Rating of applicants Tomsk Agricultural College. Tomsk Agricultural Institute

Tomsk Agricultural College (SO.) - an institution of secondary specialized agro-technical vocational education, the first and oldest in Siberia.

  • Full official name as of June 2013: Tomsk Regional State Budgetary Educational Institution of Secondary Vocational Education " Tomsk Agricultural College»
  • Short name: SO or OGBOU SPO "Tomsk Agrarian College"

The beginning of the story

In connection with the construction and launch Tomsk (Siberian) Railway and beginning agrarian Stolypin reforms, beyond the Urals, there was a problem of shortage, lack of trained workers and artisans to ensure these grandiose undertakings. Also, for applicants of the first higher educational institutions beyond the Urals (Siberian Tomsk State Imperial University and) required applicants with a high educational level, which is achieved by graduates of specialized gymnasiums and commercial/real schools second (advanced) level of education. The network of institutions that in the future became the primary specialized (vocational) education and training technicians (technical schools) was just emerging in response to the challenges of the time. As for agricultural (not higher) education in Siberia, for the first time such an institution appeared first in Omsk (1878, the Omsk veterinary paramedic school of the Siberian Cossack army to train veterinary paramedics in combat units), a year later - the same School in Tomsk (1879-1905), which stopped its work during the troubled times of the unrest of the First Russian Revolution.

To solve the problem of training specialists-technicians, three schools were opened in Tomsk: Commercial, Real and handicraft, which actually became the first Tomsk secondary specialized educational institutions that train highly professional technicians.

COMMERCIAL SCHOOL

In March 1901, the Minister of Finance of the Russian Empire S.Yu. Witte the Charter was approved in the city of Tomsk, which opened in the provincial center on September 16, 1901. In the future, the Tomsk Commercial School was repeatedly reorganized, transformed and renamed.

In 1904, the Imperial House of Education was allowed to have the name "named after Tsarevich Alexei»: First Siberian Commercial School named after Tsesarevich Alexei. The opening of the school was preceded by the fact that back in 1896, among the West Siberian merchants, the idea arose of opening a commercial educational institution in Tomsk, and in the same year, the Tomsk Merchant Society decided to establish an annual fee from persons "choosing" guild and class certificates, for the organization of the future school. The most significant (by the money of that time) contributions to the creation of the Commercial School were made by a donation of 30 thousand gold rubles by the trading house "Efgraf Kukhterin and Sons" and 10 thousand rubles were allocated by the Tomsk City Duma with the transfer to the school of the building on Magistratskaya Street (now R. Luxembourg). A well-known Tomsk educator and merchant Pyotr Ivanovich Makushin also made a patronage contribution. The first wooden building could not fully meet the needs of the educational institution, and therefore the question arose of building a new stone building. S.Yu. insisted on the same. Witte, who personally visited the school in 1902 and allocated 100,000 rubles of an interest-free loan for the construction of a new building. Through the efforts and patronage of the merchant I.E. Kukhterin as a gift to the new School, with the participation of the architect K. K. Lygin, in 1902-1904. A special large three-story building was built on Salt Square. On August 10, 1904, the School solemnly moved into this new academic building.

It should be noted that in the XIX-XX centuries. In the system of public education in the Russian Empire, there were two types of commercial schools: primary (first stage of education) and special (second stage of education, training of specialists with non-higher technical and vocational education).

The main structure of the Siberian Commercial School in 1910 was combined: it is general and special (technical) education. General education included two preparatory classes (junior and middle) and six basic general education classes. For graduates of the first stage of the School who passed the examination tests, technical education could be continued at any one of the three departments of the second stage - commercial, mining, or (from October 1912) surveying. It is the land surveying (land management) department that by the middle of the 20th century will become an independent Tomsk educational institution - an agricultural technical school. Also, graduates of the second stage of education had the right to enter higher educational institutions. Russian Empire.

POLYTECHNICAL SCHOOL - INSTITUTE

In 1911, the Commercial School was transformed into First Siberian Polytechnic School named after Tsesarevich Alexei .

The basis for the emergence of agrarian and technical education was the opening in this educational institution Land surveying department which took place in October 1912.

At the beginning of the 20th century, the Russian state paid great attention to the development of agriculture and the support of the peasant initiative. And, above all, the allocation of land allotments to settlers in Siberia. What is especially noteworthy, the government of the Russian Empire set the task not only of training professional geodetic technicians. Graduates of the land surveying department of the Siberian Commercial School had to be able to take into account the soil conditions of the region, “... be knowledgeable in cultural and technical work and agriculture". That is, even then the foundation was laid for the training of qualified personnel for the village. (Website of the Tomsk Agrarian College, 2013)

Many well-known professors and lecturers taught at the First Siberian Polytechnic (Commercial) School Tomsk State University and Tomsk Technological Institute. This significantly improved the quality of student education and raised their professional level, which was appreciated by employers in the region. In fact, the second stage of education here began to blur the lines between technical and higher engineering education in the preparation of engineers, which was previously given by teachers of Tomsk universities.

After the February Revolution of 1917 and until 1923, the educational institution was elevated to the status of a university and was called, since 1922 it was given the name Kliment Arkadyevich Timiryazev .

In the period of 1919, the educational institution did not operate, the building was transferred to the location of the General Staff Academy, which was in Tomsk in the evacuation.

An interesting fact: less than a month before the overthrow of the first period of Soviet power in Tomsk, on May 6, 1918, an exhibition of paintings by Tomsk artist M.M. Polyakov.

People's Commissar Lunacharsky at the Tomsk Practical Polytechnic Institute, 1923.

In the photo: proletarian youth on the porch of the Practical Polytechnic Institute. K.A. Timiryazev, autumn 1922

POLYTECHNICUM

By the decision of the People's Commissariat of Education of the RSFSR from July 1, 1923 Tomsk Practical Polytechnic Institute. comrade Timiryazev converted to First Siberian Polytechnic K.A. Timiryazev(polytechnic school), which establishes a three-year term of study in technical, cooperative and agrarian (agricultural) areas.

Practical agricultural classes on the site in front of the building of the Polytechnic. K.A. Timiryazev, ca. 1925

Then in 1920-1921. part of the specialists of the Tomsk Practical Polytechnic Institute is involved in the creation of Novonikolaevsk the first secondary specialized educational institution in their city - agricultural technical school, which became the second institution in Siberia for the training of agricultural personnel. The third (after the Tomsk Polytechnic and Novonikolaev Agricultural) agricultural educational institution in Siberia is the one opened in Tomsk by decree of SibProfrObra dated April 1922 Tomsk Land Management College (1922-1927).

Providing the needs of the Siberian industry and agriculture in medium-skilled specialists, the Tomsk Technical School for 1923-1928. trained and released 310 technicians to work in the system of the national economy of the Siberian Territory.

In 1925, the Polytechnic opens zootechnical department. The range of agricultural specializations is being strengthened and expanded.

In 1928, the technical school was reorganized into the creation on its basis of two new technical schools (a polytechnic and an agricultural technical school), as the shortage of the economy's need for a sufficient number of technicians increased. Also, on the threshold of mass collectivization, the demand for agricultural specialists increased sharply, which was written in red line in the resolution of the plenum of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks, held in November 1929: “... Particular attention of the Party, the Soviets and the collective-farm system must be drawn to the problem of cadres. The collective-farm movement has taken on dimensions that require a decisive, revolutionary restructuring of the entire system, the program and methods of training organizers, agronomists, engineers, land surveyors, technicians, financial accountants, and so on. for collective farm construction» .

History of the Tomsk Agricultural College

Actually an independent story Tomsk Agricultural College begins with the division of the Polytechnic in 1928 into two independent technical schools: the Polytechnic and the Agricultural College.

