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Anchorage Memorial Park

The Anchorage Memorial Park, also known as Anchorage Cemetery, is a 22-acre (89,000 m2) cemetery located in Anchorage, Alaska, United States. Covering nine city blocks, the cemetery separates the city's downtown and Fairview neighborhoods.

Anchorage Memorial Park

1915

Anchorage, Alaska

United States

Public and private

Municipality of Anchorage

22.35 acres (9.04 ha)

>12,500

Anchorage, Alaska

22.35 acres (9.04 ha)

1915

ANC-766

April 26, 1993

The cemetery was established by President Woodrow Wilson in 1915 as part of the Anchorage townsite, one of a number of land reserves set aside for public facilities for the new town.[2] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1993, recognizing its status as Anchorage's oldest cemetery.[3]


From approximately 1954 to 1986, a public housing complex called Willow Park occupied the half-blocks of the cemetery site adjacent to Ninth Avenue and Fairbanks Street. The buildings were razed to allow for expansion of the cemetery. All that remains is the complex's maintenance building, taken over for the same purpose by the cemetery.

(1878–1924), first Mayor of Anchorage

Leopold David

(1881–1953), U.S. Congressman

Anthony Joseph Dimond

(1905–2005), Artist and educator[4]

Lorene Harrison

(1919–2010), U.S. Cabinet Secretary and Alaska Governor. Buried standing up, facing East towards Washington, D.C.

Walter Joseph Hickel

(1898–1983), Explorer[5]

Ada Blackjack

(1865–1940), Artist

Sydney Laurence

(1920–2011), U.S. Congressman

Howard Wallace Pollock

(1911–2012), Fifth Director of the U.S. Army Women's Army Corps

Mary Louise Rasmuson

(1900–2001), Anchorage Mayor

William Alex Stolt

a private cemetery near the Seward Highway in south Anchorage, of similar stature in the community to this cemetery

Angelus Memorial Park

List of cemeteries in Alaska

National Register of Historic Places listings in Anchorage, Alaska