attack, as he perceived that the German advance to
Uritsk had left them vulnerable to a flank attack; 8th Army would act as the "hammer" and 42nd Army as the "anvil". The 191st and 281st Divisions, reinforced by the 11th and
10th Rifle Divisions plus what remained of the 3rd
Opolcheniye Division would attack toward
Krasnoye Selo. The commander of 8th Army, Maj. Gen.
V. I. Shcherbakov, declared his forces were too weak to carry out this plan, and he was relieved of his command. Lt. Gen.
T. I. Shevaldin replaced him. In the event, the German forces preempted 8th Army's counterattack, by resuming their own offensive on September 16. This encountered strong and continuing Soviet resistance and heavy fighting went on for possession of Volodarsky, Uritsk, and
Pulkovo Heights until the end of the month, by which time 42nd Army had solidified its defenses. However, to the west three German divisions, including
1st Panzer, attacked and defeated 10th Rifle and forced it to abandon Volodarsky on September 16. The attackers reached the Gulf of Finland the same day, cutting the Oranienbaum bridgehead off from Leningrad, which was in turn cut off from the rest of the USSR. Whipped on by Zhukov, Shevaldin completed his regrouping on September 18 and attacked toward Krasnoye Selo with four divisions the next day. A further German assault struck on September 20, forcing the 191st and the remainder of Shevaldin's shock group back to the line Novyi PetergofTomuziPetrovskaya, where the front stabilized once and for all.
First Sinyavino Offensive In early October the 191st was removed from the bridgehead into Leningrad proper, where it was assigned to the Eastern Sector Operational Group, formed by Fedyuninskii from 55th Army and Front reserves. This Group consisted of five rifle divisions, two tank brigades and one battalion, and supporting artillery. It was intended to assault across the
Neva River on a 5km-wide sector between Peski and Nevskaya Dubrovka, advance toward Sinyavino, and help encircle and destroy the German forces south of
Shlisselburg in conjunction with
54th Army advancing from the east, effectively lifting the siege. Again, German action preempted the Soviet attack, as they began a thrust toward Tikhvin on October 16. Nevertheless, the
STAVKA insisted that the attack proceed as planned on October 20, but it made little progress. By October 23, Tikhvin was directly threatened, and at about this time the 191st was transferred to 4th Army, which was under direct
STAVKA control. == Battle for Tikhvin ==