In the same years, by the decisions of the Soviet government, new small educational institutions of the profile of vocational education were already allocated from this agricultural technical school. In the conditions that began in the country depeasantization and collectivization and the influx of young people from the village into the city, new schools and technical schools are being created in Tomsk. Some of them start to duplicate each other. Former Land surveying department Commercial School (Practical Institute) with a material base on the street. K. Marx, 19, is actually Tomsk Agricultural College of the West Siberian Territory(TSHT). The technical school has at its disposal an extensive material and technical base, students receive practical skills at various (in Tomsk and in the regions of the Tomsk district) selection and experimental stations of an agricultural profile.

The TSHT survived the harsh time of the Great Patriotic War quite stably, however, the contingent of students from the predominance of boys almost completely shifted towards girls.

In the newly created Tomsk region in August 1944, TSHT becomes a regional educational institution in the system Ministry of Agriculture of the RSFSR.

The post-war period, the 1950s, required the restoration of the agricultural base, the restructuring of the village to solve the country's food security. The rapid development of agricultural education begins.

In the 1950s in parallel with the TSHT, other technical schools of agricultural specialization operate in Tomsk, such as the Tomsk veterinary technical school (the second veterinarian technical school appeared in the 1950s), Tomsk secondary agricultural school, Tomsk regional agronomic school. To streamline agricultural education and strengthen, improve the efficiency of the learning process, according to a joint resolution of the executive committee of the Tomsk Regional Council of People's Deputies of Workers and the Bureau of the Tomsk Regional Committee of the CPSU No. B-52/3 dated September 7, 1957 " On the merger of two veterinary technical schools and an agricultural technical school into one agricultural technical school", a single Tomsk Agricultural College. All other educational institutions of a similar agricultural profile were abolished or introduced with their own material and educational and methodological base in the TSHT of the new formation. The main building of the united technical school (with the preservation of the exhibition of agricultural mechanization and machine and tractor equipment) remains the building on the street. K. Marx, 19. The technical school also received a complex-organized building at pl. Solyanaya, 11 (aka Pushkin St., 24) and temporarily, until the construction of a new educational building - a building along Malaya Podgornaya Street, 3. TSHK becomes the largest agricultural technical school of the RSFSR of that time.

The TSHT formed in 1957 becomes the historical successor of the following previous Tomsk educational institutions:

  • Land surveying department First Siberian Commercial School, First Siberian Polytechnic School, Siberian technical courses for evening education for adults (1915-1917) and / technical school. Timiryazev;
  • Tomsk Agricultural College 1928-1957,

In the next decade, the technical school shows high achievements and the quality of education, conducts intensive experimental and production activities with a network of auxiliary and experimental sites, experimental stations and laboratories. TSHT receives authority and appreciation in the RSFSR and in the USSR.

In 1967, for great merits in the training of agricultural specialists for the economy of Western Siberia, by the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, the technical school was awarded Order of the Red Banner of Labor . Graduates of the TSHT worked in almost all collective farms and state farms of the Tomsk region, neighboring regions, many of them (for example, Hero of Socialist Labor Rembert Elmarovich Paloson) took place as prominent agricultural leaders. These traditions are preserved to this day.

SOVHOZ-TEHNIKUM

In 1974 the college was renamed Tomsk Order of the Red Banner of Labor State Farm Technical School of the Main Directorate of Agricultural Technical Schools of the Ministry of Agriculture of the RSFSR. On November 26, 1985, the state farm technical school became subordinate to the Main Directorate of Agricultural Technical Schools of the State Agro-Industrial Committee of the RSFSR.

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In the 1970s, due to the increased attention of the regional authorities (headed by E.K. Ligachev), the material base of the technical school began to be significantly replenished with buildings of new educational buildings and hostels for students, an educational and residential complex was put into operation (an educational building, a hostel and a sports site) on the former wasteland of the Second Microdistrict - on the street. Ivan Chernykh, 101. In the early 1980s, the foundation was laid for a new technical school base at Irkutsk Trakt, 181 (dormitories, educational buildings, laboratories, a veterinary station). The completion and commissioning of this complex has been carried out now, since 2005.

In 1983, part of the material base and the Kuzovlevsky branch of the Kuzovlevsky suburban state farm were transferred to the state farm-technical school as a new site for the subsidiary and educational and experimental farm. On February 16, 1992, the state farm technical school was again reorganized into Tomsk Agricultural College of the Ministry of Agriculture of the Russian Federation. From August 1999 to 2012, the technical school is under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Agriculture and Food of the Russian Federation.

In the 1990s, with the creation in Tomsk of a branch of the Novosibirsk Agrarian Regional University - the Tomsk Agricultural Institute, many curricula and courses of the TSHT and the new TSHI were integrated with each other. Part of the TSHT base (in particular, the building on Pushkin St.) was provided for the deployment of the TSHT, the curricula of the two institutions were adjusted so that TSXT graduates could easily enter the TSHT to continue their advanced studies. In 1994, the Veterinary Center was opened on the basis of the TSHT.

In 1997, the Asinovsky and Kolpashevsky training and advisory centers of the TSHT and a new training and production facility were opened. A few years later, these points in Asino and Kolpashevo were reorganized into branches of the TSHT. In 2008, TSHI became the winner in the priority national project "Education" with the program "System of personnel training for high-tech enterprises of the Siberian region", received funding for the purchase of modern equipment.

It should be noted that since 2012, such Russian educational institutions (technical schools) from the level of federal ministries and departments have been transferred to the jurisdiction of the subjects of the Federation. TSHT was transferred to the administration of the Tomsk region and regional budget financing, this Administration acts founder educational institution. Simultaneously with the streamlining of interbudgetary relations of the federal Center and regions in the Russian Federation, the technical school went on its own internal structural reorganization.

TOMSK AGRARIAN COLLEGE

Since 2012, due to the transformation of the system of science and education in Russia, the educational institution has been reorganized into the Tomsk Agrarian College.

Today the college is a multidisciplinary secondary vocational educational institution, has a modern material base, which creates favorable conditions for obtaining a high-quality education. Students, using the educational potential of the college, represent their educational institution with honor and dignity, annually becoming winners of olympiads and competitions of professional skills, laureates of the Tomsk Region Prize in education, science, culture and health, actively participate in seminars, conferences of various levels, where they represent creative, research and design work. A wealth of experience has been accumulated in working with the adult population in the form of training and development of competencies at short-term specialized courses, including in the agrarian and educational Regional Resource Center based on the college. Internships, advanced training courses and retraining of agro-industrial complex personnel are regularly held in the profile of basic educational programs.

Modernity

Founded over 110 years ago, Tomsk Agrarian College preserves and enhances its glorious traditions and strives for new successes and achievements. Under the conditions of the Russian reform of 2013 to transform primary and secondary vocational education institutions, as well as to improve the training of technicians, agronomists and bachelors, the Agrarian College continues to search for new methods of work, fits into the new structure of staffing the needs of the regional agro-industrial economy.

The number of college students in May 2013:

  • Total: 1156 people, of which:
    • 804 full-time students;
    • 352 people on the correspondence form of education.

Famous personalities

  • Pyotr Yakovlevich Bazhin(1914-1978) - veteran Great Patriotic War, The hero of the USSR. He graduated from the Tomsk Agricultural College in 1937.
  • Anatoly Evstafievich Grushchinsky (1932-1976) - a graduate of the TSHT in 1971, a prominent Soviet leader of agriculture (the Mayak collective farm in the Pervomaisky district), Hero of Socialist Labor.
  • Alexander Filippovich Musokhranov (1921-2002) - veteran Great Patriotic War, The hero of the USSR. He studied at the Tomsk Veterinary College in 1937-beginning of 1938.
  • Rembert Elmarovich Paloson (1932-2013) - a graduate of the TSHT in 1968, later - a prominent Soviet leader of agriculture, director of the Kolomensky state farm, Hero of Socialist Labor.
  • Svetlana Alexandrovna Puzanova (born in 1929) - teacher of the TSHT in 1952-1991. Honored Teacher of the RSFSR (1968), participant of VDNKh of the USSR. Tomsk poetess.
  • Alexander Nikolaevich Spitsyn (born in 1935) - a graduate of the TSHT in 1966, an advanced worker of the SKhK, by the time he completed his studies at the TSHT - Hero of Socialist Labor.

