Pyotr Mikhailovich Verhovsky

Pyotr Mikhailovich Verhovsky

Male 1822 - 1890  (68 years)

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  • Name Pyotr Mikhailovich Verhovsky 
    Born 1822  Petrovka Estate, Chukhlomsky District Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Died 1890 
    Buried City of Makariev Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I02091  Eliots of Port Eliot
    Last Modified 16 Jun 2021 

    Wife Varvara Petrovna Denisiev,   b. 1835,   d. 1889  (Age 54 years) 
    Last Modified 16 Jun 2021 
    Family ID F00651  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 

    • --- http://mash.dobrota.biz/39istoriya/78448-3-vremeni-kostroma-bbk-s19-redakcionnaya-kollegiya-pavlichkova-nagradov-udovenko-saprigina-s19-slugi-vr.php

      The mother of the orphaned children, Nastasya Petrovna Mamaeva, remarried Oskar Karlovich Moller (born in 1825), the Chukhloma district leader of the nobility, who was also a widow in the late 1860s, and lived happily with him until his death in 1897 ... They never had children of their own.

      Nastasya Petrovna survived her husband for three years. Their ashes rests behind the ancient walls of the Kostroma Epiphany Convent.

      Nastasya Petrovna Moller's sister, Varvara Petrovna (1835-1889) became the wife of Pyotr Mikhailovich Verkhovsky. His mother came from the German-Polish family Toll. Father Mikhail Ivanovich was a military man, had a combat wound and awards. Upon retirement, he served as the Makariev leader of the nobility. In Kostroma, he had a house on Maryinskaya Street (now Shagova Street, house number 61), but preferred to live in his Petrovka estate of the Chukhlomsky district, in which the future husband of Varvara Petrovna, Peter Mikhailovich Verkhovsky (1822-1900), was born.

      Petr Mikhailovich Verkhovsky was a graduate of the Corps of Railway Engineers, served on the construction of the Nikolaev railway and in the Southern Directorate, first as the head of the distance, and then corrected the position of the head of the 3rd department of the St. Petersburg-Moscow railway. After transferring to the Kostroma province in 1855, he was the head of the construction and road commission, the world mediator for the Makaryevsky district, the Makaryevsky district leader of the nobility, etc. The first wife of P.M.Verkhovsky Victoria Osipovna Karinskaya died in 1854 with the birth of her seventh child at the age of 30 , and three years later, the widower married a second time to 22-year-old Varenka Denisyeva and settled with her in the Petrovka estate inhabited by three generations of the Verkhovsky family. Judging by the documents, Varvara Petrovna herself was an active person. During the war of 1877-1878.she stood at the head of the Ladies' Guardian Committee of the city of Makariev. Varvara Petrovna died in 1889, a year later Pyotr Mikhailovich also died. Both of them are buried on the Kostroma land. Petr Mikhailovich in the city of Makariev, and Varvara Petrovna at the Church of the Ascension of the village of the same name in Makarievsky district. From this marriage, five sons and five daughters were born.

      Little is known about the fate of Anna Petrovna Denisyeva. She was married to Dmitry Vikentievich Svadkovsky, who, as can be seen from his correspondence with O. K. Moller, sought to take into his custody the estate of his wife's sister Varvara Aleksandrovna Denisieva and her children. The case of D.V.Svadkovsky, supported by Oskar Karlovich, was successfully completed.

      And, finally, the last of the Denisyev sisters, Elizaveta Petrovna, as mentioned above, did not marry. She devoted her life to raising her nephews Valentin, Peter, Yulia and Ekaterina Mamaevs - children of Nastasya Petrovna, Moller by her second marriage. She was helped in raising children by their second cousin Valentin Aleksandrovich Novikov, who was widowed in 1849.

      We conclude the detailed history of one of the Kostroma noble families, the epicenter of which was Yulia Aleksandrovna Denisieva, and Novikova, the niece of the outstanding educator of the 18th century N.I. Novikov, was the niece of the prominent educator of the 18th century. It was the focus of a large dynasty of naval officers Denisievs in several generations, numbering a dozen, and in the clan of the Denisievs, Perfilievs, Bartenevs, Shipovs and Lermontovs and hundreds, if not more, representatives of the naval business.

      How not to recall the expression of “the patriarch of Kostroma local history” AA Grigorov, which gave the name to the posthumous publication of the collection of biographical information of the Kostroma seafarers “Without Kostroma, our fleet is incomplete…” 378.