Sheremetyevsky

[5] The settlement of Sheremetyevsky arose around 1901 as a dachas area near the Sheremetyevskaya railway station on forest lands belonging to Count Sergey Sheremetev.

On January 4, 1939, the Krasnopolyansky District of the Moscow Oblast was formed with the administrative center in the workers' settlement of Krasnaya Polyana.

On March 26, 1939, by decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR, the official status was approved, the dacha settlement of Sheremetyevsky.

After the victory in the Great Patriotic War, in accordance with the Decree of the Council of People's Commissars of the Soviet Union,[6] "in order to improve housing conditions" for honored generals and officers of the Red Army, construction of dacha "officer settlements" began in a number of areas of the Moscow Oblast[7][8] In the settlement of Sheremetyevsky, plots for the construction of dachas for the officer settlement were allocated on the territory adjacent to the railway line, from the Sheremetyevskaya railway platform in the direction of the village of Sumarokovo.

[9] Along the road to the station (now Gorky Street), veterans of the Great Patriotic War, residents of the new settlement planted a birch alley.

On the 65th anniversary of the end of the war, a memorial marble stele with the names of 82 former residents of the village who contributed to the Great Victory was erected at the intersection of Gorky and Magistralnaya Streets.

The officers' settlement in Sheremetyevsky