He was born into a working-class family. His father, Sergei Sergeevich Popkov, was a carpenter. His mother, Maria Petrovna Guseva, was a housewife. The Popkov family consisted of nine people.[1]
In 1910, he entered the parish school in his native village, but in May 1912 he was sent to work as a farm laborer (as a shepherd for public livestock). He worked as a farm laborer for about four years in different villages of the Vladimir province.[1]
In November 1915, at the request of his father, he moved permanently to the city of Vladimir, where he began working in a private bakery. In 1917, the "Union of Carpenters" was organized in Vladimir, and he began working there as an apprentice in carpentry. From May 1918, he transferred to serve in the provincial communications department, and from the end of 1920 to 1925, he worked as a carpenter at the Krasny Stroitel plant.[1]
From 1925 he served as Secretary of the Vladimir volost committee of the Komsomol.
From 1926 to 1928 he served ashead of the carpentry workshop of the Vladimir city department of public utilities. In 1937 as head of the research sector and secretary of the party committee of the Leningrad Institute of Public Utilities Engineers. In 1937-1938 he served as chairman of the executive committee of the Leninsky District Council in Leningrad. In 1938-1939 he served as first deputy chairman of the Leningrad City Council and in 1939-1940 as chairman of the Leningrad City Council. From 1940 to 1946 he served as chairman of the executive committee of the Leningrad City Council.[citation needed]
He was one of the organizers and leaders of the defense of Leningrad during the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945. During this period, all spheres of city life were reorganized due to the outbreak of the Great Patriotic War and the siege. The city's industry was converted to defense needs. Hospitals for patients with malnutrition were created. Sanitary cleaning of the city was organized. A cable was laid along the bottom of Lake Ladoga to supply electricity from the Volkhov Hydroelectric Station.
Following the end of the war, he was involved in restoration and reconstruction efforts of the city. The rationing system for food distribution was abolished. The Leningrad Coke and Gas Plant resumed operations and the city's heat supply was organized. Large gas-holder stations were put into operation.
From 1946 to 1949 he served as First Secretary of the Leningrad Regional and City Party Committee.
On August 13, 1949, he was arrested in the office of Georgy Malenkov; he was one of the main figures in the Leningrad affair, the post-war purges in the party apparatus.
^Известия ЦК КПСС № 2 (289) февраль 1989 года, Moscow, Издательство ЦК КПСС «Правда», С. 136 ISSN 0235-7097
Bibliography
Амосова, Алиса (2009). "Петр Сергеевич Попков: начало политической карьеры (1920-30-е гг.)". Вестник Санкт-Петербургского университета (in Russian) (1).