Settlers from elsewhere in Ukraine and Russia began to arrive in the new town and its adjacent settlements, Moldavanka and Peresyp.
The Kartamyshev family established a large farm, and their farmhouse was near the beginning of the area between today's Srednyaya and Komityetskaya Streets.
[citation needed] On 7 May 1823, Graf Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov was appointed governor-general of New Russia (as the southern provinces of the empire were then called) and namestnik of Bessarabia.
Hawa also established a small glassworks for the production of bottles and similar vessels on the street.
[1] The apartment house of Ivan Solyanikov at Karamyshevska 17 and Kosvennaya 86, designed by architect C. Ottone, was demolished during this period.
[1] The defense of Odesa, from 5 August to 16 October 1941, began when German and Romanian troops surrounded the city.
Middle School 60 was blown up by Soviet troops in October 1941, before they left Odesa by sea to continue the siege of Sevastopol (1941–42).
The only significant damage to buildings on Kartamyshevska Street during the Second World War was the destruction of the school.
Replacing the Tarnopol brothers' third wallpaper factory and others houses and shops, it produced polygraph machines.
The two-storey, Soviet neoclassic house with columns and gates at Kartamyshevska 34 was built on the site of a sausage factory in 1952.
In 1947, the city government transferred 11 acres of land to the Black Sea Shipping Company for an antenna installation.
The large antenna facilitated communications with steamers in the Mediterranean and Red Seas and the north-eastern Indian and Atlantic Oceans.
On the, Mikhail Gorbachev announced the end of jamming during an 8 December 1988 session of the UN General Assembly.
An order from the Minister of Communications "On the cessation of jamming of foreign radio stations broadcasting to the Soviet Union" was signed on 19 December 1988.
[15] Construction of the First Church of Evangelical Christians and Baptists in Odesa began in 1992, very close to the tower for radio jamming, and was completed in 1997.