On the history of the Moscow University printing house and
the Nativity of Virgin Mary Church on the Butyrkiwe mentioned before (page 8), where Mikhail Nechaev's family attended.
According to
Wikipedia the Moscow university printing house was founded in 1756 and the first emplyees were asigned from the children of soldiers of Butyrka infantry regiment residing at Butyrka sloboda.
Butyrka sloboda was home for one of the first elite 'selected' Moscow soldier regiments since mid-17th centur, i.e. tsar Alexey Mikhailovich. This kind of regiments belonged to the so-called 'new-order' or 'foreign-order' regiments, adopted by Russia from Western Europe. Soldiers back then were a type of musketeer infantry, not just a private.
So, there's a theoretic possibility.
I can't tell, if there were any influxes of new employees from other Moscow's areas.
Anyway, i think this version must be researched.
Moscow archives doesn't seem to have any earlier revision for the printing house. Theoretically, regional archives should have the revisions from the 4th one, 1782, if they survive.
There's also a question whether the Moscow archives have a revision for Butyrka sloboda.
Anyways, the 3rd revision, i.e. for 1760-s, if there's any connected to the subject-matter, can be found at RGADA.
There's also the fonds at Moscow city archives # 418 dedicated to Moscow Imperial university (it was named prior to the Revolution).
The series # 490 is dedicated to the printing house. There's a file # 93 "The lists of officials and servicemen of the University's printing house for 1813
https://cgamos.ru/upload/ibloc...490-00.pdf