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...Samara was founded at the easternmost bend of the Volga River in the 16th Century, during the reign of the weakling Theodore, son of Ivan the Terrible. It was to be a fortress against the wandering tribes of the steppe. At first its citizens were mostly Cossacks, but in the 19th Century there was a great influx of Poles and Germans-particularly from Danzig...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RUSSIA: Samara's Memories | 11/3/1941 | See Source »

...Samara was a fine spot for a fort, perching on terraced heights at the juncture of the Volga and Samara Rivers; but it was a terrible place to live. Freezing weather comes by mid-October. The average January temperature is 9° Fahrenheit. Some years the sharp-toothed winds are so persistent that snow will not stay on the ground. Droughts follow, and famines follow the droughts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RUSSIA: Samara's Memories | 11/3/1941 | See Source »

There was a terrible famine in 1891, when the rye and wheat crops failed. In a dozen provinces around Samara 30,000,000 peasants shrank on the bone and swelled in the belly. The great U.S. heart was touched. Money was raised, four ships of provisions and clothing sailed for St. Petersburg. But the Volga was far from the Mississippi and the aid came too late: thousands perished...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RUSSIA: Samara's Memories | 11/3/1941 | See Source »

Between 1921 and last week Samara had been renamed Kuibyshev, after Valerian Vladimirovich Kuibyshev, who was head of the State Planning Commission and prime mover of the First Five-Year Plan when he died in 1935. The city had been refurbished, as the junction of important railroads joining Moscow, the Donets Basin and Siberia, as the location of an armature and carburetor factory famous throughout the U.S.S.R., as a cultural center with seven colleges, 18 technical schools, six scientific research institutes, six repertory theaters...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RUSSIA: Samara's Memories | 11/3/1941 | See Source »

...Government bureaus and foreign diplomats who had moved to Samara last week settled down to their routine of calls. They waited for the Moscow Ballet, the Bolshoi Theater casts. The U.S. Embassy holed up in a former school. Diplomats gathered at the Grand Hotel for flat beer from the local brewery. With the Germans still 600 miles away in the west, they speculated about the Volga Germans, many of whom had been deported to Siberia. With the Italians still 700 miles away in the southwest, they sat down to huge meals of Samara's abundant local macaroni...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RUSSIA: Samara's Memories | 11/3/1941 | See Source »

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