As a child, my grandmother Natalya Borisovna was nicknamed “Poolya”
(Bullet) for her speed and intelligence. This nickname is often found in
correspondence with brother Kirill and his wife Lita in the 50s and 60s.
The correspondence of Natalya Borisovna with her brother Kirill and his wife
Lita, who emigrated to San Francisco, has been preserved. This
correspondence lasted for many years and was conducted with great care. The
children of Kirill and Lita,
Boris
and
Dmitry
, served in the American army,
Natalya Borisovna’s son-in-law,
Nikolai Georgievich Vysotsky
,
the husband
of his daughter
Susanna
, was also a military man. Letters from America were
sent on behalf of her friend Lita from Palo Alto, letters from Moscow - on
behalf of
Olga Arkhipovna Khramtsova
(Boratynskaya).
Natalya Borisovna’s correspondence with her relatives from St. Petersburg,
the
Lazhenitsyns
, has also been preserved.
Through the efforts of Natalya Borisovna, it was possible to preserve the
material history of the family - antiques, portraits and documents. In order
not to forget the French language, she read the only available newspaper of
the French communists, L’Humanité.
In 1961, when New Arbat was being built, the entire Krechetnikovsky Lane
was demolished, Natalya Borisovna and Leonid Mikhailovich received a small
apartment on 15 (?) Parkovaya Street in Izmailovo.
At the end of her life she suffered from asthma. She was buried in the family
plot of the Vvedensky cemetery.
Artist Gleb Ilyin, pastel. Coursework or diploma work
by Gleb Ilyin
Natalya Borisovna poses for this portrait
She spent her childhood in
Petrovo
.
With brother Kirill
With brother Kirill
During the revolution, she fled from Kazan along with her father
Boris
Petrovich
and brother
Kirill
’s wife
Lita
, following units of the White Army.
They reached Krasnoyarsk, but returned to Kazan in 1920, since it was no
longer possible to follow the army.
During this trip, she met her future husband,
Leonid Mikhailovich Andreev
.
He served as a supply manager for a medical train. They were introduced by
Nikolai Zakharyevich Shulgin, who was on this train, the husband of Olga
Nikolaevna Boratynskaya, Lita Boratynskaya’s aunt.
Upon returning to Kazan, Natalya Borisovna and Leonid Mikhailovich got
married. Leonid Mikhailovich believed that it was dangerous to stay in Kazan,
where Natalya Borisovna had numerous relatives and friends, and took the
family first “to the mill” somewhere on the Volga, and then to Moscow.
In Moscow they lived in Krechetnikovsky Lane (in its place now Lotte Plaza
hotel) in a room 11 meters in a communal apartment. Son
Nikolay
(1922) and
daughter
Susanna
(
1924) were born there.
After the death of father
Boris Petrovich
in Kazan (1931), her mother
Natalya Nikanorovna
moved to Moscow to live with her daughter’s family.
Natalya Borisovna took in Evgenia Fedorovna Kirillova, our beloved Zhenya,
from the Kazan orphanage, who became a member of our family and raised
us, Natalya Borisovna’s grandchildren.
Natalya Borisovna worked as a typist; she could not find any other job with
her background.
Three generations — Natalya Nikanorovna, Natalya Borisovna and Susanna Leonidovna. Summer of 1951, dacha
in Zagorianka
.
Artist Gleb Ilyin, watercolor on a background
of colored fabric
Natalya Borisovna Andreeva, nee Ilyina (1895-1968)
BORIS
PETROVICH
1868 - 1931
NATALYA
NIKANOROVNA
SHCHERBAKOV
1868- 1953
NATALYA
BORISOVNA
1895 - 1968
NIKOLAY
LEONIDOVICH
ANDREEV
1922 - 1950
LEONID
MIKHAILOVICH
ANDREEV
1900 - 1968
SUSANNA
LEONIDOVNA
VYSSOTSKY
1924 - 2019
enquiries@ilyinsfamily.com
RUS
ILYIN FAMILY HISTORY
PORTRAITS
GEN. TREE
TIMELINE
ESTATES
MEMOIRS
ALL PORTRAITS
Ilyins
+