Sevpechlag was set up in mid-1940 and existed for ten years until it was amalgamated with Sevzheldorlag. It was first based in Abez village (Komi Republic) and then the Pechora rail station. (Thirteen sites associated with the Sevpechlag network of camps are included on the Map of Memory.)
The main tasks of the prisoners were to build the section of the Kotlas-Vorkuta railway between Ust-Kozhva and Vorkuta and to complete and expand the capacity of the Pechora railroad. Prisoners from Sevpechlag were also used to finish construction of a seaport and a ship-repair yard at the mouth of the Ob river on the Arctic Sea.
The initial number of prisoners increased dramatically over two years, rising from 34,959 at the beginning of 1941 to 102,000 on 1 January 1942. Within a year this total dropped to 58,000. Probably, a great many prisoners were transferred to other camps but, evidently, high death rates in 1942 also played their part. A little under half of the prisoners had been convicted under Article 58 of “counter-revolutionary” offences. There were almost two thousand women in the camp.
Numbers of prisoners never again reached the same level. When the camp closed it had 42,028 prisoners.
( See also The Gulag in Northwest Russia, 1931-1960)
Rail construction; max. prisoners 102,354 (1942); HQ Abez, Pechora, Komi; merged July 1950 with 8. Sevzheldorlag to form 17. Pechorlag. [13 sites.]
Staraya Abez. Prisoners burial ground, 1932-1955
Yarpiyag settlement. Sevpechlag burials, 1939-1940s
Pechora [C]* Infirmary No 5 cemetery, 1940-1949
Mishayag ss [C]* Cemetery of Sevpechlag infirmary No 2, 1940-1956
Kochmes settlement. Cemetery at camp infirmary, 1940-1957
Sevpechlag punitive outpost burials**, 1941-1944
Kozhym settlement. Sevpechlag burial ground, 1942-1944
Oshpyor** camp outpost burials, 1940s
Sevzheldorlag and Synya camp farm burials, 1940s
Kozhym-Rudnik (c)* Sevpechlag & deportees graves, 1940s-1950s
Abez. Sevpechlag, central infirmary burials, 1940s-1950s
1973 km Northern Railroad. Camp burials, 1940s-1950s
1990 km N. Railroad settlement. “Lazaret” burials, 1940s-1950s