The history of the name "Devyatkino" is still a mystery. For the first time, a settlement with this name was recorded on the map of F. Schubert from 1834, curved along the Kapral stream. According to one version, the name "Devyatkino" just came from the bend of the stream - as if by its shape it somehow resembled the number nine. According to another version, the name of the village came from the surname of the owner of the factory located nearby: information was preserved that at the beginning of the XIX century. a certain manufacturer, the Ninth, owned a porcelain factory just at the northern borders of Petersburg. “The village of Devyatkino (in Finnish Uusi Miina) was located in the Toksovsky volost of the Shlisselburg district of the St. Petersburg province,” Murino. Chronicle of three centuries “local historian N.Ya. Serebryakova. - It is necessary to note the peculiarity of the Finnish villages of this volost. If the Russian settlement consisted of one settlement, then the Finnish one was a multitude of separate farms remote from each other. Each of these villages could have its own name ... So Devyatkino, the Finnish settlement, was divided into Big and Small ... "
N.Ya. Serebryakova investigated in detail the history of the accession of the village of Devyatkino to Murinsky volost. In a document dated May 1888 and addressed to the St. Petersburg provincial peasant affairs by the presence of the district police officer, it was reported: “For the deduction of land for the artillery experimental field on which the village of Devyatkin of the Toksovsky volost of the Shlisselburg district was located, the indicated village was transferred to another locality located in the area of St. Petersburg county. As a result of which, and according to the presentation of the Shlisselburg Uyezd for Peasant Affairs, the provincial presence decided on February 16 to determine: in view of the territorial position, the village of Devyatkina within the St. Petersburg district of Murinsky volost was added to the designated volost. "
On May 9, 1888, the Murinsky Rural Society met with the participation of peasants from the village of Novo-Devyatkina, at which they announced their accession to the Murinsky Rural Society. At that time in the village of Novo-Devyatkino there were 27 yards, 60 revision souls of a male and 58 - of a female. The lists of residents of Novo-Devyatkino included exclusively Finnish surnames - Velikayne, Tansk, Kanine, Kostoma, Liski, Nui, Yalikone, Sus, Haikon and others.
Children from Novo-Devyatkino went to study at the Murinsky school, until in 1910 their own appeared in the village. The question of the need for its opening was discussed on February 17, 1910 at a village gathering under the chairmanship of the headman Samuil Mikhailovich Kanninen. The fact is that the Murinsky school, located at a distance of more than two miles from the village, of the available fifty students attended no more than ten, the rest just stayed at home. As an explanation of this fact, the local historian N.Ya. Serebryakova cites lines from a rural gathering document: “... The peasants of our village are in very poor condition and are not able to make good clothes to send their children to school. In addition, the children are in danger along the way, as there is always a large driveway along the Big Murinsky Road. ”
In 1931, universal collectivization came to Devyatkino: they organized the Novaya Urtaya collective farm (translated from Finnish as “New Harvest”). The first attempt, relatively voluntary, to create a collective farm in Devyatkino, undertaken in 1930, ended in failure. N.Ya. Serebryakova cites an archival document signed by the chairman of the district executive committee Kapustin: “At the beginning of February 1930, 45 households entered the collective farm at the general meeting, of which 34 people, thanks to the campaigning of Susie and Kaugenen, submitted applications for leaving the collective farm for two to three days. Mr. Susy persuaded the peasants that horses could live without a collective farm, but let the poor live on the collective farm. I propose to conduct a secret investigation and submit all material to the Presidium of the District Executive Committee no later than March 15 this year. ”
In March 1942, the Finnish population of Devyatkino was evicted on a national basis along with all the other Finnish Ingermanlanders and German colonists who were inside the blockade ring of Leningrad. The villages of Old and New Devyatkino existed in the late 1980s, then New Devyatkino absorbed the Old, and today there is only the village of Novo-Devyatkino.