Leaders

Since 1957, the directors of the Tomsk Agricultural and Veterinary Technical Schools, and the new formation of the TSHT were:

  • 1930-1937 (TSHT) - F.F. Melekhov
  • 1930-1936 (TZVT) - A.Ya. Chudinov
  • 1936-1938 (TZVT) - N.M. banin
  • 1938-1939 (TSHT) - Z.N. Grechenina
  • 1939-1942 (TSHT) - E.N. Sokolov
  • 1939-1943 (TZVT) - Suvorov
  • 1942-1944 (TSHT) - V.V. Matskevich
  • 1943-1957 (TZVT) - Z.N. Golberg
  • 1944-1950 (TSHT) - T.F. Ershov
  • 1950-1955 (TSHT) - N.V. Mastryukov
  • 1955-1957 (TSHT) - I.V. Arzamaskov
  • 1957-1959 - I.L. Arzamaskov
  • 1959-1970 - Z.G. Lipatnikov
  • 1970-1978 - A.I. Mirgorodsky
  • 1978-1998 - E.V. Mitrushkin

Modern teaching staff

Today, all TAK teachers have a higher education and a high pedagogical qualification category, and I have practical experience in the specialty they teach. See the TAK website for more details.

Training units

  • Educational resource center of the college (retraining of specialists of the agro-industrial complex)
  • Full-time education department
  • Correspondence educational department
  • TAK branch in Asino
  • TAK branch in Kolpashevo
  • Training and production sites and pilot farm
  • Educational and practical veterinary clinic

Students study in the following specialties (2013).

New

The branch was organized in 1993 by the Novosibirsk State Agrarian University together with the administration of the Tomsk region. The veterinary faculty was the first to appear, since in the 1990s there was a very acute shortage of veterinary specialists. A little later, the Faculty of Economics appeared. In 2000, a law department was opened as part of the Faculty of Economics. In the same year, the agroengineering faculty began its work. To date, the Institute trains personnel in 8 areas of undergraduate and 1 specialist training:

  • veterinarians (specialty "Veterinary");
  • agronomists (direction of training "Agronomy");
  • livestock specialists (direction of training "Zootechny");
  • fish farmers (direction of training "Zootechny");
  • agroengineers (direction of training "Agroengineering");
  • hunters (direction of training "Biology");
  • technologists-processors of agricultural products (direction of training "Technology of production and processing of agricultural products");
  • accountants (training area "Economics");
  • production managers, logisticians (direction of training "Management");
  • lawyers (training area "Jurisprudence").

The educational process is provided by more than 48 qualified teachers, including 4 doctors and 26 candidates of sciences. Over the past five years, teachers of the institute have defended 1 doctoral and 4 master's theses.

Currently, 1578 students are studying at the Tomsk Agricultural Institute, a branch of the Federal State Budgetary Educational Institution of Higher Education, Novosibirsk State Agrarian University, of which 279 are full-time students, 49 are full-time part-time students, and 1250 are part-time students. Due to the severity of the local climate, which complicates agricultural production, the direction of research and training has some specifics. The development of wild plants, the rich fauna of Tomsk and neighboring regions, and the migration of ungulates and fur animals are being studied.

The best traditions of Siberian scientific schools are used in the educational process. Students receive broad knowledge in various fields and have the opportunity to actively apply them in practice.

University graduates have no difficulty in finding employment, as the branch has close ties with the Siberian Agrarian Group, an industry holding in which all processes follow a closed chain - from the production of grain, animal feed, to the production of meat products. At all stages of work, the holding attracts graduates and students of our institute. Poultry farming is also developed in the Tomsk region, and the university, at the request of companies, supplies specialists to work in this profile. Since 2013, the institute has been training fish farmers for the young industry of the Tomsk region. Graduates of the institute are in demand in various sectors of the region and successfully work in institutions of science and education, in production, in public organizations, in state and municipal governments, in the law enforcement system, in enterprises and organizations of various forms of ownership. Many graduates hold the positions of heads of enterprises, leading specialists: heads of veterinary departments of districts; chief veterinarians; chief agronomists; chief zootechnicians; chief accountants; chief economists, etc.

In 2014, the institute became one of the organizations participating in the innovative territorial cluster "Pharmaceuticals, medical equipment and information technologies of the Tomsk region", in 2015 - "Cluster of renewable natural resources".

When conducting joint research, the scientific base of the branch of the Federal State Budgetary Institution "Gossortkomissiya" Tomsk GSIS, the Siberian Research Institute of Agriculture and Peat - a branch of the Federal State Budgetary Institution of Science of the Siberian Federal Scientific Center for Agrobiotechnologies of the Russian Academy of Sciences, the National Research Tomsk State University, the Tomsk Research Institute of Balneology and physiotherapy, Bank of Stem Cells LLC, Institute of High-Current Electronics SB RAS, Institute of Petroleum Chemistry of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Federal State Budgetary Institution - "Tomskaya Agrochemical Service Station", Regional Veterinary Laboratory, LLC "Tomsk Research and Production Fish Breeding Complex", CJSC "Dunes Medical and Ecological Center", "Agrogum" LLC, "Agrotechservis" LLC, "Plemzavod "Zavarzino" LLC, SPK (collective farm) "Nelyubino", CJSC "Dubrovskoye", LLC "SHP "Ust-Bakcharskoe", LLC "Sibirskoe milk".

Technical education.

  • Full official name as of June 2013: Tomsk Regional State Budgetary Educational Institution of Secondary Vocational Education " Tomsk Agricultural College»
  • Short name: SO or OGBOU SPO "Tomsk Agrarian College"

The beginning of the story

In connection with the construction and launch of the Tomsk (Siberian) railway and the beginning of the Stolypin agrarian reforms, beyond the Urals there was a problem of shortage, lack of trained workers and artisans to ensure these grandiose undertakings. Also, for applicants of the first higher educational institutions beyond the Urals (Siberian Tomsk State Imperial University and) applicants with a high educational level were required, which is achieved by graduates of specialized gymnasiums and commercial / real schools of the second (advanced) level of education. The network of institutions that in the future became the primary specialized (vocational) education and training technicians (technical schools) was just emerging in response to the challenges of the time.

To solve the problem of training specialists-technicians, three schools were opened in Tomsk: Commercial, Real and handicraft, which actually became the first Tomsk technical schools.

COMMERCIAL SCHOOL

POLYTECHNICAL SCHOOL - INSTITUTE

The basis for the emergence of agrarian and technical education was the opening in this educational institution Land surveying department which took place in October 1912.

At the beginning of the 20th century, the Russian state paid great attention to the development of agriculture and the support of the peasant initiative. And, above all, the allocation of land allotments to settlers in Siberia. What is especially noteworthy, the government of the Russian Empire set the task not only of training professional geodetic technicians. Graduates of the land surveying department of the Siberian Commercial School had to be able to take into account the soil conditions of the region, “... be knowledgeable in cultural and technical work and agriculture". That is, even then the foundation was laid for the training of qualified personnel for the village. (, year 2013)

Teaching at the First Siberian Polytechnic (Commercial) School was carried out by many well-known professors and lecturers of Tomsk State University and. This significantly improved the quality of student education and raised their professional level, which was appreciated by employers in the region. In fact, the second stage of education here began to blur the lines between technical and higher engineering education, which was given by teachers of Tomsk universities.

