Ed_Haynes Posted September 24, 2007 Posted September 24, 2007 Quoted from http://www.collectrussia.com/DISPITEM.HTM?ITEM=17623 --For Mastering the Equipment (ZOT), 1934-35. . . . Cogwheel shaped badge with white border and red center, and superimposed portrait of Stalin. The motto along the upper part is "Equipment is the key to everything during the reconstruction period". This slogan was coined by Stalin in 1931, at the time when Soviet Union was buying massive amounts of machinery in the US and Europe for its fledgling industrialization program. Later as equipment became plentiful, this slogan was replaced with the "Personnel is the key to everything" . . . .#117973
Ed_Haynes Posted September 24, 2007 Author Posted September 24, 2007 (edited) And the (non-matching?) document. Said to be from the Kiev Communications Administration.Details, please. Edited September 24, 2007 by Ed_Haynes
Guest Rick Research Posted September 25, 2007 Posted September 25, 2007 Document awards the "ZOT" badge to Comr. I. A. Nasenik as a shockworker (Udarnik) in mastering technology, having passed the social-technological examination as "excellent" (Otlichnik) for standards in realizing production work skills.Awarded badge # 132,081 on 3 October 1934 with the examining board's file numbers, and signed by its President and Secretary.But I can't read the stamp-- too small and light.
Ed_Haynes Posted September 25, 2007 Author Posted September 25, 2007 Thanks, Rick.Stamp at the top -- hard to make it legible but I'll try.
Ed_Haynes Posted September 25, 2007 Author Posted September 25, 2007 (edited) And the circular stanp at the bottom, also fiddled, also light. Edited September 25, 2007 by Ed_Haynes
Bryan Posted September 25, 2007 Posted September 25, 2007 It's from Kiev. Anyway, that's all I can understand.
Guest Rick Research Posted September 26, 2007 Posted September 26, 2007 Upper flat stamp is in Russian, and by squinting I get Upravlenniye Svyazi Kieva = Management of Signals/Communications of Kiev.Round stamp is typically fading away. Center of it is in Ukrainian, for Kiev Province Soviet, but outer rim is in Russian (just to confuse things) and all I get is on left-- "...All-Union...." (Vsesoyuziye) and then at top down something in quotes ("For...") that is probably the name of a factory or organization.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now