Wheat, millet and hay grew well in the sandy soil, and there is a stone mill.
In addition to farm work, women weave wool fabric for clothing and crafts; what they do not use themselves, they sell."
According to maps of the period, its position corresponds to the lowland before the rise of the hill (which people still called "Baba.")
This bridge, which connects Mykhailo-Laryne and Peresadovka with its neighbors, helped the village grow to 99 inhabitants (48 men and 51 women).
An 1849 map shows present-day Lenin Street; an entrance-block of houses and a stone wall came down to the river.
According to the 1896 census, in the villages of Mikhailovka and Larievka (also known at the time as Greeve and Blajkova) there were 47 homes and 246 residents (122 men and 124 women).
In the nearby German-speaking hamlet of Douengauer, 106 residents (61 men and 45 women) lived in 18 households; it later became part of Mykhailo-Laryne.
According to the village register, the residents of Mikhailo-Larievka had the following surnames: Fedorenko, Kovbosha, Krasivoron, Kravshenko, Krikun, Kulikov, Lukashevitsh, Melnychenko, Natchinaylo, Nesterov, Nosenko, Novikov, Osipov, Ostapenko, Shkolyar, Taran, Tchernovol and Vassylenko.
In 1863, a church dedicated to the Archangel Michael was built in the nearby village of Peresadovka; its parish register (recording baptisms, marriages and burials) from 1876 to 1917 is preserved in the state archives of the Mykolaiv region.
After the Civil War the estate was converted into an orphanage, where 16 student Komsomolets organized the Joint Guardians of Illich (one of the first two in the Mykolaiv region) in 1924.
The second head is the Common Council was Shalaenko Gregoire, who was killed by the Germans during World War II; a village street is named for him.
Beginning in 1944, the withdrawal of German forces led to reprisals (the murder of 60 innocent civilians), and many young people were deported to Germany.
In 1951 a wave of immigrants arrived in Mikhailo-Laryne from western Ukraine, swelling the number of villagers.
The dissolution of the Soviet Union at the end of the 20th century led to a decrease in the population of Mykhailo-Laryne.