However, in the fall, the educational process was disrupted by the events of the October (1917) revolution that began and the Civil War that began after that. The beautiful building was first used as a hospital for parts of the Czechoslovak Corps, then, under the authority of the Kolchak government, the All-Russian Academy of the General Staff of the Russian (White) Army operated here. With the arrival of units of the 5th Red Army in Tomsk at the end of December 1919, the new government began to form the Polytechnic Institute in a new way. Here in the spring, in a hurry, they brought the proletarian youth to worker-peasant higher polytechnic courses. Ultimately, an institution is defined as Siberian (Tomsk) Workers' and Peasants' Practical Polytechnic Institute. In the summer of 1922, the university was named after Comrade K. A. Timiryazev.

An interesting fact: less than a month before the overthrow of the first period of Soviet power in Tomsk, on May 6, 1918, an exhibition of paintings by the Tomsk artist M. M. Polyakov opened at the Tomsk Polytechnic (Commercial) Institute.

History of the Tomsk Agricultural College

Actually an independent story Tomsk Agricultural College begins with the division of the polytechnic in 1928 into two independent technical schools: the polytechnic and the agricultural technical school.

In the same years, by the decisions of the Soviet government, new small educational institutions of the profile of vocational education were already allocated from this agricultural technical school. In the conditions that began in the country depeasantization and collectivization and the influx of young people from the village into the city, new schools and technical schools are being created in Tomsk. Some of them start to duplicate each other. Former Land surveying department Commercial School (Practical Institute) with a material base on Karl Marx Street, 19, is actually Tomsk Agricultural College of the West Siberian Territory(TSHT). College since the 1930s has at its disposal an extensive material and technical base, students receive practical skills at various (in Tomsk and in the regions of the Tomsk district) selection and experimental stations of an agricultural profile.

The post-war period, the 1950s, required the restoration of the agricultural base, the restructuring of the village to solve the country's food security. The rapid development of agricultural education begins again.

In the project for the construction of a water tower for the auxiliary educational facilities of the TSKhT in the Tugan region (1955). A large experimental and educational farm is being created ( Agricultural technical school) with its experimental pond, which is located in the nearest suburbs, just south of the Irkutsk tract and Suvorov Street, which was then being formed.

In the 1950s in parallel with the TSHT in Tomsk, there are other technical schools of agricultural specialization, such as and , Tomsk secondary agricultural school , Tomsk regional agronomic school . To streamline agricultural education and strengthen, improve the efficiency of the learning process, according to a joint resolution of the executive committee of the Tomsk Regional Council of People's Deputies of Workers and the Bureau of the Tomsk Regional Committee of the CPSU No. B-52/3 dated September 7, 1957 " On the merger of two veterinary technical schools and an agricultural technical school into one agricultural technical school", a single Tomsk Agricultural College. All other educational institutions of a similar agricultural profile were abolished or introduced with their own material and educational and methodological base in the TSHT of the new formation. The main building of the united technical school (with the preservation of the exhibition of agricultural mechanization and machine and tractor equipment) remains the building along K. Marx Street, 19. The building at pl. Solyanaya, 11 (aka Pushkin St., 24) and, temporarily, until the construction of a new educational building - a building along Malaya Podgornaya Street, 3. TSKhK becomes the largest agricultural technical school of the RSFSR of that time.

In 1967, for great merits in the training of agricultural specialists for the economy of Western Siberia, by the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, the technical school was awarded Order of the Red Banner of Labor.

Graduates of the TSHT worked in almost all collective farms and state farms of the Tomsk region, neighboring regions, many of them (for example, Hero of Socialist Labor Rembert Elmarovich Paloson) took place as prominent agricultural leaders. These traditions are preserved to this day.

SOVHOZ-TEHNIKUM

Modernity

Founded over 110 years ago, Tomsk Agricultural College preserves and increases its glorious traditions and strives for new successes and achievements. In the context of the Russian reform of 2013 to transform primary and secondary vocational education institutions, as well as to improve the training of technicians, agronomists and bachelors, Agricultural College continues to search for new methods of work, fits into the new structure of staffing the needs of the regional agro-industrial economy.

The number of college students in May 2013:

  • Total: 1156 people, of which:
    • 804 full-time students;
    • 352 people on the correspondence form of education.

Leaders

Since 1957, the directors of the Tomsk Agricultural and Veterinary Technical Schools, and the new formation of the TSHT were:

  • 1930-1937 (TSHT) - F. F. Melekhov
  • 1930-1936 (TZVT) - A. Ya. Chudinov
  • 1936-1938 (TZVT) - N. M. Banin
  • 1938-1939 (TSHT) - Z. N. Grechenina
  • 1939-1942 (TSHT) - E. N. Sokolov
  • 1939-1943 (TZVT) - Suvorov
  • 1942-1944 (TSHT) - V. V. Matskevich
  • 1943-1957 (TZVT) - Z. N. Golberg
  • 1944-1950 (TSHT) - T. F. Ershova
  • 1950-1955 (TSHT) - N. V. Mastryukov
  • 1955-1957 (TSHT) - I. V. Arzamaskov
  • 1957-1959 - I. L. Arzamaskov
  • 1959-1970 - Z. G. Lipatnikov
  • 1970-1978 - A. I. Mirgorodsky
  • 1978-1998 - E. V. Mitrushkin
  • from 1998 - Albert Yakovlevich Oksengert

Training units

  • Educational resource center of the college (retraining of specialists of the agro-industrial complex)
  • Full-time education department
  • Correspondence educational department
  • TAK branch in Kolpashevo
  • Training and production sites and pilot farm
  • Educational and practical veterinary clinic

Students study in the following specialties (2013):

  • Agricultural mechanization
  • Law and organization of social security
  • Economics and Accounting
  • Technical operation and maintenance of electrical and electromechanical equipment of agricultural enterprises

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Notes

  1. In the rules of Russian spelling of that time, the name of the institution meant writing all the words in the name with a capital letter.
  2. The building of the Commercial School has survived to this day. Now it is the Second educational building of TGASU, a house on Solyanaya Square, 2/2.
  3. The new name became officially valid from January 1st of the new year, 1912.
  4. Soviet power in Tomsk was initially exercised from November 1917 to the end of May 1918.
  5. Muravyova V. L. A. V. Lunacharsky in Siberia. / GATO, Tomsk, 1971. Electronic resource: gato.tomica.ru/publications/region/archive1970-1979/1971myraveva1
  6. From this moment begins the history of the Tomsk Polytechnic.
  7. Until 1930, the agricultural departments of the TSHT were still located on the square. Salt, 2.
  8. Reorganized from Tomsk veterinary medical school II degree (1878-1920), in Tomsk for more than 40 years a small Tomsk Veterinary College.
  9. Tomsk Veterinary College organized in July 1930 on the basis of livestock specializations of the then liquidated Siberian Polytechnic
  10. In particular, as part of the development of the material base Veterinary College in 1952, the "Technical design for the construction of the thermal sector of the district veterinary hospital in the city of Tomsk" was developed. There is no information whether this project was fully implemented.
  11. Initially organized as a two-year school, later Tomsk secondary agricultural school switched to a three-year term of educational training of specialists for the village.
  12. State farm "Kuzovlevsky", at the insistence of the head of the Tomsk region in 1964-1982. E. K. Ligacheva was the main site for the winter supply of fresh vegetable agricultural products (cucumbers and tomatoes) of Tomsk residents as part of the Food Security project of the city of Tomsk.
  13. GATO. F. R-782. Op.1. Unit ridge 474. P.1., Ed. ridge 476. L.24.

