Monday, October 5, 2015

CONTINUATION WAR (Karelian Isthmus) June 25, 1941 – Winter 1942

                                                                              1941

25 June 1941 Soviet air force bombs Finnish homes. President Ryti declares that Finland is at war again to defend itself. 


1941. The last Finnish Army Corps yet to engage in battle, the 4th, started their attack towards Viipuri on the Karelian Isthmus, by the Gulf of Finland, on August 22. Viipuri was the second biggest city in Finland prior to the Winter War and had been ceded to the Soviets in the 1940 Moscow peace treaty.  The 8th Division crossed the Viipuri Bay and cut the road leading south of the city on the coast. The Soviet troops defending Viipuri left the town too late and were later surrounded in a large pocket south of the city. The Finns got a lot of booty and prisoners, including one division commander. The 4th Army Corps took the deserted Viipuri on August 29. This was a mental boost for all Finnish troops – the liberation of a major Finnish town. Word of the capture of Viipuri was quickly passed on to soldiers everywhere and civilians celebrated in Finland. 


The majority of the 1st Army Corps was moved to Karelian isthmus from Sortavala and the attack towards the 1939 border on the isthmus was continued with three Army Corps, the 1st on the eastern side of the isthmus by Lake Laatokka, 2nd in the middle and 4th in the west near the Gulf of Finland. These troops had altogether seven divisions. Parts of the 4th Army Corps continued chasing the Red Army towards Koivisto without stopping in Viipuri. The 1st Army Corps grouped north of Vuoksi and prepared to attack the enemy on the south bank of the river. Troops from the 12th Division (4th Army Corps) and the 18th Division (2nd Army Corps) reached the level of Vammelsuu – Kivennapa on August 30. 


By the first days of September the 1939 border was reached and crossed in the center to make a straighter line from the Gulf of Finland to Lake Laatokka. By September 9 the liberation of Karelian isthmus was over and the troops grouped for defense with the front line going from the mouth of River Rajajoki - Valkeasaari - Lempaala to Tappari by Lake Laatokka. The Finns had arrived in front of the Karelian Fortified Region and advance would have required significant artillery power and brought increasing casualties. The front line stayed here until June 1944. In September and October two divisions and some other troops were moved to East Karelia.  [Wikipedia]


Army of the Isthmus 
(Lieutenant General H.Österman, Commander)

Field Artillery Second Corps (II), 5th Division, Jär.Psto. 3 (Light Artillery Unit)
(The 5th Division was a unit of the Finnish Army during the Winter War. It was part of the II Corps (II AC) which fought on the Karelian Isthmus as part of the Army of the Isthmus. It was stationed on the Mannerheim Line between Lake Muolaanjärvi and Kuolemajärvi. Early in the war Finnish forces liberated the Karelian Isthmus. It had been ceded to the soviet Union on March 13, 1940, in the Moscow Peace Treaty, which marked the end of the Winter War.) [Wikipedia]

Call to the Russian Front
      The armistice didn’t last very long. In June I was called up and refused to wait around for the Post Office to exempt me from military service. So I followed my orders which took me to some place between Jyväskylä and Tampere – I can’t remember the exact location. We were encamped there waiting for developments.

Finnish troops on the march at the Finno-Russian border. 1941.
      I was the secretary for the Battery, but the Battery commander and I didn’t see eye to eye and so I transferred to the Field Artillery Fire Control Unit of my own accord (18 June, 1941). They wanted to make me the Battery Commander’s courier to the front lines, but I didn't even show up to talk to them regarding the assignment. And no one came looking for me about it either. We spent Mid Summer there and then in July we moved to our attack-ready positions on the eastern front in Parikkala. 




Valto Antero Tolvanen and Aune Makinen. 1941.
       If only I had saved the war correspondence between Aune and me, it would certainly have shed light on many things that now would be so important. But, as we were leaving  Rovaniemi for Canada and Aune asked me what we should do with our correspondence, my response was that we would burn it, and that’s just what happened. Aune broke into tears over it, but I was determined to
 
Letters, letters, letters!


shake the dust of the Old Country off my feet, and so all of those letters burned to ashes in the fireplace as Yli-Maunula [Rovaniemi]. I have thought about it often since then, but what can I do about it in retrospect. In those letters would have been recorded all my feelings and emotions, as well as all sorts of first hand experiences. All of those letters were written on expensive air mail paper, and I believe that pile of letters weighed about 50 kilos [110 lbs]. That would have been quite an archive!

