In August the 374th was transferred to the rebuilding 2nd Shock Army, still in Volkhov Front, but saw little action in the
Sinyavino Offensive taking place at that time. In early October it was briefly part of the
4th Guards Rifle Corps of that Army, before being removed to the
Reserve of the Supreme High Command for a much-needed rebuilding. On 1 November Colonel Barabanshchikov was succeeded in command by Col. Stefan Vladimirovich Kolomiets. The division was assigned to the 3rd Reserve Army, and did not return to Volkhov Front until January 1943, when it was assigned to Front reserves, before being reassigned to the
54th Army in February. During March the 374th was transferred again, now to the
8th Army where it would remain for the rest of the year. The
STAVKA was planning an ambitious offensive, Operation Polyarnaya Zvezda, but this was stymied in the south by the German reserves gained by their evacuation of the
Demyansk Pocket. The northern component of the offensive, directed at the enemy communication hub of
Mga, was ordered to proceed on 19 March. After a 135-minute artillery preparation and three days of intense fighting, 8th Army's first echelon divisions, including the 374th, had penetrated 3 - 4 km on a 7 km front at the junction of the
1st and
223rd Infantry Divisions. At this point a mobile group consisting of the 191st Guards Rifle Regiment from
64th Guards Rifle Division and a battalion of tanks was committed to advance to Mga Station. In ongoing fighting until 2 April this last objective was not reached. On 14 July, after a three-day gap, Colonel Kolomiets was replaced in command by Col. Vasilii Konstantinovich Semibratov, but a few weeks later Col. Viktor Yakovlevich Popov was given command. The fifth Sinyavino Offensive began on 22 July with 8th Army again attacking east of Mga, this time on an attack front of 13.6 km in the Voronovo region and aiming to link up with
67th Army at or near Mga while detaching two rifle divisions and a tank brigade to strike at Sinyavino from the south. In order to penetrate the strong German defenses the Army commander, Lt. Gen.
F. N. Starikov, organized his forces into two shock groups, each of two echelons. The 374th was in the second echelon of the second group, along with the
165th Rifle Division and 122nd Tank Brigade ready to exploit the offensive, which was preceded by six days of artillery fire on the enemy positions, which were held by
5th Mountain Division. Despite the careful preparations the attack stalled after capturing the forward German trenches. Late in the month Starikov released the 165th and
379th Rifle Divisions from second echelon but this did not improve the situation as German reserves were arriving just as 5th Mountain was falling apart. On 9 August Soviet reconnaissance detected what they thought was a weak point in the German defenses around a small bridgehead on the east bank of the
Naziia River, held by the much-weakened 5th Mountain. Early on 11 August Starikov committed the 374th and
256th Rifle Divisions with two Guards tank regiments in support of the divisions already fighting in the area. Although the reinforced shock group almost enveloped the defending Germans and the 256th finally took the Poreche strongpoint, the attack once again stalled. Repeated attacks and counterattacks severely wore down both the attacking and defending forces. A German source states that the 374th had committed two rifle regiments to the battle and that by 16, 12 to 14 August Red Army infantry battalions were reported as "decimated". At 1440 hours on 22 August the
STAVKA finally permitted the Leningrad and Volkhov Fronts to go over to the defensive. The sixth and final Sinyavino Offensive began on 15 September. This time the 67th Army's
30th Guards Rifle Corps finally seized the Sinyavino Heights, but the supporting attacks by 8th Army achieved very little during three days of heavy fighting. The 374th was not part of the Army's shock groups in this attack. Following this battle the fighting south of Leningrad abated for the rest of the year. On 25 October Colonel Popov handed his command to Col. Aleksandr Aleksandrovich Volkov. In December the division became part of the
119th Rifle Corps, still in 8th Army. ==Leningrad-Novgorod Offensive==