Boris Krasin (policeman)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Boris Ivanovich Krasin (Russian: Борис Иванович Красин (Ishim 1846 - June 23 (July 6)1901)) was policeman in Imperial Russia. He served a police chief in Kurgan and Tyumen.[1] Krasin gave access to the jail in Tyumen to the American explorer, George Kennan. Before his trip to Russia, Kennan had been a supporter of the Tsarist regime, but what he encountered in the jail contributed to his subsequent condemnation of Tsarism.

Family life[]

Boris was the son of a solicitor Ivan Vasilyevich Krasin, a Titular Councillor - a formal rank in the Imperial Table of Ranks. He married Antonina Grigorievna Kropanina, the youngest daughter of a prominent local merchant.[2] Together they had five children:[3]

  • Leonid Krasin (1870–1926)): Soviet politician, engineer, social entrepreneur, Bolshevik revolutionary politician and a Soviet diplomat
  • Herman Krasin (1871 - 1947): the first director of the State Institute of Structures (1927-1929)
  • Alexander Borisovich (1874-1909), engineer
  • Boris Krasin (1884–1936): composer and Proletkult activist

References[]

  1. ^ Рылова, Александра Алексеевича. "Дети окружного исправника". Тюменские известия». Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  2. ^ Д.Н., Маслюженко (10 September 2014). "Памятник видному Советскому государственному деятелю Л. Б. Красину, перекресток ул. Красина — Куйбышева | Культурное наследие города Кургана". kurgan.pro (in Russian). МБУК «Централизованная библиотечная система города Кургана». Retrieved 16 November 2021.
  3. ^ "Антонина Григорьевна Красина". geni_family_tree. Geni.com. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
Retrieved from ""