The prominent teacher F. M. Kerensky and his son A. F. Kerensky

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The article reveals the facts of the biography of the prominent national pedagogical leader Fyodor Mikhailovich Kerensky and his son - Alexander F. Kerensky, the Prime Minister of the Russian Provisional Government in 1917. F. M. Kerensky (1837-1912) distinguished himself as a remarkable gymnasium teacher and prominent organizer of public education. In 1877-1879 he was the director of the Vyatka gymnasium, then he worked in the gymnasium of the town of Simbirsk, just in the years, when V. I. Ulyanov (Lenin) studied there. Volodya Ulyanov's father, Ilia Nikolaevich worked there at that time as a Director of the province school department. Subsequently, F.M. Kerensky was on pedagogical work in Tashkent and has done a lot for the development of education in this remote province of the Russian Empire. His son Alexander (1881-1970) studied at the Tashkent gymnasium and then at St. Petersburg University. He became a famous lawyer, and in 1917, he headed the so-called provisional government. He was the youngest leader of Russia in the XX-th century. As a result of the political events of the tumultuous year of 1917 A. F. Kerensky was forced to leave Russia and all subsequent years he spent far from home. For a long time A.F. Kerensky worked in several universities in the United States of America as a professor, specializing in the history of Russia. He wrote a large number of works on Russian history. His son Oleg (1905-1984) became famous bridge-builder. Another son, Gleb (1907-1990) was an engineer. He also worked as a translator into English his father's books. A. F. Kerensky is buried in London.

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Vyatka, the 1-st men high school, f. m. kerensky, a. f. kerensky, provisional government

Короткий адрес: https://sciup.org/140205369

IDR: 140205369

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