Dmitry Onika
Dmitry Grigoryevich Onika was a Soviet state official, organizer of the Ministry of Coal Industry, Doctor of Technical Sciences, Professor, and Deputy of the Supreme Soviet of the 4th and 5th Soviet convocations from 1954 to 1962.
Biography
He was born on November 21, 1910, in the city of Kremenchug, Poltava Governorate, into a Russian working-class family. From 1920 to 1921, he worked as a farmhand and shepherd in the Poltava Governorate. Then, he became homeless. In 1924, he became an apprentice of a housekeeper at a workshop in Kremenchug. From 1925 to 1928, he was a student at the vocational school of the wagon-building plant in the village of, Moscow Region. He worked as an assistant steam engine operator at a timber processing plant in Kryukovo from 1928 until 1929. From 1929 to 1930, he studied, preparing for higher education at the Zhytomyr Pedagogical Institute, now known as.In 1930, he entered the Moscow Mining Academy and joined the Communist Party of the Sovet Union in April of the same year. Due to the division of the Moscow Mining Academy into six universities in May 1930, he graduated from the Moscow Mining Institute with a degree in mining engineering and electrical engineering in 1938.
From 1939 to 1957, he worked in various leadership positions in the coal industry of the USSR: Head of the Main Department, Deputy People's Commissar, Head of the Moscow Coal Combine.
In 1946, until 1947, he was the Minister of Coal Industry of the Western, then Eastern regions of the USSR. He also became the first deputy minister of the coal industry of the USSR in 1948.
On September 10, 1947, at the suggestion of the Ministers of Coal Industry Onika and Alexander Zasyadko, his successor, the holiday Miner's Day was officially approved in the USSR.
During the Great Patriotic War from October 1941 to January 1942, Brigadier Engineer Onika was the commander of the which was involved in the construction of defensive structures near Donbass and Stalingrad. After the war, he held the rank of Colonel of the Engineering and Technical Service.
He made a significant contribution to the housing and socio-cultural development of the city of Stalingorsk, known since 1961 as Novomoskovsk). In 1953, he initiated the construction of the children's railway in the city. At his initiative, mining settlements such as Kamenetsky, Dubovka, Rudnev, Kazanovka, and many others were built in the city, landscaping of roads leading from Novomoskovsk to Uzlovaya,, and Donskoy was carried out, and the Stalinogorsk television center was created.
In 1954, he defended his dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Technical Sciences.
From 1957 to 1959, he headed the Karaganda Regional Economic Council. As he was connected with the uprising in Temirtau, in 1959, he was expelled from the party, removed from his position, and appointed the manager of the Sokolovrudstroy trust in the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic. From 1962 to 1964, he was the director of the Institute of Labor in Moscow. Onwards of 1965, he worked in the State Planning Committee and the State Supply Committee of the USSR, engaging in scientific and teaching activities. He conducted theoretical and experimental research on the creation of mining combines for conducting mining operations.
He died in a car accident on September 3, 1968, in Moscow. He is buried at the Novodevichy Cemetery. In 1995, Onika was posthumously awarded the title of Honorary Citizen of the city of Novomoskovsk.
Literature
Co-authored:Published posthumously:
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