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An excerpt characterizing the Tomsk Agricultural College

“Ah, I really didn’t think to offend her, as I understand and highly appreciate these feelings!
Princess Mary looked at him silently and smiled tenderly. “After all, I have known you for a long time and love you like a brother,” she said. How did you find Andrew? she asked hastily, not giving him time to say anything in response to her kind words. “He worries me a lot. His health is better in winter, but last spring the wound opened, and the doctor said that he must go for treatment. And morally, I'm very afraid for him. He is not a character like us women to suffer and cry out his grief. He carries it inside himself. Today he is cheerful and lively; but it was your arrival that had such an effect on him: he is rarely like that. If you could persuade him to go abroad! He needs activity, and this smooth, quiet life is ruining him. Others do not notice, but I see.
At 10 o'clock the waiters rushed to the porch, hearing the bells of the old prince's carriage approaching. Prince Andrei and Pierre also went out onto the porch.
- Who is this? asked the old prince, getting out of the carriage and guessing Pierre.
– AI is very happy! kiss, - he said, having learned who the unfamiliar young man was.
The old prince was in a good spirit and kindly treated Pierre.
Before dinner, Prince Andrei, returning back to his father's study, found the old prince in a heated argument with Pierre.
Pierre argued that the time would come when there would be no more war. The old prince, teasing, but not angry, challenged him.
- Let the blood out of the veins, pour water, then there will be no war. Woman’s nonsense, woman’s nonsense, ”he said, but still affectionately patted Pierre on the shoulder, and went up to the table, at which Prince Andrei, apparently not wanting to enter into a conversation, was sorting through the papers brought by the prince from the city. The old prince approached him and began to talk about business.
- The leader, Count Rostov, did not deliver half of the people. He came to the city, decided to call for dinner, - I asked him such a dinner ... But look at this one ... Well, brother, - Prince Nikolai Andreevich turned to his son, clapping Pierre on the shoulder, - well done your friend, I fell in love with him! Fires me up. The other one speaks smart words, but I don’t want to listen, but he lies and inflames me, old man. Well, go, go, - he said, - maybe I will come, I will sit at your supper. I'll bet again. Love my fool, Princess Mary, ”he shouted to Pierre from the door.
Pierre now only, on his visit to the Bald Mountains, appreciated the full strength and charm of his friendship with Prince Andrei. This charm was expressed not so much in his relations with himself, but in relations with all relatives and household. Pierre, with the old, stern prince and with the meek and timid Princess Mary, despite the fact that he hardly knew them, immediately felt like an old friend. They all already loved him. Not only Princess Mary, bribed by his meek attitude towards wanderers, looked at him with the most radiant eyes; but the little, one-year-old Prince Nikolai, as his grandfather called him, smiled at Pierre and went into his arms. Mikhail Ivanovich, m lle Bourienne looked at him with joyful smiles when he talked with the old prince.
The old prince went out to supper: this was obvious to Pierre. He was with him both days of his stay in the Bald Mountains extremely affectionate, and ordered him to come to him.
When Pierre left and all the members of the family got together, they began to judge him, as it always happens after the departure of a new person, and, as rarely happens, everyone said one good thing about him.

Returning this time from vacation, Rostov for the first time felt and learned to what extent his connection with Denisov and with the entire regiment was strong.
When Rostov drove up to the regiment, he experienced a feeling similar to the one he experienced when driving up to the Cook's House. When he saw the first hussar in the unbuttoned uniform of his regiment, when he recognized the red-haired Dementyev, he saw the hitching posts of the red horses, when Lavrushka joyfully shouted to his master: “The count has arrived!” and shaggy Denisov, who was sleeping on the bed, ran out of the dugout, hugged him, and the officers converged on the newcomer - Rostov experienced the same feeling as when his mother, father and sisters hugged him, and tears of joy that came to his throat prevented him from speaking . The regiment was also a home, and the home was invariably sweet and expensive, just like the parental home.
Appearing to the regimental commander, having received an assignment to the former squadron, going on duty and foraging, entering into all the small interests of the regiment and feeling deprived of freedom and chained in one narrow, unchanging frame, Rostov experienced the same calm, the same support and the same consciousness the fact that he was here at home, in his place, which he felt under his parents' roof. There was no all this disorder of the free world, in which he did not find a place for himself and made mistakes in the elections; there was no Sonya with whom it was necessary or not to explain. It was not possible to go there or not to go there; there were no those 24 hours of the day, which could be used in so many different ways; there was not this innumerable multitude of people, of whom none was closer, none was farther; there was no such obscure and indefinite monetary relationship with his father, there was no reminder of the terrible loss to Dolokhov! Here in the regiment everything was clear and simple. The whole world was divided into two uneven divisions. One is our Pavlograd regiment, and the other is everything else. And the rest didn't matter. Everything was known in the regiment: who was a lieutenant, who was a captain, who was a good man, who was a bad person, and most importantly, a comrade. The shopper believes in debt, the salary is a third; there is nothing to invent and choose, just do not do anything that is considered bad in the Pavlograd regiment; but they will send, do what is clear and distinct, determined and ordered: and everything will be fine.
Entering again into these certain conditions of regimental life, Rostov experienced joy and calmness, similar to those that a tired person feels when he lies down to rest. This regimental life was all the more gratifying in this campaign to Rostov that, after losing to Dolokhov (an act which, despite all the consolations of his relatives, he could not forgive himself), he decided to serve not as before, but in order to make amends for his guilt, to serve well and to be a completely excellent comrade and officer, that is, a wonderful person, which seemed so difficult in the world, and so possible in the regiment.
Rostov, since his loss, decided that he would pay this debt to his parents at the age of five. He was sent 10 thousand a year, but now he decided to take only two, and give the rest to his parents to pay the debt.

Our army, after repeated retreats, offensives and battles at Pultusk, at Preussisch Eylau, concentrated near Bartenstein. They were waiting for the arrival of the sovereign to the army and the start of a new campaign.
The Pavlograd regiment, which was in that part of the army that was on the campaign of 1805, being manned in Russia, was late for the first actions of the campaign. He was neither near Pultusk, nor near Preussish Eylau, and in the second half of the campaign, having joined the army in the field, he was assigned to Platov's detachment.
Platov's detachment acted independently of the army. Several times the Pavlograders were part of the skirmishes with the enemy, captured prisoners and once repulsed even the crews of Marshal Oudinot. In the month of April, the inhabitants of Pavlograd stood for several weeks near the empty German village, completely ravaged to the ground, without moving.
It was growing, mud, cold, the rivers broke open, the roads became impassable; for several days they did not give food to either horses or people. Since the supply became impossible, people scattered around the abandoned deserted villages to look for potatoes, but even that was not enough. Everything was eaten, and all the inhabitants fled; those who remained were worse than beggars, and there was nothing to take away from them, and even little - compassionate soldiers often, instead of using them, gave them their last.
The Pavlograd regiment lost only two wounded in action; but from hunger and disease lost almost half of the people. In hospitals they died so surely that the soldiers, sick with fever and swelling, which came from bad food, preferred to carry out their service, dragging their legs in the front by force, than to go to the hospitals. With the opening of spring, the soldiers began to find a plant that looked like asparagus, which for some reason they called Mashkin's sweet root, which was showing up from the ground, and scattered over the meadows and fields, looking for this Mashkin's sweet root (which was very bitter), dug it up with sabers and ate, despite on orders not to eat this harmful plant.
In the spring, a new disease was discovered among the soldiers, a swelling of the hands, feet and face, the cause of which the doctors believed was the use of this root. But despite the prohibition, the Pavlograd soldiers of the Denisov squadron ate mainly Mashkin's sweet root, because for the second week they had been stretching the last crackers, they were giving out only half a pound per person, and the frozen and germinated potatoes were brought in the last parcel. The horses, too, for the second week fed on thatched roofs from the houses, were ugly thin and covered with tufts of winter hair that had strayed.
Despite such a disaster, the soldiers and officers lived exactly the same as always; so now, although with pale and swollen faces and in tattered uniforms, the hussars lined up for calculations, went to clean up, cleaned horses, ammunition, dragged straw from the roofs instead of food and went to dine at the boilers, from which they got up hungry, joking about with their vile food and their hunger. As always, in their free time, the soldiers burned fires, steamed naked by the fires, smoked, took away and baked sprouted, rotten potatoes and told and listened to stories about either the Potemkin and Suvorov campaigns, or tales about Alyosha the rogue, and about the priest's farm laborer Mikolka.
The officers, as usual, lived in twos and threes, in open half-ruined houses. The elders took care of acquiring straw and potatoes, in general, about the means of subsistence for people, the younger ones were engaged, as always, in cards (there was a lot of money, although there was no food), some in innocent games - piles and towns. Little was said about the general course of affairs, partly because they did not know anything positive, partly because they vaguely felt that the general cause of the war was going badly.
Rostov lived, as before, with Denisov, and their friendly relationship, since their vacation, had become even closer. Denisov never talked about Rostov's family, but from the tender friendship that the commander showed his officer, Rostov felt that the old hussar's unhappy love for Natasha participated in this strengthening of friendship. Denisov apparently tried to expose Rostov to danger as little as possible, took care of him and, after the deed, especially joyfully met him safe and sound. On one of his business trips, Rostov found in an abandoned devastated village, where he came for provisions, the family of an old Pole man and his daughter, with a baby. They were naked, hungry, and could not leave, and had no means to leave. Rostov brought them to his parking lot, placed them in his apartment, and for several weeks, while the old man was recovering, kept them. Comrade Rostov, talking about women, began to laugh at Rostov, saying that he was more cunning than everyone, and that it would not be a sin for him to introduce his comrades to the pretty Polish woman he had saved. Rostov took the joke for an insult and, flaring up, said such unpleasant things to the officer that Denisov could hardly keep both of them from dueling. When the officer left and Denisov, who himself did not know Rostov's relationship with the Pole, began to reproach him for his temper, Rostov told him:
- How do you want ... She is like a sister to me, and I cannot describe to you how it hurt me ... because ... well, because ...
Denisov hit him on the shoulder, and quickly began to walk around the room, not looking at Rostov, which he did in moments of emotional excitement.
- What an arc "your hellish weather" ode G "Ostovskaya," he said, and Rostov noticed tears in Denisov's eyes.