First Combat Experiences In Parikkala
      I’m going to follow the course of the war as it’s recorded in my military passport.


Valto Antero Tolvanen. Finnish Military Passport. 1941-1944.

     There is no record of anything but the official campaigns – none of the small skirmishes are mentioned at all, but I’m sure I’ll recall some of them later when I go through my war album  photos. First of course was the place where we settled into our attack-ready positions: Parikkala. That’s where the cannons were stationed but we, the Fire Control unit, were right on the border.

     In my passport are mentioned the various battles: Laikko, Ilmee, Purnujärvi – all places where the initial attack and breakthrough battles took place.




Rautjärvi - Laikko - Ilmee. Karelian Isthmus Campaign arena. 1941.
      Laikko was a railway station to which the cannons were brought by train, and we were also transported the same way. Ilmee was on the other side of the border, but Purnujärvi straddled both sides of the border. After a fierce initial fire barrage (fifteen minutes and 500 guns) we started moving forward from there behind the infantry. We followed a forest trail – a few of the dead were still lying beside the trail – one handsome young man especially stays in my memory. He had been hit by a bullet in the forehead and his brains were lying on the ground next to him.


Purnujärvi, Finnish Karelia. Eastern Front. 1941.

                                                         Purnujärvi Campaign

Company battery station. Jär. Psto. 3. Purnujärvi Campaign. (Valto Antero Tolvanen, second from right of gun on main back row.) August, 1941.

On the road between Rautjärvi and Purnujärvi. Purnujärvi Campaign. 1941. 
Field Commanders. Purnujärvi Campaign. 1941.

H-203 and tractor. Gun (11,000 kg). (Tractor: 8,000 kg). Purnujärvi Campaign. 1941.

Transport in progress. Purnujärvi, Finnish Karelia. Eastern Front. 1941.



Battery station. Purnujärvi Campaign, Finnish Karelia. Eastern Front. 1941.

Field Artillery Station. Purnujärvi Campaign. 1941..

View through the gun barrell. Purnujärvi Campaign. 1941.

Guns away! Purnujärvi Campaign. 1941.

90-93 kg shell ready to fire. Purnujärvi Campaign. 1941.

Purnujärvi Campaign. 1941.

                                                                  Ilmee Campaign

     The Soviet fortifications had been concentrated near the river Vuoksi and along the roads, so the Finns concentrated their forces on narrow, deep breakthroughs over the roadless terrains which were supported by pioneers building temporary supply roads through the forests and over the swamps. The 18.D (Col. Pajari) attacked through the forest against the northernmost section of the Soviet 115.D and instead of following roads they secured a road crossing and advanced again over the forest to the next road where they did the same. The road crossings were occupied by stronger units, which had to defend against several armor supported Soviet counterattacks.
 [Wikipedia]    

    We reached Ilmee and the edge of the main road, and began moving forward to the south in closed ranks. We ran into the Russians almost immediately in ready positions at their stations. To my left I suddenly saw the nose of a rapid-fire gun swinging toward me and I immediately threw myself in the ditch. We had a lot of casualties in that incident – wonder who had ordered that poorly planned maneuver?

                                                                   Photos from the Ilmee battlefield

 Jär. Psto.3. Squad after capture of Ilmee. (Antero Tolvanen sitting at rear of the transport truck). Ilmee Campaign. 1941.

     I was on reconnaissance on the front lines together with Santtu Teriö. We pulled off the bottom slat on a wooden fence and crawled through it into the woods. We came across some pits – they were pretty shallow. Then I saw a bullet strike the ground right between Santtu and me, and pointed it out to him. Santtu crawled backwards a few meters and then crawled to his right finding a slightly deeper hole. That’s when he found the Captain of our unit – he had taken a bullet to the head – probably had lifted his head out of the fox hole trying to see across the road. I can still capture that moment in my mind’s eye: we were barely 30 meters from the Russian rapid-fire gun which was firing bullets the whole time. The surprise at that moment was total on both sides – the Russians were equally taken by complete surprise. 


