Alchevsky Mansion
The Alchevsky Mansion is the former mansion of the prominent Alchevsky family, built in 1893 according to the design of Oleksiy Mykolayovych Beketov in the center of Kharkiv at 13 Zhon Myronosyts Street. The building is included in the list of architectural and urban planning monuments of local significance and in the list of historical monuments of local significance. Currently, the building houses the Palace of Culture of the Main Department of the National Police in the Kharkiv Oblast.
History
Construction
In 1862, the founder of the Kharkiv Commercial and Land Banks, Ukrainian industrialist, banker, public figure, and philanthropist Oleksiy Kyrylovych Alchevsky married Ukrainian teacher, organizer of public education, philanthropist, writer, and founder of the Kharkiv Women's Sunday School Khrystyna Danylivna Zhuravlyova. In 1889, their daughter married Kharkiv architect Oleksiy Mykolayovych Beketov, who in 1893 built a luxurious Renaissance-style mansion surrounded by a garden for the Alchevsky family on the modern Zhon Myronosyts Street. The owner of the house was Oleksiy Alchevsky's wife, Khrystyna Alchevska. In 1896, he built a building for Alchevska's Sunday School on the same street, and in 1897, his own mansion opposite the Alchevsky house.Shevchenko Monument
In 1900, the first monument to Taras Hryhorovych Shevchenko in Ukraine was erected on the territory of the garden in the Alchevsky estate, despite the official ban of the tsarist authorities. The figure of the poet was especially revered in the family of educators Alchevsky. The bust of the poet was made of white marble by sculptor Volodymyr Beklemishev, almost the same age as Beketov, and like the latter, he also graduated from Maria Raevska-Ivanova's drawing school in Kharkiv and the St. Petersburg Academy of Arts. Student youth, Sunday school students, budding poets and guests of the Alchevsky family, including, for example, Ukrainian political and public figure Mykola Ivanovych Mikhnovsky, the first aviator of Ukrainian origin, public and political figure Levko Makarovich Matsievich, Ukrainian actor Severyn Fedorovych Pankivskyi and others, often gathered near this monument.The family happiness of the Alchevsky family did not last long. In 1901, the head of the family, Oleksiy Alchevsky, tragically died at the Varshavsky Railway Station in St. Petersburg. The family's house, the Beketov mansion and the Sunday School were put up for sale to cover debts. The new owner of the estate became the Active State Councillor Mykola Pompeiovych Shabelsky. Khrystyna Alchevska took an obligation from him not to reconstruct or demolish either the estate or the monument to Taras Shevchenko, not to build or install any new structures or monuments.
Presumably, later the new owner violated the obligation and the Alchevsky family took the Shevchenko bust back, where it was kept until 1932. In the early 1930s, when the Shevchenko Art Gallery was opened in Kharkiv, a teacher at the local law institute, the son of Oleksiy Kyrylovych, Alchevsky Mykola Oleksiyovych donated the monument to its collection. After the end of World War II, the bust was restored and sent to the Kyiv Taras Shevchenko National Museum, where it is currently on display. The pedestal of the monument is lost.
Nationalization
In 1917, the house was nationalized. By order of one of the organizers of the "Red Terror", Felix Dzerzhinsky, in 1921, the club of the All-Russian Extraordinary Commission for Combating Counter-Revolution, which was especially known for its atrocities in Kharkiv, was located in the building of former educators and philanthropists. From the side of the garden in 1945 and in the 1950s extensions were made, which completely destroyed the courtyard facade of the monument, of which only the front part remained.In 1997, the chapel of Archangel Michael and the bell tower were built on the territory of the estate, and in 1995, a monument to law enforcement officers who died in the line of duty. The monument in the form of Archangel Michael, who defeats the hydra with a sword pointing down as a personification of crime. Authors: sculptor A. N. Ilyichov, architect S. G. Chechelnytskyi. The building has a concert hall and the Kharkiv Maritime Museum operated. Currently, the building houses the Palace of Culture of the Main Department of the National Police in the Kharkiv region. Concerts and creative meetings are held in the building's hall.