Armored train No. 5 of the Coastal Defense of the Main Base of the Black Sea Fleet "Zheleznyakov", which received the name "Green Ghost" from the Germans......“The armored train changed its appearance all the time. Under the direction of junior lieutenant Kamornik, the sailors tirelessly painted armored platforms and locomotives with camouflage stripes and patterns so that the train blended indistinguishably with the terrain. The armored train skillfully maneuvered between recesses and tunnels. In order to confuse the enemy, we constantly change parking places. Our mobile rear is also on continuous patrols, ”recalled the foreman of the group of machine gunners of the armored train midshipman N.I. Alexandrov.
"Zheleznyakov" operated not only in the area of ​​​​the Mekenziev mountains, but also went to the Balaklava railway line, where German troops rushed to Sapun Mountain.
The command of the Sevastopol defensive region appreciated the Zhelyaznyakov very much. When, during the withdrawal of the train from the combat position, the path was broken, and the armored train was under attack by German artillery, which was guided by a spotter aircraft, a link of Soviet fighters was sent to the rescue, and it was very problematic to lift them from the Khersones airfield with the complete dominance of German aviation in the sky .

“How the Germans hated this armored train, and how many kind, full of gratitude words were spoken to it by our soldiers and commanders,” Colonel I.F. Khomich, a participant in the defense of Sevastopol, later wrote. - Sailors worked on the armored train. The courage of the Black Sea people has long been proverbial. The armored train actually ran into the enemy and fired with such swift surprise, as if it were running not on rails, but right on the uneven ground of the peninsula.
German aviation was constantly hunting for the last Crimean armored train, which caused them so many problems.
On the night of December 28-29, 1941, the crew of the armored train set aside for rest put the train not in the tunnel, but under a sheer rock at the Inkerman station, fitting passenger cars between the rock and the armored train to rest. The Germans took advantage of this by inflicting an air strike that cost the lives of many Zheleznyakovites.
But in battle, 18 machine guns of an armored train were a serious enemy for aviation as well. So, only on the first day of 1942, Zheleznyakov’s machine-gun crews shot down two German fighters who decided to fire on the stopped train.
During the battles for the Mekenzievy mountains, German heavy artillery managed to break the railway track in front of a moving armored train. Ballast platforms flew downhill, an armored platform derailed. Fragments of the next projectile disabled the main locomotive, and the power of the second armored locomotive was not enough to lift the armored platform onto the rails. The armored train was saved by the driver's assistant Yevgeny Matyush. To repair the locomotive, he climbed into a furnace filled with raw coal. The water that was poured over the daredevil immediately evaporated. Having finished work, Matyush barely managed to get out and lost consciousness from burns. Thanks to his feat, it was possible to commission a steam locomotive, raise an armored platform on the rails and withdraw the train from the impact of heavy enemy batteries.
Soon coal reserves ran out in Sevastopol. Several times, the Zheleznyakovites managed to take coal literally from under the nose of the enemy - from the Mekenzievy Gory station, which passed from hand to hand. When this coal also ran out, the machinist Galinin suggested making special briquettes from coal dust and tar. This idea turned out to be quite viable, and coal dust was collected on the territory of the railway station and throughout Sevastopol.
In 1941-1942, the armored train made more than 140 combat exits. Only from January 7 to March 1, 1942, Zheleznyakov, according to the command of the Sevastopol defensive regions, destroyed nine bunkers, thirteen machine-gun nests, six dugouts, one heavy battery, three aircraft, three vehicles, ten wagons with cargo, up to one and a half thousand soldiers and enemy officers.
On June 15, 1942, Zheleznyakov entered the battle with a column of German tanks, knocking out at least 3 armored vehicles.

IN THE STONE GRAVE

On June 21, the defenders of the city retreating to the Sevastopol Bay blew up all the remaining artillery on the Northern side. Only the armored train, which was now based in the Troitsky tunnel, remained a powerful artillery unit. "Zheleznyakov" fired at the German units on the North side until the paint began to burn on the gun barrels.
German aircraft brought down the entrance to the tunnel several times. On June 26, 1942, more than 50 enemy bombers delivered a powerful blow to the Troitsky tunnel. A multi-ton block hit the 2nd armored platform. Part of the crew managed to be pulled out through the landing hatches in the floor of the car, then the rails burst, and the armored platform, nailed with blocks, was pressed to the bottom of the tunnel.
The second exit from the tunnel remained free, the locomotive brought out the surviving armored platform, which again opened fire on the enemy. Buried under the rock, the Green Ghost delivered its final blow.
The next day, German aircraft brought down the last exit from the tunnel. The armored train was killed, but its crew was still fighting, having installed several mortars in the area of ​​the state district power station.
On June 30, the remains of the crew were blocked in a half-filled tunnel. The Germans, having sent a truce, offered to leave the tunnel, hiding here from the bombing of civilians. The nurses of the armored train were sent with them. The Zheleznyakovites stayed in the tunnel until 3 July. Only a few survivors were captured.

THE SECOND PHENOMENON OF THE "GREEN GHOST"

The Germans who occupied Sevastopol in August 1942 managed to clear the Trinity Tunnel for the movement of their trains. Having restored part of the Zheleznyakov armored vehicles, the Germans created the Eugen armored personnel carrier from them, arming it with 105-mm howitzers with converted gun carriages. In a place with an armored train "Mikhel" of German production, armed with 88-mm anti-aircraft guns, "Eugen" participated in the hostilities in the Perekop area, as well as in the Ishun positions.
When Soviet troops broke through the German defenses of Sevastopol on Sapun Mountain, the Eugen armored car was blown up by its crew. Thus ended the fate of the most famous Crimean armored train.
In the 70s, an OV-type steam locomotive was installed near the Sevastopol railway station - the same type as the Zheleznyakov steam locomotive, on which the inscription "Death to fascism" was reproduced, which adorned the sides of the armored train. Unfortunately, the camouflage coloring that gave Zheleznyakov the name of the Green Ghost was not applied to the locomotive, painting it with black varnish.
In the early 90s, a large-caliber gun was placed next to the locomotive on a post-war railway platform, which tourists ignorant of history now mistake for one of the armored platforms of the legendary Zheleznyakov armored train.