     Finally on August 4, the Finns managed to encircle and capture the Ilmee road crossing, thus forcing the Soviets to abandon their prepared positions between Ilmee and the border. The main thrust of 15.D (Col. Hersalo) was against the Soviet IR588/142.D, and concentrated the thrust against only a two kilometer wide section, where most of the artillery was concentrated. After breaching the border fortifications, they advanced five kilometers through the forest before coming to the road thus bypassing Soviet defenses, which were encircled and captured one by one by forces coming behind the leading elements. After six days advance 15.D was only three kilometers from the Viipuri-Sortavala railroad and 15 km from the western corner of Lake Ladoga and close to encircling Soviet forces on its left side.  [Wikipedia]  

Aimed and ready! Ilmee Campaign. 1941


Women's Army Corps members. Ilmee Campaign. 1941

 Jär. Psto.3. Light artillery gun being readied to fire. Ilmee Campaign. 1941

First capture from the enemy - 75 mm. long gun.  Ilmee Campaign. 1941

Transport truck. Ilmee Campaign. 1941

Getting the captured 75 mm gun ready to fire. Ilmee Campaign. 1941

Night shot of artillery fire. Ilmee Campaign. 1941

       I had my automatic rifle – but I didn’t use it at all – I just lay flat on the ground. Santtu disappeared to do his own thing – and I was scared out of my wits in my shallow fox hole.  It actually wasn’t much of a hole, more like a depression, but I didn’t dare move from it – I just stayed as quiet as I possibly could. After a while the firing ceased, or at least lessened quite a bit – whether it had lasted 15 minutes or a half hour, I had no idea. I slowly crawled to the hole where the Captain and several other men lay dead. I later heard that Santtu had taken the Captain’s Suomi semi-automatic rifle and then turned it over to the Artillery Command. Otherwise it might have ended up as a war trophy for the Russians. I kept crawling backwards into the woods until I finally came across the rear guard. Actually I guess they were mainly infantry men – Santtu had delivered a message about the firefight back to the rear. We dug our trenches there – every so often we heard the whine of an automatic- or rapid-fire gun, and a small “naku” [grenade] from a grenade launcher would fall somewhere close by. That’s where we stayed the night, and in the morning found that the enemy had dismantled their stations and disappeared.

       Our Fire Control unit did reconnaissance in the area all the way to the Ilmee Hill where one Russian soldier came out with his hands raised above his head and surrendered. Seemed like a really nice guy. I was ordered to escort him back to the place where the receiving officers were. They took him in for interrogation at the Artillery Command post.

Prisoner of war. Hungarian conscript in the Russian army. (Sergeant Antero Tolvanen standing guard behind the prisoner). Ilmee Hill. Ilmee Campaign. 1941


Prisoner of war. Hungarian conscript in the Russian army. Ilmee Hill. Ilmee Campaign. 1941
      On the way I met one of our field couriers who spoke Russian, and he accompanied us back to the rear so we were able to talk with the Russian. He turned out to actually be a Hungarian – he had spent two days hiding in the river since our guns had concentrated their barrage right on the Ilmee Hill. It goes without saying that those guys got out of there if they could possibly manage it. We didn’t find anyone else in the area so we descended the hill only to run right into a mine field. Fortunately all of the wires had rusted so none of the mines were set off. We deactivated the mine field which had been seeded with 3-inch grenades and on our return trip we carted the grenades back to the Battery Command. We had received our baptism by fire and the rest of the troops stared at us round-eyed with astonishment.



Town of Ilmee, Karelia, after victory over Russian troops. Ilmee Campaign. 1941.

Hiitola - Antrea Campaigns

     The 10.D continued attack towards the Käkisalmi-Hiitola railroad, but Soviet forces managed to keep the railroad and road open until August 8, when 10.D captured the village of Hiitola. When the first troops of 10.D reached Lake Ladoga next day, the last land connection to Soviet troops defending the northwest coast of Lake Ladoga was severed. The Soviets tried to open the connection with strong counterattacks during August 10 and 11 but were unsuccessful. Meanwhile, IR28/2.D had captured the Elisenvaara railway junction on August 9, thus opening supply routes through railways from Finland. After the battle of Tyrjä IR7/2.D rested two days as a division reserve before continuing the attack along the railroad towards the town of Lahdenpohja, which it captured on August 8, thus dividing Soviet forces in the forming bridgehead. At the same day, 2.D was transferred to new I Corps with an order to clear northern Soviet bridgehead.

