The division's order of battle mostly remained the same as the first two formations, but it inherited the 337th Antitank Battalion from the 34th Brigade. On August 20 the 301st was declared fit for service. It remained in the 9th Rifle Corps, where it was formed, for the duration of the war and on into the postwar period. 9th Corps was almost immediately reassigned to
5th Shock Army, where it would serve for most of the rest of the war. 5th Shock was then in
South Front (later
4th Ukrainian Front), and the 301st served in that Front until February, 1944. It arrived at the front during the
Donbass Strategic Offensive, advancing through the southernmost part of the Soviet-German front. On September 8 the division was recognized for its role in the liberation of Stalino, and was given its name as an honorific: In November the division was moved to 28th Army, then back to 5th Shock when that army was reassigned to
3rd Ukrainian Front. In April, 1944 the 301st was in
57th Army of the same front during the
First Jassy–Kishinev Offensive. On the 11th the division reached the
Dniestr River and, without bridging equipment, began forcing a crossing with improvised means: In the end, the several bridgeheads seized by 57th Army proved too small and shallow for major crossing operations, and the offensive on this sector came to a halt. When the
Second Jassy–Kishinev Offensive began in late August, 9th Corps and the 301st were still in 57th Army, but before month's end would return to 5th Shock Army, where they remained until postwar. At the start of the offensive 9th Corps, reinforced by 96th Tank Brigade, was committed to the fighting on the second day, moving up to the area north of Lake Botno while covered by an 11km-wide smoke screen. On August 22, still under cover of smoke, 9th Corps joined the fighting on 57th Army's left flank, supported by tanks and by the
SU-76s of the 1202 SU Regiment. This combined force crushed the enemy's resistance and by 0830 hrs. seized the strongpoints of Ursoiya and Kaushan station. By the close of the day the 301st had advanced up to 10-15km in the day's fighting and taken the village of
Zaim. The advance continued the next day and 9th Corps attained all its objectives, advancing so aggressively that it was outrunning the corps that had been in the first echelon. The whole 5th Shock Army went into the
Reserve of the Supreme High Command in September, and the division's 337th Antitank Battalion had its towed guns replaced with self-propelled SU-76 guns. In November, 5th Shock joined
1st Belorussian Front for the duration, allowing the 301st to take part in the final defeat of Germany in Poland, East Pomerania, and in Berlin. On May 2, 1945, units of the 301st reported the capture of the ruins of the
New Reich Chancellery building, just as fighting in the city was drawing to an end, and Colonel Antonov was shown the burned bodies of
Josef and
Magda Goebbels. By this time the division had earned, in addition to its honorific
Stalino, the
Order of Suvorov as well. (Russian: 301-я стрелковая Сталинская ордена Суворова дивизия). Following the German surrender, when most Soviet formations were being demobilized, 5th Shock Army, including the 301st Rifle Division, was selected to be part of the
Group of Soviet Forces in Germany, with its headquarters in Berlin. The division was disbanded in October, 1946, with the army. ==References==