Where did the name “Utkina Dacha” come from?
Although the fate of the estate, located at the confluence of the Okkervil River into the Okhta River, was for many years connected with the Poltoratsky family, its name retains the surname of the last owners - Utkins. (This is all the more strange because the Poltoratskys and Utkins made different contributions to the development of the estate. It reached its heyday under Poltoratskys). It is true that for some reason it was called not Utkin's dacha, but Utkina dacha. This name conjures up an idyllic picture: overgrown green banks, water surface and, of course, a lot of ducks. Probably, once the neighborhood of Utkina dacha looked like that, but today, alas, everything is different.
What was the farm of Utkina dacha like?
In the heyday of the estate, which today we call Utkina Dacha, its economy included stables, barns, haylofts, cellars, and glaciers. The estate had greenhouses, vine and flower greenhouses, a large orchard with apple and cherry trees surrounded by a stone fence, and a landscape park. Flowers and apples were for sale.
By the way, there were a lot of apple trees in these places. Hence the names of the two villages that were located in the neighborhood of the estate: Bolshaya Yablonovka and Malaya Yablonovka. (In the 1930s a vegetable and berry state farm was established to the east of them.) These villages no longer exist, but their traces have been preserved in the local toponymy. Yablonovskiy and Bolshoy Yablonovskiy bridges crossed the Okkervil River, Malaya Yablonovka and Bolshaya Yablonovka streets stretched along it (on different banks), and Yablonovskiy garden was laid out.
History of the Location
1750- In the second half of the XVIII century, Mark Fedorovich and Agafokleia Alexandrovna Poltoratsky became the owners of the Okkervil manor.
1790s (presumably) The manor house was built to the design of Nikolai Alexandrovich Lvov or Giacomo Quarenghi.
1828 In December the manor of Okkerville was acquired by Princess Zinovia Petrovna Shakhovskaya (by her first husband).
Utkin Dacha
The historic estate known among St. Petersburg residents as Utkin Dacha has miraculously survived and is located at the confluence of the Okkerhvil River and the Ohta River, within walking distance from the metro stations “Novocherkasskaya” and “Ladozhskaya.” Unfortunately, today it is not the most picturesque corner of the city, but it was once quite different.
There is a legend that before Peter the Great's time, this land belonged to the Swedish Colonel Okkerhvil. However, scholars still debate the connection between his surname and the name of the left tributary of the Ohta River. Some researchers believe that the name “Okkerhvil” has Finnish roots and question the existence of the colonel. One thing is certain: the estate changed hands multiple times. In the late 17th century, it belonged to the pastor of the church in the Swedish town of Nien. By 1712, the owner was Stepan Petrovich Neledinsky-Meletsky, a chamberlain of Peter I, and in the 1730s, it was held by General-Anchievement, Chief of the Secret Chancellery, Andrey Ivanovich Ushakov.
In the second half of the 18th century, the estate was owned by the Poltoratsky family. The founder of this noble family, Mark Fyodorovich Poltoratsky, came from Ukrainian Cossacks. With a remarkable voice, he sang in the church choir from a young age. He studied in Chernihiv, then in Kyiv, where he was heard by Alexei Grigorievich Razumovsky, who had rapidly risen from a choir singer to a favorite of Empress Elizabeth Petrovna. Thanks to Razumovsky's patronage, Poltoratsky moved to the capital and made a brilliant career. Mark Fyodorovich became the first Russian artist invited to perform with an Italian opera troupe in St. Petersburg, performing under the name Marco Porturatsky. From 1763 to 1795, he was the director of the Imperial Court Singing Chapel.
According to one version, the estate was granted to Mark Fyodorovich in the mid-18th century for his participation in opera productions. According to another version, the Poltoratsky family acquired it at the end of the century, possibly with the mansion already built.
Under the Poltoratskys, though not immediately, the estate flourished. The main role in this was played by Mark Fyodorovich’s wife, Agafokliya Aleksandrovna (née Shishkova). This was Poltoratsky's second marriage, having been widowed early. Agafokliya was 8 years younger than Mark (at the time of marriage, she was not yet 15), but she was beautiful, intelligent, efficient, and had an iron will. (Publications dedicated to Poltoratskaya note that she was extraordinarily strict and even cruel. In her rage, Agafokliya Aleksandrovna was fearsome, and not only serfs but also family members trembled before her.)