     Attack by Finnish forces managed to cut the Soviets' main supply route and a subsequent Finnish counterattack forced Soviet forces to retreat southwards while fighting delaying action and first Finnish troops reached the Vuoksi River on August 14 at Antrea (now Kamennogorsk), where they continued clearing the left shore of the river. Soviets started to move forces from southwestern side of Viipuri to defend Enso (now Svetogorsk) and to counterattack at Antrea on August 16, but when the attack failed, the Soviets were forced to evacuate the northern shore on August 21. At the eastern side the Finns advanced southeastward and reached Vuosisalmi  on August 17 and a northern outlet of the river Vuoksi on August 18. Immediately, the Finns crossed the River Vuoksi unopposed a few kilometers west of Vuosalmi on August 17, and by August 20 they had secured the beachhead. [Wikipedia]
     From there [Ilmee] we moved to the railroad bridge near Antrea – our whole Battery Company that is. Our Fire Control guys were on the cliffs right above the railroad bridge and watched while the Russians were making their preparations. The next night then we started firing at the bridgehead. The Russians blew up the bridge immediately and fired such a volley across to our side of the river that they could have easily spotted anyone over on our side.

Karelian Isthmus. Finnish and Russian Army Divisions.
    We were behind the cliffs and the shells flew against that too. I was on patrol with Ierik Salomaa, a boy from Käkisalmi (now Priozersk), who became a very good friend during the war.  There sure was a lot of running and commotion on the opposite shore, but we crawled behind the cliffs and back to our base when all the firing died down. This by the way was the famous 'deception maneuver' which confused the whole Russian defense force. They seemed to be running around like chickens with their heads cut off because they had no idea from which direction the actual attack was coming from. We did all of our troop movements at night of course, and I can’t even recall where we crossed the Vuoksi River. Be that as it may, we reached Heinjoki after two days and for the first time were able to get some rest. Or at least we tried to do so.

Antrea - Ilmee - Hiitola. Map of  Karelian Isthmus.



        On August 15, 1941, Antero Tolvanen was promoted from Corporal to the rank of Sergeant.


Heinjoki - Kämärä on the Karelian Isthmus. 



Hiitola Campaign
Approaching Hiitola. Karelian Isthmus. 1941.

Hiitola, Karelian Isthmus. 1941.

6-inch guns in transport. Hiitola, Karelian Isthmus. 1941.

Harvest time. Hiitola, Karelian Isthmus. 1941.

Russian casualties. Hiitola, Karelian Isthmus. 1941.

Roadside scene. Hiitola, Karelian Isthmus. 1941.

Railroad crossing and rest period. Hiitola, Karelian Isthmus. 1941.

Captured enemy tank. Hiitola, Karelian Isthmus. 1941.

Captured 6-inch gun. Hiitola, Karelian Isthmus. 1941.


Russian collective [kolkhoz]. Hiitola, Karelian Isthmus. 1941.

Russian encampment. Hiitola, Karelian Isthmus. 1941.

Tank column. Hiitola, Karelian Isthmus. 1941.

Grain storage shed on the collective. Hiitola, Karelian Isthmus. 1941.

Escort for prisoners of war. Hiitola, Karelian Isthmus. 1941.

Tank on the move. Hiitola, Karelian Isthmus. 1941.

End of the line for some enemy soldiers. Matkanpää. Karelian Isthmus. 1941.
 
     There was a huge dugout left over from the Winter War – it may have served as a command post bunker or some such thing – but it also served as a sauna. Well, we boys started warming up the sauna and it was nearly ready when we received our new marching orders just before midnight. We protested and at least got in one turn in the sauna bath before we had to move out.                                               

     I guess I put up the biggest fuss because I ended up in front of the military court. I must have pleaded my case very eloquently because nothing further happened to me except that I was under home arrest and had to shine up some captured enemy rifles while the rest of the troops went for a tour of Viipuri. [The Finnish forces captured Viipuri on 29 August 1941].
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    This was most likely the famous Kannas Battle which has been marked down in my pass. We really didn’t have any time to fight, but I heard later on that the Russians had been totally frightened and wondered what kind of division was coming at them this time, because our whole Battery was heavily armed and were being transported in American GM trucks. And we boys were in a real hurry with all our headlights on! It probably was the Russians’ panic that ultimately saved us. I guess it was my fault that we were so late taking off [because of the last minute sauna baths] that we missed the fighting altogether, and that in order to make it there at all we had to drive in the dark with our headlights on. It’s no wonder that Ensign Salo was so furious with me that he didn’t forgive me for the whole duration of the war. But that’s another story!


