14.9.2014

Pak 75 mm / Toivo Ilomäki

Toivo Osmo ilomäki (25.8.1917 Sääksmäki (mean = ospreyhill) – 4.3.1965 Hämeenlinna) oli suomalainen sotilas ja Mannerheim-ristin ritari numero 155. 
5. divisioonan 24. tykkikomppaniassa (24. TykK) panssarintorjuntatykin ampujana toiminut Ilomäki nimitettiin Mannerheim-ristin ritariksi 2. lokakuuta 1944. Sotilasarvoltaan hän oli nimityshetkellä korpraali.


Hän on ainoa sotilas, joka on saanut kaikki viisi panssarintuhoojan merkkiä eli leveän kuviollisen nauhan ja neljä kapeaa kuviotonta nauhaa yli viidentoista panssarivaunun tai rynnäkkötykin tuhoamisesta.

Kokonaissaldo on 21 panssariajoneuvoa, joista 17 yhdessä (Sammatus) taistelussa. 24.- 25. 6. 1944 käydyssä taistelussa hän tuhosi 14 kpl T-34 vaunua ja 2 kpl Klim Voroshilov tankkia ja yhden rynnäkkötykin.

Jo aiemmin hän osoitti tarkkuutensa yksittäisten pistemaalien tuhoajana, mutta varsinaisiin oikeuksiin hänen tarkkuutensa pääsi vasta kesällä 1944, kun hän sai aseekseen saksalaisen 75 K/40 -panssarintorjuntatykin siihen asti käyttämänsä venäläisen 45 mm sotasaalistykin tilalle.

Kirjailija Mauri Sariola kertoo kirjassa "Näin tekivät ritarit" että Ilomäki oli aluksi vain ammusten kantaja, koska alkuperäinen tykin ampuja oli mustasukkainen tehtävästään. 
Laukaukset menivät kuitenkin mihin sattuivat ja se suututti Ilomäkeä. 


Tykki oli venäläinen 45-millinen, jonka ammusten sytyttimet saattoi herkistää äärimmilleen - siis äärimmäisen tehokas kohdalleen osuessaan.

Ammukset menivät aina vain roimasti ohi, kunnes lopulta joukkueenjohtaja, luutnantti ja myöhemmin myös Mannerheim-ristin ritari Esko Kausti hermostui ja vaihtoi miestä tykin takana. 
ilomäki osui ensimmäisellä laukauksella siihen, mihin oli luvannut, jolloin Kausti totesi ehdottomaan sävyyn:

»Nähty on! Tällä tykillä ampuu sitten vastedes vain ilomäki, tuliko selväksi!»
Tämä luottamus osoittautui oikeaksi  

(Toivo Ilomäki / toivo = hope / ilo-mäki = joy- or gaiety hill)


Ritari Ilomäen 75 K/40 -tykki putkeen maalattuine voitonmerkkeineen on nykyisin Parolan Panssarimuseo.


-----------------------------------------------------------
Sammatuksen suurtaistelun aikana tuhosi hän samassa tehtävässä toimien kaikkiaan 16 panssarivaunua. 
Panssarivaunun torjuja merkki, joka syntyi tämän sammatus taistelun jälkeen.

Tässä taistelussa hän osoitti erikoista urheutta ja järkkymätöntä taistelutahtoa joutuessaan useaan otteeseen vihollisen erittäin ankaran tykistökeskityksen alaisena kaksintaisteluihin panssarivaunujen kanssa. 

Ampumamatka oli useimmissa tapauksissa suhteellisen lyhyt ja syttyivät vaunut aina joko ensimmäisellä tai toisella laukauksella tuleen, mikä osoittaa lisäksi panssarijääkäri Ilomäen tarkkaa kättä työssään ja hänen täydellistä aseensa hallintaa. 

Myöhemmin tuhosi hän panssaritorjuntatykillä Tihverin taistelussa erittäin vaikeissa olosuhteissa lähietäisyyksiltä 4 panssarivaunua estäen siten erään kolonnan joutumasta vaunujen hyökkäysten kohteeksi. 

Kolonna pelastui täten varmalta tuholta. 21 panssarivaunun tuhoaminen vihollisen tulittamisesta välittämättä osoittaa, että panssarijääkäri Ilomäki on erittäin rohkea, kylmäverinen ja peräänantamattoman velvollisuudentuntoinen taistelija.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 1944 he was the gunner of a PaK40 and destroyed a total of 21 tanks, At the Battle of Sammatus he destroyed 16 Soviet tanks over three days, many of them at close range in the middle of a Soviet artillery barrage. 
These included T-34 tanks and IS-2 heavy tanks. He was the only man in the Finnish army to get all four additional stripes to the tank killer badge and received the Mannerheim Cross for his valour.
----------------------------------------------------
The Battle of Nietjärvi (15–17 July 1944) was part of the Continuation War between Finland and the Soviet Union, which occurred during World War II. The battle ended in a Finnish victory.

Nietjärvi is a name of a village by Lake Nietjärvi ("järvi" meaning lake). The place is located in the Ladoga Karelia district, north of Lake Ladoga (in the southwestern corner of the Aunus Karelia frontier), in an area which belonged to Finland up to the end of the Continuation War (1944). Here, Finland's Aunus Group was in 11–12 July 1944, ready in positions at the U defense line, expecting an enemy offense. The construction of the U defense line had been launched seven months earlier on the level of Nietjärvi – Lemetti – Loimola, as the fortified line behind the PSS-line (Pisi – Saarimäki – Sammatus), which was the most heavily fortified defense line in the Olonets Karelia (north and northeast of Lake Ladoga).