While Mark Fyodorovich honed his vocal skills and nurtured young talents, Agafokliya Aleksandrovna increased the family’s wealth. In addition to the Okkerhvil estate and the Kosaya Gora estate (upstream in the area of what is now Kudrovo), the Poltoratskys owned houses in Moscow, Tver, Torzhok, St. Petersburg, estates in Tver Province, about 4,000 serfs, factories, and distilleries. Agafokliya Aleksandrovna managed all household affairs herself, without a manager, through overseers. Meanwhile, the Poltoratskys had 22 children!
The Poltoratsky family produced many notable statesmen and military figures. A notable example is Konstantin Markovich Poltoratsky, whose portrait can be seen in the Military Gallery of 1812 at the Winter Palace. Konstantin Poltoratsky distinguished himself not only on the battlefields (he participated in several wars, including the Patriotic War) but also as the governor of Yaroslavl. He retired with the rank of lieutenant general.
Incidentally, one member of this family is familiar from school. Anna Petrovna Kern, who is believed to be the subject of Pushkin’s poem “K***” (“I remember a wonderful moment…”), was the granddaughter of Mark and Agafokliya Poltoratsky.
The mansion of the Okkerhvil estate – an exquisite example of strict classicism – was likely built in the 1790s. The exact author of the design is not known. Some researchers suggest that it was Nikolai Alexandrovich Lvov, a staunch Palladian and one of the most prominent and versatile figures of his time. This theory is supported by the fact that Lvov was close to the Poltoratsky family. He was friends with Alexei Nikolaevich Olenin, who in 1791 married Elizaveta Markovna Poltoratskaya, the daughter of Mark Fyodorovich. (By the way, Alexei Nikolaevich later became the director of the Imperial Public Library and president of the Imperial Academy of Arts. The Olenins owned the Priyutino estate, where Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin, who was in love with their younger daughter Anna Alexeyevna, often visited.) Others lean towards Giacomo Quarenghi, the distinguished Italian architect, as the designer.
The elegant structure with its gently sloping dome, rounded colonnade, and wings extending at right angles is harmoniously integrated into the natural landscape formed by the confluence of the two rivers. The corner rotunda contains a round hall with some delicate ceiling stucco work remaining (though in a terrible state). The ensemble of Utkin Dacha is completed by the service wing, built in the 1820s-1830s. Two stories high and arc-shaped in plan, it ends with two pavilions. The service wing belongs to the high or even late classicism period. Unfortunately, there is no information about the architect of this wing.
Agafokliya Aleksandrovna Poltoratskaya lived permanently at the Gruziny estate (in Tver Province, about 15 kilometers from the town of Torzhok), so the Okkerhvil estate was managed by her daughter, Agafokliya Markovna Sukhareva (by marriage), who owned the neighboring property. The first attempt to sell the estate was made in 1814, while Agafokliya the Elder was still alive (she died in 1822, outliving her husband by 27 years).
In December 1828, the estate was sold to Princess Zinovia Petrovna Shakhovskaya (née Zelenkova). Her first husband was Prince A. Y. Shakhovsky. Her second was Vasily Ivanovich Utkin (future justice of the peace and actual state councilor), and the Okkerhvil estate eventually became known as Utkin Dacha.
The subsequent history of the estate is dismal. The owner died childless in the late 1860s, bequeathing her estate to the Imperial Society for the Care of the Poor. The estate was to be transferred to this charitable organization only after Vasily Utkin's death. He outlived his wife by only a few years. Zinovia Petrovna's final wishes were eventually fulfilled, but the transfer of the estate to the Imperial Society for the Care of the Poor was not smooth (it involved a legal process) and took a long time. Without an owner, the estate fell into disrepair, and a series of charitable institutions operating on its grounds completed the decline. These included the Ohta Mariinsky almshouse for the incurably ill and crippled, a children’s shelter, the Malo-Ohtinskaya mental hospital, and the Malo-Ohtinskaya branch of urban almshouses for the mentally ill.
Each year, Utkin Dacha lost its former splendor. In the 1920s, the mansion belonged to the People's Commissariat of Health of the RSFSR. It housed the Malo-Ohtinskaya branch of the 2nd Psychiatric Hospital. In 1936, part of the premises was converted into apartments, while another part was occupied by the 176th children's home (a preschool institution) of the Volodarsky district housing union. In the post-Soviet era, communal apartments crowded the mansion, and the service wing housed production sections of the Cinema Management. Finally abandoned in the early 2010s, the derelict dacha suffered several fires.
In 2012, the estate, classified as a cultural heritage site of federal significance, was transferred to the State Museum of City Sculpture. Currently, Utkin Dacha is undergoing restoration.