                                        Kannas - Viipuri [Vyborg] Campaign



Viipuri [Vyborg] Castle after recapture of the city by Finnish troops. August 1941.
Old church converted by the Soviets to an ammunition shed. Viipuri [Vyborg]. August 1941.

Viipuri [Vyborg]. August 1941.
Soviet architecture. Viipuri [Vyborg]. August 1941.

An old church. Viipuri [Vyborg]. August 1941.

Viipuri [Vyborg]. August 1941.

Viipuri [Vyborg]. August 1941.
Viipuri [Vyborg]. August 1941.

Viipuri [Vyborg]. August 1941.
Soviet collective farm. Viipuri [Vyborg]. August 1941.
Aftermath of battle. Battlefield. Viipuri [Vyborg] Campaign. August 1941.

Time out for a rest break and a cigarette. Commanding officers. Viipuri [Vyborg] Campaign. August 1941.

Rest break during transport. Valto Antero Tolvanen center on front row (no cap) Karelian isthmus. 1941.

During troop transport at Rautu, Karelian Isthmus. (Antero Tolvanen standing far left.)1941.


                                        Kämärä and Hotakka Campaigns
Finnish troop locations on the Karelian Isthmus. 1941.


Building a new bridge at Kiviniemi. Karelian Isthmus. 1941.

     We didn’t even have time to get bored with our leave before once again we were marching south following the railroad tracks. There was another battle at the Kämärä Station which has been marked down in my passport.

             Summa [Sommee] Encirclement (Motti) and Campaign

Summa [Sommee] and other Continuation War Battlefields on the Karelia Isthmus. 1941.

     The crossing for the main road was under heavy fire so that some of our troops advanced while others retreated from the area. Finally we reached the railroad station where a Russian munitions train was stranding and which they set on fire with their cannons. Was that ever a deafening ruckus as the mortar shells exploded all at once! – Another place marked down in my pass is Hotakka – that’s where we waited while some of our troops were arriving in open formations from the south. And no one was aware until the last minute that this was a Finnish Battalion that had formed behind the enemy’s ranks.

      Later on the Russian generals stated that they had never seen such military tactics before. It was just like in the Winter War where small units beat overwhelming numbers of troops – even divisions. Most of the Russian troops were able to escape by boat to St. Petersburg, but they left behind all of their supplies. There were cannons and tanks, not even taking into consideration all of the smaller stuff. And horses, wagons and soup kitchens – as much equipment as you would ever want. Enough to supply to whole Finnish army for a whole year!

Field Artillery unit on the move. Sergeant Antero Tolvanen standing front right. Summa [Sommee], Karelian Isthmus. 1941.


      As the Finnish army's encirclement tightened, the Soviet troops made a final attempt to save their men by abandoning all vehicles and trying to escape on foot through the forests. The ring was already too tight and only small groups managed to escape during that night. The next morning, demoralized troops started to surrender. 9,000 men surrendered and 7,000 were buried there, but almost 12,000 men had managed to escape before the ring closed. Also, the booty was abundant: 306 artillery pieces, 55 tanks, 673 trucks, almost 300 tractors and around 4,500 horses. [Wikipedia]


     Along the main road and railroad between Viipuri and Leningrad, the Soviet order to retreat and form a new defensive line along the old Mannerheim Line came too late, as the 12.D at the same day captured Leipäsuo and continued advance southwest, towards Lake Kuolemanjärvi, and southeast, along the railroad. The Soviet defences at main road at Sommee (Summa) held, but the Finns encircled these defenses by breaching the defenses at Munasuo. The defending remains of Soviet 123.D managed to hold Finnish advance only few places and continued withdrawing towards Leningrad. At the morning of August 30 12.D cut the Koivisto-Leningrad railroad at Kuolemanjärvi and reached the Gulf of Finland during the same day. Also at Vammelsuu, 12.D cut the railroad at the same evening, but failed to cut main road. The Gulf was reached also here in the next morning, and the attack continued east to Terijoki, which was captured August 31 and reached old border at the river Rajajoki, next day. The encircled Soviet forces at Koivisto retreated to the islands and Soviet fleet transferred them to Leningrad. [Wikipedia]


Equipment left behind by the Soviet troops. Summa [Sommee], Karelian Isthmus. 1941.

