The 209th Rifle Division began forming on October 8, 1941 in the reserves of Transbaikal Front, based on local resources and the
shtat (
table of organization and equipment) of July 29, 1941, and by December it had come under command of 36th Army in that Front, joining its "sister", the
210th Rifle Division. When it completed forming its order of battle was as follows: • 579th Rifle Regiment • 754th Rifle Regiment • 770th Rifle Regiment • 675th Artillery Regiment • 492nd Self-propelled Artillery Battalion (added in 1945) • 34th Antitank Battalion • 278th Reconnaissance Company • 398th Sapper Battalion • 597th Signal Battalion (later 320th Signal Company) • 385th Medical/Sanitation Battalion • 197th Chemical Defense (Anti-gas) Company • 517th Motor Transport Company • 359th Field Bakery • 836th Divisional Veterinary Hospital • 1490th Field Postal Station • 1490th Field Office of the State Bank Col. Vladimir Mikhailovich Akimov was assigned to command on the day the division began forming and held the post until February 24, 1942 when he was replaced by Lt. Col. Vasilii Stepanovich Elikhov. Akimov returned to command of the 35th Reserve Rifle Brigade that he had led prior to the 209th and was promoted to the rank of major general on December 20 before taking over the division again on January 24, 1943. Through this entire period it remained on this inactive front in 36th Army, which as of the beginning of the new year also contained the
94th and 210th Rifle Divisions, the 126th Rifle Brigade and the 31st Fortified Region. At the start of 1944 the situation was essentially unchanged although the Army had added the
278th and
298th Rifle Divisions and an operational rifle corps headquarters numbered the 86th. General Akimov was appointed to command of
86th Rifle Corps on April 4 and was replaced in command of the 209th by Col. Vladimir Aleksandrovich Dubovik, who would remain in this post for the duration of the war. In May all five rifle divisions of 36th Army came under command of this Corps, but a month later it went back to operational status and the divisions returned to being under direct Army command. At the beginning of 1945 the Corps had the 94th and 298th Divisions under command but the 209th, 210th and 278th were still separate divisions.
Soviet invasion of Manchuria At the time of the surrender of Germany 36th Army was still in the same configuration, but preparations for war against Japan were being made. The 492nd Self-propelled Artillery Battalion of 12
SU-76s was added to the 209th to provide fully-tracked mobile firepower given the difficult and mostly roadless terrain to be found in
Manchuria. In July the division was transferred to 17th Army, still in Transbaikal Front, joining the 278th and
284th Rifle Divisions. When the Manchurian operation began the 17th Army was in a secondary role on the western flank of the invading forces and saw very little combat before the Japanese capitulation on August 20.
Postwar Following the campaign, in common with many other formations of the Front, the 209th was awarded the honorific "Khingan" for its success in crossing the
Greater Khingan mountain range. By October 1 it had come under command of the
85th Rifle Corps, still in 17th Army. It was disbanded along with this Army in the spring and summer of 1946. ==References==