In the month of April, the troops revived with the news of the arrival of the sovereign to the army. Rostov did not manage to get to the review that the sovereign did in Bartenstein: the people of Pavlograd stood at outposts, far ahead of Bartenstein.
They bivouacked. Denisov and Rostov lived in a dugout dug for them by soldiers, covered with branches and turf. The dugout was arranged in the following way, which then became fashionable: a ditch broke through one and a half arshins wide, two arshins deep and three and a half lengths. Steps were made from one end of the ditch, and this was a descent, a porch; the ditch itself was a room in which the lucky ones, like a squadron commander, on the far side opposite the steps, lay on stakes, a board - it was a table. On both sides, along the ditch, a yard of earth was removed, and these were two beds and sofas. The roof was arranged in such a way that one could stand in the middle, and one could even sit on the bed if one moved closer to the table. Denisov, who lived luxuriously because the soldiers of his squadron loved him, also had a board in the gable of the roof, and in this board there was broken but glued glass. When it was very cold, heat was brought to the steps (to the reception room, as Denisov called this part of the booth), on an iron bent sheet, from soldiers' fires, and it became so warm that the officers, of whom Denisov and Rostov always had many, sat in the same shirts.
In April, Rostov was on duty. At 8 o'clock in the morning, after returning home, after a sleepless night, he ordered to bring heat, changed his rain-soaked linen, prayed to God, drank tea, got warm, put things in order in his corner and on the table, and with a weathered, burning face, in one shirt, lay on his back, his hands under his head. He pleasantly thought about the fact that the next rank for the last reconnaissance should come to him the other day, and he was waiting for Denisov to come out somewhere. Rostov wanted to talk to him.
Behind the hut, Denisov's rolling cry was heard, obviously getting excited. Rostov moved to the window to see who he was dealing with, and saw Sergeant Topcheenko.
“I told you not to let them burn this claw, some kind of Mashkin!” shouted Denisov.
“I ordered, your honor, they don’t listen,” the sergeant-major answered.
Rostov again lay down on his bed and thought with pleasure: “Let him now fuss, fuss, I finished my job and I’m lying - excellent!” From behind the wall he heard that, besides the sergeant-major, Lavrushka, Denisov's perky, roguish lackey, was also speaking. Lavrushka was talking about some kind of carts, crackers and bulls, which he saw when he went for provisions.
Behind the booth, Denisov's retreating cry was heard again and the words: “Saddle! Second squad!
"Where are they going?" thought Rostov.
Five minutes later Denisov entered the booth, climbed onto the bed with dirty feet, angrily smoked his pipe, scattered all his belongings, put on his whip and saber, and began to leave the dugout. To the question of Rostov, where? he answered angrily and vaguely that there was a case.
- Judge me there, God and the great sovereign! - said Denisov, leaving; and Rostov heard the feet of several horses splashing through the mud behind the booth. Rostov did not even bother to find out where Denisov had gone. Having warmed himself in his corner, he fell asleep, and before evening he only left the booth. Denisov has not yet returned. Evening cleared up; near a neighboring dugout, two officers with a cadet were playing pile, laughingly planting radishes in the loose, dirty earth. Rostov joined them. In the middle of the game, the officers saw wagons approaching them: 15 hussars on thin horses followed them. The wagons escorted by the hussars drove up to the hitching posts, and a crowd of hussars surrounded them.
“Well, Denisov was grieve all the time,” said Rostov, “so the provisions have arrived.”
- And that! the officers said. - That's a happy soldier! - Denisov rode a little behind the hussars, accompanied by two infantry officers, with whom he was talking about something. Rostov went to meet him.
“I’m warning you, captain,” said one of the officers, thin, short and apparently angry.
“After all, he said that I wouldn’t give it back,” Denisov answered.
- You will answer, captain, this is a riot - to beat off transports from your own! We didn't eat for two days.
“But they didn’t eat mine for two weeks,” Denisov answered.
- This is robbery, answer, sir! – raising his voice, repeated the infantry officer.
- What are you doing to me? BUT? - shouted Denisov, suddenly heated up, - I will answer, not you, but you don’t buzz around here while you are safe. March! he shouted at the officers.
- It's good! - not shy and not driving away, the little officer shouted, - to rob, so I will ...
- To chog "that march with a quick step, while intact." And Denisov turned his horse to the officer.
“Good, good,” said the officer threateningly, and turning his horse, rode away at a trot, shaking in the saddle.
“A dog for godliness, a living dog for godliness,” Denisov said after him - the highest mockery of a cavalryman over a mounted infantryman, and, approaching Rostov, burst out laughing.
- Recaptured from the infantry, recaptured the transport by force! - he said. “Well, why don’t people die of hunger?”
The wagons that drove up to the hussars were assigned to an infantry regiment, but, having been informed through Lavrushka that this transport was coming alone, Denisov with the hussars recaptured it by force. The soldiers were handed out crackers at will, even shared with other squadrons.
The next day, the regimental commander called Denisov to him and told him, closing his eyes with open fingers: “I look at it like this, I don’t know anything and I won’t start business; but I advise you to go to the headquarters and there, in the food department, settle this matter, and, if possible, sign that you received so much food; otherwise, the demand is written to the infantry regiment: things will rise and may end badly.
Denisov went directly from the regimental commander to the headquarters, with a sincere desire to fulfill his advice. In the evening he returned to his dugout in a position in which Rostov had never seen his friend before. Denisov could not speak and was suffocating. When Rostov asked him what was the matter with him, he only uttered incomprehensible curses and threats in a hoarse and weak voice ...
Frightened by the position of Denisov, Rostov offered him to undress, drink water and sent for a doctor.
- To judge me for g "azboy - oh! Give me more water - let them judge, but I will, I will always beat the scoundrels, and I will tell the sovereign." Give me some ice, he said.
The regimental doctor who came said that it was necessary to bleed. A deep plate of black blood came out of Denisov's hairy hand, and then only he was able to tell everything that had happened to him.
“I’m coming,” Denisov said. “Well, where is your boss here?” Showed. Wouldn't you like to wait. “I have a service, I arrived 30 miles away, I have no time to wait, report back.” Well, this chief thief comes out: he also took it into his head to teach me: This is robbery! “Robbery, I say, is not done by the one who takes food to feed his soldiers, but by the one who takes it to put it in his pocket!” So you don't want to be silent. "Good". Sign, he says, with the commission agent, and your case will be handed over on command. I go to the commissioner. I enter - at the table ... Who is it ?! No, just think! ... Who is starving us, - Denisov shouted, hitting the table with his fist of his sick hand so hard that the table almost fell and the glasses jumped on it, - Telyanin !! “How are you starving us?!” Once, once in the face, deftly it had to be ... “Ah ... rasprotakoy and ... began to roll. On the other hand, I’ve had fun, I can say, ”Denisov shouted, joyfully and angrily baring his white teeth from under his black mustache. “I would have killed him if they hadn’t taken him away.”
“But why are you screaming, calm down,” said Rostov: “here again the blood has gone. Wait, you need to bandage it. Denisov was bandaged and put to bed. The next day he woke up cheerful and calm. But at noon, the adjutant of the regiment, with a serious and sad face, came to the common dugout of Denisov and Rostov and regretfully showed the uniform paper to Major Denisov from the regimental commander, in which inquiries were made about yesterday's incident. The adjutant said that things were about to take a very bad turn, that a military judicial commission had been appointed, and that with real severity regarding looting and self-will of the troops, in a happy case, the case could end in a dismissal.
The case was presented by the offended in such a way that, after repulsing the transport, Major Denisov, without any call, appeared in a drunken state to the chief provisions master, called him a thief, threatened to beat him, and when he was taken out, he rushed to the office, beat two officials and dislocated one arm.
Denisov, to Rostov’s new questions, laughingly said that it seemed that some other one had turned up here, but that all this was nonsense, nothing, that he did not even think to be afraid of any courts, and that if these scoundrels dare to bully him, he will answer them so that they will remember.
Denisov spoke disparagingly about the whole affair; but Rostov knew him too well not to notice that in his heart (hiding this from others) he was afraid of the court and was tormented by this affair, which, obviously, was supposed to have bad consequences. Every day, paper requests began to arrive, demands for the court, and on the first of May Denisov was ordered to hand over the squadron to the senior officer and report to the headquarters of the division for explanations on the case of the riot in the provisions commission. On the eve of this day, Platov made reconnaissance of the enemy with two Cossack regiments and two squadrons of hussars. Denisov, as always, rode ahead of the chain, flaunting his courage. One of the bullets fired by the French riflemen hit him in the flesh of the upper leg. Maybe at another time Denisov would not have left the regiment with such a light wound, but now he took advantage of this opportunity, refused to appear in the division and went to the hospital.

