For most of the rest of its existence, the 55th was involved in the battles to liberate Belarus (Belorussia). In October, Central Front was renamed
Belorussian Front. Prior to this, by September 30, the division had captured a small bridgehead across the Dniepr between
Love and Radul. This bridgehead became the main staging area for the offensive that liberated
Gomel in late November, although it involved regrouping the 55th into another bridgehead to the south. Prior to the Gomel-Rechitsa Offensive Operation in early November the division was reassigned to the
89th Rifle Corps, where it would remain until disbanded. The 55th deployed in the Kuchaevka-Domamerki sector in the first echelon alongside
15th Rifle Division. During the offensive, on November 28, the corps, supported by
2nd Guards Cavalry Corps, drove a wedge into German defenses on the approaches to Iurevichi on the
Pripiat River but was unable to exploit further. A further offensive to try to liberate the German stronghold at
Kalinkovichi began on December 8, with 89th Corps on the left flank of 61st Army's front. By this time both sides were exhausted, and although a few gains were made, the offensive was shut down on December 12. On January 8, 1944, 61st and
65th Armies, the left wing of Belorussian Front, launched the Kalinkovichi-Mozyr Offensive, with the objective of liberating these two fortified towns and drive the German forces back at least to the Ipa River. Prior to the offensive the 2nd and
7th Guards Cavalry Corps were regrouped from east to south of Kalinkovichi, screened by
415th Rifle Division that was facing a scratch force of three German battle groups. When the offensive opened, the cavalry soon deeply outflanked the German forces in the western sector, but the main attacks of the two Soviet armies made little progress. In spite of this, the German grouping was in a very deep pocket, and after several days of fighting through very difficult terrain, the 55th, advancing westwards along the rail line south of Klinsk, linked up with the cavalry. On January 14 the division was recognized for this with the following honorific: Col.
Kornei Mikhailovich Andrusenko was given command of the division on January 22, and he would remain at that post for the duration of the 2nd formation. By March, the 55th was severely worn down by this grim fighting in the Pripiat swamps and forests. Its rifle regiments had no rifle battalion structure left; each regiment consisted of four separate rifle companies, each of 90 men in three platoons and a section each of sub-machine gunners and heavy machine guns. Each regiment also had a single mortar and a single heavy machine gun company, plus a reconnaissance platoon. In short, the front line strength of the division was about half that of one full-strength rifle regiment. At the start of
Operation Bagration the division was still in the much-reduced 61st Army, in the western sector of the renamed 1st Belorussian Front, facing German
2nd Army along the south face of the Pripiat region. It played a limited role in the actual offensive, mostly holding the line and acting as a follow-on force as the Germans retreated. Before dawn on June 29 the
Dniepr Flotilla's 2nd Brigade of river cutters landed forces of the 55th across the
Pripyat River in the areas of Krukovichi and Belki, and in the Petrilov area a day later. Overcoming the enemy's resistance by the end of July 4 the division had taken the important railroad junction of Starushki and the town of Koptsevichi. As a result of this action, specifically its role in the liberation of
Luninets, the division was awarded the
Order of the Red Banner for "exemplary fulfillment of command tasks" and its "valor and courage" on July 23. It then went into the Reserve of the Supreme High Command in late July, along with the rest of its army, through August and September, moving north to join
3rd Baltic Front in the vicinity of
Riga. In late 1944 the Red Army was facing a manpower "crunch" as most men available were going into the new artillery and other support units rather than the rifle divisions. In consequence of this, on October 7 the division was broken up in 61st Army to provide replacements for the other units in the army. At the time of its disbandment, the division carried the official title of 55th Rifle, Mozyr, Order of the Red Banner Division. (Russian: 55-я стрелковая Мозырьская Краснознамённая дивизия.) == Descendant formations ==