Doronin Fyodor Petrovich was born in 1888 in the village of Demyanskoye, located on the right bank of the Irtysh, north of Tobolsk. He graduated from a parochial school, a two-grade school in the village of Samarovo, Tobolsk province, entered the Omsk paramedic school and was sent to the village of Chernoe after graduating in 1908.
On November 29, 1909, he was dismissed from his job as politically unreliable and sent to work in his native village of Demyanskoye, where he began to communicate with political exiles.
In August 1914, he was conscripted into the army, where he heard about the Bolshevik Party. After the October Revolution, in November 1917, he returned to Demyanskoye, determined to implement Bolshevik slogans.
Relying on a group of peasants, Doronin began to hold events of Soviet power in Demyansk volost, congresses of Councils of seven northern volosts of Tobolsk County. A wonderful organizer, he was always in the thick of the people, talked with peasants, held meetings and rallies, told people about the essence of Soviet power.
In the spring of 1918, armed clashes began between supporters of the Soviet government and the White Army. On August 28, Fyodor Doronin was arrested and taken to Tobolsk. In the Tobolsk convict prison, he was put in solitary confinement. From there, he would later be sent to Troitskosavka prison, where he worked as a paramedic in the camp hospital. Fighting for the lives of his comrades, easing their suffering, he realized how little chance they and he himself had to live until the arrival of Soviet power.
In January 1920, a message came to Demyanskoye that Fyodor Petrovich Doronin had been shot by the White Guards.