Omaka Cemetery

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Omaka Cemetery (also known as Blenheim Omaka Public Cemetery) is a historic cemetery in Blenheim, New Zealand founded in the 1850s.[1] It consists of over 10,000 burials and is the largest cemetery in Marlborough due to its proximity to the region's capitol. The cemetery closed for burials during the later half of the 1970s but was reopened in 2011.[2][3] The cemetery consists of three separate lawns numbered one to three with lawns one and two being established in the mid-nineteenth century. Lawn three was established during World War I and was used as a cemetery for returned serviceman but over time became the main cemetery for the Marlborough region. is now Marlborough's foremost cemetery.

Burials[]

Notable burials in Lawn One (Old Cemetery) and Lawn Two (Catholic Cemetery) include:

Notable burials in Lawn Three (New Cemetery) include:

References[]

  1. ^ Cemetery Records Search – Marlborough District Council
  2. ^ Reopening of Omaka Cemetery, Marlborough, Order – 2011-go5666 – New Zealand Gazette
  3. ^ New Zealand. Census and Statistics Department (1918). The Municipal Handbook of New Zealand. J. Mackay, Government Printer.

External links[]

Coordinates: 41°32′17″S 173°56′24″E / 41.53806°S 173.94000°E / -41.53806; 173.94000


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