Webcam Krasnoyarsk. Proletariat Dictatorship Street, Dubrovinskogo Street
Proletarian Dictatorship Street is located in the Central District of Krasnoyarsk.
Originally this lane was named after the first Yenisei Governor Alexander Petrovich Stepanov (1781-1837). The lane received its second name in 1891 in honor of another governor of Yenisei province - Vasily Kirillovich Padalka (1800 - 1865), who also did much for the development of the city. Under his leadership the first newspaper was issued, the first shipping company appeared, gold mining developed, the city garden was transformed, and the Vladimir orphanage was opened.
The news of the October revolution in Krasnoyarsk was received on October 27, 1917. On the same day an emergency meeting of the executive committee of Krasnoyarsk Soviet took place. A number of urgent measures were taken in connection with the news of the October revolution victory. The military staff of the Krasnoyarsk Soviet, headed by Sergey Lazo, with the help of revolutionary soldiers occupied the decisive points of the city. The Soviet power and dictatorship of the proletariat was established. Dictatorship of the "proletariat", became nothing more than the usual dictatorship of the Bolshevik leaders.
In April 1921 a special commission of the city of Krasnoyarsk renamed Padalkin lane into Diktatura lane, in 1935 it was renamed into Diktatura Proletariat lane, and in 1936 lane became a street.
It would be fair for several streets in the historic part of the city to get their former street names back. In particular, replace the odious and uncomfortable name of Dictatorship of the Proletariat with one of the names of Yenisei governors, who did much good for our city, and are now undeservedly forgotten.
The street originates from the Yenisei embankment, and after passing almost a kilometer from south to north, ends at the intersection with Ada Lebedeva Street. The street is heavily laden with traffic, especially in the area from Prospekt Mira to Ada Lebedeva Street.
Residential quarters are represented here by several brick "Khrushchev", one "improved" and three brick houses with apartments with "individual planning".
Of the pre-revolutionary buildings on this street, only one has survived: the 1904 building of the Novaya Rossiya hotel (38 Proletarian Dictatorship Street).