Parts of Karelia, as they are traditionally divided
The frontline—up till July 1944—had been following closely the banks of the River Svir, which flows from Lake Onega to Lake Ladoga. Before battles even begun Finns abandoned the bridgehead which they had occupied on the southern shore of Svir when troop transfers to the Karelian Isthmus made it impractical to hold. Behind the frontline there was a secondary defensive line before the strong PSS line for the Finnish Army to slow down the Soviet advance. 

The long awaited Soviet offensive begun with overwhelming force and managed to push through Finnish defenses at the front line. Attack stalled at the PSS line but combined effort from assaulting troops and from naval infantry landing behind the Finnish lines made holding PSS impossible for the Finns who started withdrawing towards U line while delaying Soviet advance.
Sammatus village

During the previous three weeks, the Finnish defenders had managed to delay and disturb the advancement of the enemy offensive, wearing down and eating away the sharpest edge of the Soviet attack. Withdrawing Finnish stopped at U line and after finding out the Finnish defenses the Soviets begun to make local probing attacks against the U-line in an attempt to locate possible weak spots suitable for a breakthrough attempt from the Finnish defense line. Decision was made to breach Finnish defenses along the main coastal road at Nietjärvi and advance to Kittilä. Reaching Kittilä would provide access to better maintained Finnish road network as well as several roads to Finnish rear areas (Sortavala, Värtsilä and Matkaselkä).

In the dawn of 15 July, the formation of the Finnish 5th Division was as follows: The line between Lake Ladoga and Nietjärvi was defended by 44th Infantry Regiment, commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Ilmari Rytkönen. The 2nd Infantry Regiment defended on the northeastern side of Nietjärvi under command of Colonel Heikki Saure.
                                          Sammatus village / anti-tank barriers

on the morning of 15 July 1944, the Soviet artillery and mortars opened fierce fire preparations. Resulting dust, sand and smoke clouds severely reduced the visibility making it difficult to see anything. Red Army followed the artillery preparation with infantry assault supported with armored units. By mid-day, the Finnish defense had been able to stop the Soviet attacks everywhere else, but on the west side of Nietjärvi where 1st and 3rd battalions of 44th Infantry Regiment were unable to hold back the Soviets. Soviets followed their initial success with another breakthrough attempt on the northwestern shore of Lake Nietjärvi, in Yrjölä. 

Lack of reserves made it difficult for the Finns to respond to Soviet attacks but by the evening the Finns had succeeded in stopping the Red Army breakthrough attempt apart from a 400 m wide section of the line which the Soviets held tight. Throughout the evening the Soviet offensive continued relentlessly backed by heavy air support. Also the Finnish Air Force took part in the battle by bombing the Red Army formations on the southeastern edge of Lake Nietjärvi.

The Finnish counter-attack to regain the defense line was launched in the morning. The entire day saw continuous heavy fighting. At the evening the Soviets held on to a part of the Nietjärvi village, and a part of the defense line (stretch of a line consisting of connected trenches) on a low hill in that area. As frontal assault was deemed to be too expensive Finns chose to cut off the Soviets by assaulting along the trenches with artillery being used to prevent Soviet reinforcements from reaching the area. At 22:30, the same evening (16 July), the Finnish artillery and mortars began an artillery preparation which was immediately followed with infantry assault along the trenches from the both ends, using automatic rifles, hand grenades and flame throwers.

In the early morning hours of 17 July 1944, the Finnish units approaching the trench from both ends managed to link up with the help of the flame throwers. Only a small portion of the Red Army soldiers trapped to the trench or beyond it had escaped. Soviet forces tried to support the troops fighting in the trenches but Finnish artillery prevented reinforcements from reaching the area.


                                                      Monument (sammatus village)

Losses, and conclusion
The Red Army had not been able to penetrate through the defense of the Finnish 5th Division in the U-line. The heaviest losses were suffered by the Soviet 114th Division. The Soviet 762nd Infantry regiment was destroyed totally. The Finns captured the Red Army message to its headquarters: "The Regiment destroyed, the flag saved". The main bulk of the two other regiments of the Soviet 114th Division were destroyed as well. Also, the Soviet 272nd Division suffered heavy losses. The Red Army's tanks, 40–50, which had attacked in the direction of Nietjärvi, were also lost. The breakthrough attempt had cost the Soviets over 6,000 casualties, of which over 2 000 as dead.

The efficient cooperation of the elements of the Finnish armed forces helped the Aunus Group to stop the Soviet Karelian Front's advance along the shores of Ladoga—at the U-line. Soviet 7th Army's attempt to get around of the U line resulted smaller engagements in the frontier north of lake Ladoga. The Soviet move to extend the front required Finns to extend their line as well which set the stage for the battle of Ilomantsi fought further to the north. The Finnish defense had prevented the Red Army from advancing from the north side of Lake Ladoga into the battle stages of the Karelian Isthmus. If the Red Army would not have been stopped here, the Finnish forces fighting on the Karelian Isthmus would have been left between two Soviet armies on the narrow Isthmus, in the area limited by the Gulf of Finland in the south, and Lake Ladoga in the north.

                  

4 kommenttia:

  1. Vastaukset
    1. Hello Rodger.
      Thanks.
      Happen: funny name, to this man. front - and family name
      Njet / No or not
      Järvi / Lake

      Poista
  2. I was there last summer. Sammatus village is a great place. Time has stood still.

    VastaaPoista
    Vastaukset
    1. Moi = Hi, unknown.
      Thank you for your comment.
      Are you a little shy :) because there is not your name
      Yes, the village is a beautiful, idyllic, and landscape also
      True, the time has stopped.
      The people move out, just old and weak remain..
      ...the landscape is eternal ....

      Poista

Any explosive ammunition or empty cores, you can put in this.