At the start of the Moscow counteroffensive the division was taking part in reconnaissance activity toward
Solnechnogorsk. Otherwise it remained on the defensive until January 22, 1942, when it was redesignated as the new 130th Rifle Division. After redesignation its order of battle was very similar to that of the 1st formation: • 371st Rifle Regiment (from 1st Worker's Regiment) • 528th Rifle Regiment (from 2nd Worker's Regiment) • 664th Rifle Regiment (from 3rd Worker's Regiment) • 363rd Artillery Regiment • 215th Antitank Battalion • 453rd Antiaircraft Battery • 151st Reconnaissance Company • 192nd Sapper Battalion • 130th Signal Battalion (later 342nd Signal Company) • 122nd Medical/Sanitation Battalion • 103rd Chemical Defense (Anti-gas) Company • 255th Motor Transport Company • 153rd Field Bakery • 994th Divisional Artillery Workshop • 261st Field Postal Station (later 1802nd) • 1601st Field Office of the State Bank (later 1135th) Colonel Anisimov remained in command. During January and early February 3rd Shock, commanded by Lt. Gen.
M. A. Purkaev, and
4th Shock Armies had carved out a huge salient centered around the town of
Toropets, but the former was now bogged down in front of
Velikiye Luki and the small town of Kholm.
Kholm Pocket Kholm had been isolated by the
33rd Rifle Division on January 23 after a 110km pursuit of the routed
123rd Infantry Division. The town held a garrison of 3,158 German troops, organized as Battlegroup Scherer, and had been declared as a
Festung by Hitler. For several days the encirclement was fairly loose and German reinforcements were able to enter up to January 28 when the pocket began to rely entirely on air supply, which had to be airdropped or landed by
glider within the 2km-wide perimeter. By the end of the month both sides were burnt out. Purkayev soon recognized that the 33rd alone could not take Kholm, and in early February reinforced the effort with the fresh
391st Rifle Division, a pair of
T-34s and 11
T-60s of the 146th Tank Battalion, a regiment of 76mm artillery, and three
Katyusha rocket launchers. In theory this gave him a 5:1 advantage in manpower. The attack resumed on February 13 with a sustained bombardment and air attacks, turning much of the town into rubble. A large dent was made in the perimeter but after five days of close combat the breach was sealed. On February 21 Purkayev prepared for his next big push following the arrival of the 130th, plus the 27th and 75th Rifle Brigades, which were sent in against Group Uckermann. This Group was operating a heavy artillery strongpoint at Dubrova, outside the perimeter, which was firing in support of the garrison. This position was taken after a two-day fight and Group Uckerman was forced to pull back. The 33rd had received replacements and on February 24 it and the 391st struck the southeast side of Kholm while the fresh 37th Rifle Brigade attacked from the north. This proved to be the crisis of the siege, but the Soviet forces were unable to capture the center of the town.
Demyansk Pocket By the beginning of April the 130th had been transferred to Northwestern Front's 34th Army where it joined Operational Group Ksenofontov, led by Maj. Gen. A. S. Ksenofontov, and also containing the
23rd Rifle Division and six ski battalions. This Group had been formed in 3rd Shock in mid-February and on February 25 had linked up with the 1st Guards Rifle Corps to isolate German
II Army Corps in and around Demyansk. As at Kholm, Hitler declared Demyansk a
Festung. Group Ksenofontov and Group Moscow had then attacked on March 6–10 to break the outer perimeter of the pocket, but failed. By now Northwestern Front's winter counteroffensive had culminated, and the arrival of the 130th was insufficient to revive it, while II Corps was completely reliant on airlifted supplies. The Army was tasked with containing the southern side of the pocket with, initially, seven rifle divisions, two rifle brigades, and 10 ski battalions. By April 22 a "land bridge" was driven to the pocket through the village of
Ramushevo, but it remained largely dependent on air supply. Over the coming months most of the fighting would involve Northwestern Front's efforts to close this corridor. In August the
STAVKA sent orders to Lt. Gen.
P. A. Kurochkin, commander of the Front, to launch another attack, this time making local attacks by 34th, 53rd, and
27th Armies around the perimeter of the salient to draw German reserves. This began on August 10, On August 14 the team was fighting near the village of Sutoki as part of a sniper platoon, but came under a series of German counterattacks. The platoon was surrounded; Kovshova and Polivanova continued firing from a trench until they exhausted their ammunition. With no other options available they prepared grenades, which they threw close enough to eliminate some of their attackers while also taking their own lives. The report of a survivor of the action was spread through the USSR, and on February 14, 1943, were both posthumously made
Heroes of the Soviet Union. The two women were eventually buried near
Staraya Russa. Officially they had jointly accounted for 300 German soldiers killed or wounded. Kurochkin brought this unsuccessful offensive to a halt on August 21 due to excessive casualties and lack of ammunition. Shortly after the 130th was moved to 1st Shock Army, which had been conducting most of the assaults on the southern side of the Ramushevo corridor. On September 10 Colonel Anisimov became deputy to the commander of that Army, Lt. Gen.
V. Z. Romanovskii and three days later Col. Mikhail Vasilevich Romanovskii took over the division. Anisimov would be relieved on January 24, 1943, for "indecisiveness", and sent to command the
7th Guards Rifle Division, followed by the 391st Division, before being moved to the training establishment in October. By November Kurochkin was thoroughly discredited in the eyes of Stalin, and he called on Marshal
S. K. Timoshenko to take over Northwestern Front on November 17. Timoshenko decided to move his axis of attack eastward from the neck of the corridor, hoping to find weaker defenses. On November 23/24,
11th Army carried out a successful operation against a German strongpoint, but this also gave away the change of direction. The main attack started on the morning of November 28, with two divisions of 11th Army pushing from the north and the 130th, plus two rifle brigades, driving from the south against the
126th Infantry Division. The defenders were on the alert and caused heavy casualties as the shock groups struggled through minefields and barbed wire. Neither army made more than local gains, but Timoshenko was ordered to continue after a brief pause in an effort to deflect attention from
Operation Mars. German reinforcements from the siege of Leningrad made further progress impossible. In recognition of its achievements to date, on December 8 the division was redesignated as the 53rd Guards Rifle Division. == 3rd Formation ==