Equipment left behind by the Soviet troops. Summa [Sommee], Karelian Isthmus. 1941.

Summa [Sommee], Karelian Isthmus. 1941.


Summa [Sommee], Karelian Isthmus. 1941
Soviet casualties. Summa [Sommee], Karelian Isthmus. 1941

Triumphal Arch. Summa [Sommee], Karelian Isthmus. 1941

Summa [Sommee], Karelian Isthmus. 1941
Field camp barbershop.. Summa [Sommee], Karelian Isthmus. 1941.

Haircut from an army barber during a rest break. Summa [Sommee], Karelian Isthmus. 1941.
Aftermath of battle. Taipale, Karelian Isthmus. 1941.
Aftermath of battle. Taipale, Karelian Isthmus. 1941.
Aftermath of battle. Metsäpirtti, Karelian Isthmus. 1941.

Damaged War Memorial to honor fallen Finnish Soldiers in WWI. Joutselkä, Karelian Isthmus. 1941.
Casualty of war. Remains of a Soviet fighter pilot. Metsäpirtti, Karelian Isthmus. 1941.


                                                    Lempaala Campaign 

       On August 27, Finnish military headquarters ordered the offensive in the south to reach the Svir River. Finnish troops cut the Kirov railroad on 7 September, crossed the Svir on 15 September, and then halted the offensive. On 31 August, 1941, Finnish headquarters ordered the 2nd and 4th Army Corps, which had advanced the furthest, to halt their offensive after reaching a line just past the former border that ran from the mouth of the River Sestra via Retukylä, Aleksandrovka, and the eastern edge of the village of S. Beloostrov to Ohta and form for defense. [Wikipedia]

Finnish II AC, 5D had moved to Lempaala on the Karelian Isthmus. September 1941.


 
Finnish Army troops crossing the old border between Finland and Russia.  September 1941.


       We then drove in our trucks close to the old border which we proceeded to cross [September 2, 1941]. This is where we straightened out the old border at the so-called Lempaala Bend. It was this bend which the Russians used as an excuse to attack us at the start of the Winter War. They shot their cannons across the river at their own troops, and then blamed the incident on Finland, even though it was clearly shown that the Finns didn’t have any guns within 50 kilometers of the border. Well, when we made this border “adjustment’ our Neighbor didn’t have any opportunity to shoot at their own troops this time around. We stayed in this area for the next two weeks, and I even went on leave from there only to return to the same place.


Finnish Army movements, attacks and positions. Karelian Isthmus. Fall 1941.

Town of Lempaala. Lempaala Bend. 1941.

       It was only a 10-day leave, and almost immediately on my return we turned to area over to the ARRA Battery which was the 6-inch guns Battery Company from Tampere. As I was in charge of reconnaissance it was my job to go meet these troops as they came with their trucks down the road along the railroad tracks. They had already driven to the other side of the tracks through a previous road crossing, and having arrived at the front lines they had then walked from there to our battle station. That movement did not go undetected by the Russians and the mortar shells started flying toward our encirclement. Several men were killed in the fray and about a dozen were injured.




Hill III. Lempaala. 1941.

View to the Soviet side from a trench. Lempaala. 1941.
Hill III during battle. Lempaala. 1941.

Hill III during battle. Lempaala. 1941.

Battalion Commanders of Hill Ill after battle. Lempaala. 1941.

Platoon Commanders on Hill Ill after battle. Lempaala. 1941.
Platoon Commanders on Hill Ill after battle.(Antero Tolvanen third from right).  Lempaala. 1941..


Troops after Lempaala battle. (Antero Tolvanen in the far left at back of group.) Lempaala. 1941.

Our squad's field-phone operators making contact with the Command Center. Lempaala. 1941.

Lempaala. 1941.

Lempaala. 1941.

Railroad track going south from Raasuli. Destroyed by the Soviets.



Our artillery position on the eastern shore of Lake Lempaala. 1941.