In June, the Battle of Friedland took place, in which the Pavlogradites did not participate, and after it a truce was announced. Rostov, who felt hard the absence of his friend, having had no news of him since his departure and worrying about the course of his case and wounds, took advantage of the truce and asked to go to the hospital to visit Denisov.
The hospital was located in a small Prussian town, twice ruined by Russian and French troops. Precisely because it was summer, when the field was so good, this place, with its broken roofs and fences and its filthy streets, ragged inhabitants and drunken and sick soldiers wandering around it, presented a particularly gloomy spectacle.
In a stone house, in the yard with the remains of a dismantled fence, frames and glass broken in part, there was a hospital. Several bandaged, pale and swollen soldiers walked and sat in the yard in the sun.
As soon as Rostov entered the door of the house, he was overwhelmed by the smell of a rotting body and a hospital. On the stairs he met a Russian military doctor with a cigar in his mouth. A Russian paramedic followed the doctor.
“I can’t burst,” said the doctor; - come to Makar Alekseevich in the evening, I'll be there. The paramedic asked him something else.
- E! do as you know! Isn't it all the same? The doctor saw Rostov going up the stairs.
“Why are you, your honor?” the doctor said. - Why are you? Or the bullet did not take you, so you want to get typhus? Here, father, is the house of the lepers.
- From what? Rostov asked.
- Typhoid, father. Whoever ascends - death. Only the two of us with Makeev (he pointed to the paramedic) are chatting here. At this point, five of our brother doctors died. As soon as the new one arrives, he’ll be ready in a week,” the doctor said with visible pleasure. - Prussian doctors were called, so our allies do not like it.
Rostov explained to him that he wished to see the hussar major Denisov lying here.
“I don’t know, I don’t know, father. After all, you think, I have three hospitals for one, 400 patients too! It’s also good, the Prussian ladies of the benefactor send us coffee and lint at two pounds a month, otherwise they would be lost. He laughed. - 400, father; and they keep sending me new ones. After all, there are 400? BUT? He turned to the paramedic.

) required applicants with a high educational level, which is achieved by graduates of specialized gymnasiums and commercial / real schools of the second (advanced) level of education. The network of institutions that in the future became the primary specialized (vocational) education and training technicians (technical schools) was just emerging in response to the challenges of the time.

To solve the problem of training specialists-technicians, three schools were opened in Tomsk: Commercial, Real and handicraft, which actually became the first Tomsk technical schools.

The basis for the emergence of agrarian and technical education was the opening in this educational institution Land surveying department which took place in October 1912.

At the beginning of the 20th century, the Russian state paid great attention to the development of agriculture and the support of the peasant initiative. And, above all, the allocation of land allotments to settlers in Siberia. What is especially noteworthy, the government of the Russian Empire set the task not only of training professional geodetic technicians. Graduates of the land surveying department of the Siberian Commercial School had to be able to take into account the soil conditions of the region, “... be knowledgeable in cultural and technical work and agriculture". That is, even then the foundation was laid for the training of qualified personnel for the village. (, year 2013)

Teaching at the First Siberian Polytechnic (Commercial) School was carried out by many well-known professors and lecturers of Tomsk State University and. This significantly improved the quality of student education and raised their professional level, which was appreciated by employers in the region. In fact, the second stage of education here began to blur the lines between technical and higher engineering education, which was given by teachers of Tomsk universities.

Siberian (Tomsk) Workers' and Peasants' Practical Polytechnic Institute

An interesting fact: less than a month before the overthrow of the first period of Soviet power in Tomsk, on May 6, 1918, an exhibition of paintings by the Tomsk artist M. M. Polyakov opened at the Tomsk Polytechnic (Commercial) Institute.

... Particular attention of the party, the Soviets, the collective farm system should be drawn to the problem of personnel. The collective-farm movement has assumed such dimensions that require a decisive, revolutionary restructuring of the entire system, program and methods of training organizers, agronomists, engineers, land surveyors, technicians, financial accountants, etc. for collective farm construction

Actually an independent story Tomsk Agricultural College begins with the division of the polytechnic in 1928 into two independent technical schools: the polytechnic and the agricultural technical school.

In the same years, by the decisions of the Soviet government, new small educational institutions of the profile of vocational education were already allocated from this agricultural technical school. In the conditions that began in the country depeasantization and collectivization and the influx of young people from the village into the city, new schools and technical schools are being created in Tomsk. Some of them start to duplicate each other. Former Land surveying department Commercial School (Practical Institute) with a material base on Karl Marx Street, 19, is actually Tomsk Agricultural College of the West Siberian Territory(TSHT). College since the 1930s has at its disposal an extensive material and technical base, students receive practical skills at various (in Tomsk and in the regions of the Tomsk district) selection and experimental stations of an agricultural profile.

