Solodukhin was born on 24 January 1892 in the village of Vasilevka [ru], in what was then Samara Governorate, in the Russian Empire. His mother, Matryona Andrianovna, died after being shot, with his father, Andrian Antonovich, dying not long after.[1] Orphaned at a young age, he completed his studies at the Vasilyevsky parochial school, and at the Samara railway school, and went to work in Ufa Governorate.[2][3] He worked for a time on hydraulic engineering surveys in Temir District, Turgay Oblast.[1]
As the Red Army advanced against the remaining White forces in southern Ukraine, Solodukhin, by now having been appointed to command the 15th Rifle Division, came up against those of Pyotr Wrangel.[3] The Red Army strategy aimed to cut off the White forces from their sources of supply in the Crimea. On 6 August 1920 Solodukhin received orders to take his division across to the left bank of the Dnieper under cover of night. Solodukhin chose a place between the settlements of Lvovo [ru] and Tyaginka [ru] to make the crossing. Simultaneously the 52nd and Latvian divisions were to cross the Dnieper in the area of Beryslav, and the Kherson group in the area of Kherson. Solodukhin's division was tasked with capturing the Korsun Monastery, fortified by White forces, the 52nd and the Latvian divisions were to capture Malaya and Bolshaya Kakhovka, and the Kherson group the village of Aleshki. If successful, this would open the way for the Red Army's Pravoberezhnaya group to advance on Perekop and Melitopol to join up with elements of 13th Army, and cut Wrangel's forces off from its Crimean bases.[1]
The operation began at 2 o'clock in the morning on 7 August, with Solodukhin's forces successfully forcing a crossing of the Dnieper under enemy fire. The 127th Mtsensk, 128th Tula and 129th Kursk Regiments, part of the 43rd Brigade, led the crossing. By 8 o'clock, the Korsun Monastery had been taken by the 127th Mtsensk Regiment and a bridgehead with a radius of 15-20 km had been established.[1] At dawn on 8 August Solodukhin deployed the 44th Brigade to link up with the Kakhovka bridgehead. In an attempt to push back the Red forces, the White's 34th Infantry Division, supported by cavalry, artillery, armored cars and aviation attacked between Bolshaya Mayachka and Chornyanka [ru], dividing the 43rd and 45th Brigades and advancing on Korsun Monastery.[1] Solodukhin gathered a cavalry force of his own and launched a counterattack, but he and his entire force was killed.[2][4] When later captured and interrogated, some of the White force involved in the battle reported
Among the wounded was one of yours with the Order of the Red Banner. He was wounded in the leg and both arms. To the offer of the lieutenant to surrender, he replied: "We, the Communists, do not surrender to the mercy of the White Guard bastards!" Immediately one of the officers shot him at point-blank range.[2]
Solodukhin's body was sent to Petrograd and he was buried at the Monument to the Fighters of the Revolution, on the Field of Mars, on 22 August.[2][5] His commissar in the 9th Rifle Division, Semyon Voskov, is also buried at the monument, having died of typhus in Taganrog after that city had been taken by the Red Army.[6]
^ ab"Историа села" (in Russian). Администрация сельского поселения Васильевка муниципального района Безенчукский Самарской области. 7 August 2013. Retrieved 4 May 2022.
^"Борцам революции, памятник" [To the fighters of the revolution, a monument]. encspb.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original on 24 December 2018. Retrieved 18 June 2019.