     I was still on my way back to the battle station, but in the mean time Major Aarne Vihma [a judge and a soldier, and brother of Colonel Einar Vihma]
had received some shrapnel in his shoulder and we didn’t see him on the front lines after that --  he was stationed at the Command Post after his release from the hospital. At the battle station the building of dugouts was under way. We had taken over the Sirkiäsaari frontline position as well as the lookout tower and the bunker. But we also had to spend time building our own dugout at the Battery Station. In my album there are some snapshots of that as well.
   In Lempaala, by the way, Ierik Salomaa and I were given orders to check the telephone lines which crossed the Lempaala Hill. It was totally open terrain. The telephone lines ran along the roadside and wouldn’t you know it that a flock of Russian fighter planes flew over us -- on some type of reconnaissance mission most likely – appearing from behind us. We threw ourselves on the ground in the ditch next to the road but one of the planes – a so called “tshaikka” – flew back over us and started firing with both barrels along the roadside. Something grazed the heel of my boot, but afterwards not even a mark could be found on my boot. The plane flew over us once more and fired – fortunately once again very badly. Maybe it was just our good luck that time but nothing happened to us.


      Photos of our artillery position on the east shore of Lake Lempaala. 1941. I was out on reconnaissance at the front lines so I don't appear in these photos.

Lempaala. 1941.


Lempaala. 1941.

Lempaala. 1941.

Lempaala. 1941.

Soviet prisoner of war with Finnish guards. Lempaala. 1941.

Lempaala. 1941.

Frontlines. Lempaala. 1941.

View from our positions across the frontlines. Lake Lempaala. 1941.

Railroad bed in the background. Lake Lempaala. 1941.

View from our positions across the frontlines. Lake Lempaala. 1941

Lake Lempaala. 1941

Antero Tolvanen standing in the lake washing up. Lake Lempaala. 1941

Lake Lempaala. 1941
Fierce artillery battle raging on the opposite shore. Lake Lempaala. 1941

     A few days before Ierikka [Karelian for Eric] had gone to check out one of the villages we had taken over and was hit almost straight on by a Russian grenade launcher – this had rendered him unconscious for a few minutes. He had been looting the place at the time and came away from there with a complete set of dental tools. At least that is what he claimed though no one actually witnessed the whole incident, But then he was mostly pretty closed mouthed about such things, as I guess he well should have been under the circumstances. 


Antero Tolvanen with his squad. Sitting in front middle wearing light colored sweater. Lake Lempaala. 1941

Antero Tolvanen with his squad, fourth from right Lake Lempaala. 1941
Battlefield along the shore of Lake Lempaala. 1941

Coffee break at our dugout. Lake Lempaala. 1941
Reconnoitering during break at our dugout. Lake Lempaala. 1941.
"Ierikka" Erkki Salomaa, standing on the right, talking with one of the commanders. Lempaala. 1941
Starting fire for a smoke screen. Lempaala. 1941

Fire from smoke screen. Lempaala. 1941.

"Omakoira" gun at our battle station chewing up the Soviet side. Lempaala. 1941.
Camp fire and chow break. Lempaala. 1941.

Soviet troops that had surrendered standing in photo with their Finnish guards. Lempaala. 1941.
Our guys and Major Aarne Vihma. Lempaala. 1941.

Company commander, Major Aarne Vihma, and his men. Lempaala. 1941.

Waiting for the troop exchange. Photo taken just before a Soviet grenade struck our position. 1 killed. 12 wounded. Lempaala. 1941.
Chow break. Major Aarne Vihma and his men at a makeshift command post. Lempaala. 1941.
Patrol unit on break. Major Vihma and his men. Lempaala. 1941.
Major Aarne Vihma. Lempaala. 1941.

Major Aarne Vihma and a couple of his men on coffee break. Lempaala. 1941.
Lempaala. Winter 1941.
Waiting for the troop exchange. Lempaala. 1941.

After the troop exchange. (Antero Tolvanen left on back row in front of gun barrell). Lempaala. 1941. Troops from the younger age groups were given leave before being assigned to other units. Our unit on the other hand was made up of those born in 1912 and older.

Platoon commanders. Lempaala. 1941
Welcome coffee break provided by the Women's Army Corps. Sergeant Antero Tolvanen standing far left. Lempaala. 1941
Translated from the original Finnish by Marja-Leena Tolvanen Rogers

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