The post-war period, the 1950s, required the restoration of the agricultural base, the restructuring of the village to solve the country's food security. The rapid development of agricultural education begins again.

In the project for the construction of a water tower for the auxiliary educational facilities of the TSKhT in the Tugan region (1955). A large experimental and educational farm is being created ( Agricultural technical school) with its experimental pond, which is located in the nearest suburbs, just south of the Irkutsk tract and Suvorov Street, which was then being formed.

In the 1950s in parallel with the TSHT in Tomsk, there are other technical schools of agricultural specialization, such as Tomsk Veterinary College and Tomsk Veterinary College, Tomsk secondary agricultural school , Tomsk regional agronomic school . To streamline agricultural education and strengthen, improve the efficiency of the learning process, by a joint resolution of the executive committee of the Tomsk Regional Council of People's Deputies of Workers and the Bureau of the Tomsk Regional Committee of the CPSU No. B-52/3 dated September 7, 1957 "", a single Tomsk Agricultural College. All other educational institutions of a similar agricultural profile were abolished or introduced with their own material and educational and methodological base in the TSHT of the new formation. The main building of the united technical school (with the preservation of the exhibition of agricultural mechanization and machine and tractor equipment) remains the building along K. Marx Street, 19. The building at pl. Solyanaya, 11 (aka Pushkin St., 24) and, temporarily, until the construction of a new educational building - a building along Malaya Podgornaya Street, 3. TSKhK becomes the largest agricultural technical school of the RSFSR of that time.

On the merger of two veterinary technical schools and an agricultural technical school into one agricultural technical school

In 1967, for great merits in the training of agricultural specialists for the economy of Western Siberia, by the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, the technical school was awarded Order of the Red Banner of Labor.

Graduates of the TSHT worked in almost all collective farms and state farms of the Tomsk region, neighboring regions, many of them (for example, Hero of Socialist Labor Rembert Elmarovich Paloson) took place as prominent agricultural leaders. These traditions are preserved to this day.

Founded over 110 years ago, Tomsk Agricultural College preserves and increases its glorious traditions and strives for new successes and achievements. In the context of the Russian reform of 2013 to transform primary and secondary vocational education institutions, as well as to improve the training of technicians, agronomists and bachelors, Agricultural College continues to search for new methods of work, fits into the new structure of staffing the needs of the regional agro-industrial economy.

Tomsk Agricultural College (SO.) is the first and oldest institution of secondary specialized agro-technical education in Siberia.

  • Full official name as of June 2013: Tomsk Regional State Budgetary Educational Institution of Secondary Vocational Education " Tomsk Agricultural College»
  • Short name: SO or OGBOU SPO "Tomsk Agrarian College"

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    In connection with the construction and launch of the Tomsk (Siberian) railway and the beginning of the agrarian Stolypin reforms, beyond the Urals, there was a problem of shortage, lack of trained workers and artisans to ensure these grand undertakings. Also, for applicants of the first higher educational institutions beyond the Urals (Siberian Tomsk State Imperial University and) applicants were required with a high educational level, which is achieved by graduates of specialized gymnasiums and commercial / real schools of the second (advanced) level of education. The network of institutions that in the future became the primary specialized (vocational) education and training technicians (technical schools) was just emerging in response to the challenges of the time.

    To solve the problem of training specialists-technicians, three schools were opened in Tomsk: Commercial, Real and handicraft, which actually became the first Tomsk technical schools.

    COMMERCIAL SCHOOL

    POLYTECHNICAL SCHOOL - INSTITUTE

    The basis for the emergence of agrarian and technical education was the opening in this educational institution Land surveying department which took place in October 1912.

    At the beginning of the 20th century, the Russian state paid great attention to the development of agriculture and the support of the peasant initiative. And, above all, the allocation of land allotments to settlers in Siberia. What is especially noteworthy, the government of the Russian Empire set the task not only of training professional geodetic technicians. Graduates of the land surveying department of the Siberian Commercial School had to be able to take into account the soil conditions of the region, “... be knowledgeable in cultural and technical work and agriculture". That is, even then the foundation was laid for the training of qualified personnel for the village. (Website Tomsk Agrarian College, 2013)

    Teaching at the First Siberian Polytechnic (Commercial) School was carried out by many famous professors and lecturers of Tomsk State University and. This significantly improved the quality of student education and raised their professional level, which was appreciated by employers in the region. In fact, the second stage of education here began to blur the lines between technical and higher engineering education, which was given by teachers of Tomsk universities.

    However, in the fall, the educational process was disrupted by the events of the October (1917) Revolution and the Civil War that began after that. The beautiful building was used first as a hospital for units of the Czechoslovak Corps, then, under the authority of the government of Kolchak, the All-Russian Academy of the General Staff of the Russian (White) Army operated here. With the arrival of units of the 5th Red Army in Tomsk at the end of December 1919, the new government began to form the Polytechnic Institute in a new way. Here in the spring, in a hurry, they brought the proletarian youth to worker-peasant higher polytechnic courses. Ultimately, an institution is defined as Siberian (Tomsk) Workers' and Peasants' Practical Polytechnic Institute. In the summer of 1922, the university was named after Comrade K. A. Timiryazev.

    An interesting fact: less than a month before the overthrow of the first period of Soviet power in Tomsk, on May 6, 1918, an exhibition of paintings by the Tomsk artist M. M. Polyakov opened at the Tomsk Polytechnic (Commercial) Institute.

    History of the Tomsk Agricultural College

    Actually an independent story Tomsk Agricultural College begins with the division of the polytechnic in 1928 into two independent technical schools: the polytechnic and the agricultural technical school.

    In the same years, by the decisions of the Soviet government, new small educational institutions of the profile of vocational education were already allocated from this agricultural technical school. In the conditions that began in the country depeasantization and collectivization and the influx of young people from the village into the city, new schools and technical schools are being created in Tomsk. Some of them start to duplicate each other. Former Land surveying department Commercial School (Practical Institute) with a material base on Karl Marx Street, 19, is actually Tomsk Agricultural College of the West Siberian Territory(TSHT). College since the 1930s has at its disposal an extensive material and technical base, students receive practical skills at various (in Tomsk and in the regions of the Tomsk district) selection and experimental stations of an agricultural profile.

    In 1967, for great merits in the training of agricultural specialists for the economy of Western Siberia, by the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, the technical school was awarded Order of the Labor Red Banner.

    Graduates of the TSHT worked in almost all collective farms and state farms of the Tomsk region, neighboring regions, many of them (for example, Hero of Socialist Labor Rembert Elmarovich Paloson) took place as prominent agricultural leaders. These traditions are preserved to this day.

    SOVHOZ-TEHNIKUM

    In the 1990s, with the establishment of the Tomsk Agricultural Institute (TSHI), many curricula and courses of the TSHT and the new TSHI were integrated with each other. Part of the TSHT base (in particular, the buildings at 19 K. Marx St. and 24 Pushkin St.) was provided for the deployment of the TSHT, the curricula of the two institutions were adjusted so that TSXT graduates could easily enter the TSHT to continue their advanced studies . In 1994, on the basis of TSHT, a Veterinary center.

    In 1997, the Asinovsky and Kolpashevsky educational and advisory centers of the TSHT and a new educational and production facility were opened. A few years later, these points in Asino and Kolpashevo were reorganized into branches of the TSHT. In 2008, TSHI became the winner in the priority national project "Education" with the program "System of personnel training for high-tech enterprises of the Siberian region", received funding for the purchase of modern equipment.

    It should be noted that since 2012, such Russian educational institutions (technical schools) from the level of federal ministries and departments have been transferred to the jurisdiction of the subjects of the Federation. TSHT was transferred to the administration of the Tomsk region and regional budget financing, this Administration acts founder educational institution. Simultaneously with the streamlining of interbudgetary relations of the federal Center and regions in the Russian Federation, the technical school went on its own internal structural reorganization.