Tahoma National Cemetery Explained

Tahoma National Cemetery
Established:1993
Country:United States
Location:King County, Washington
Coordinates:47.3919°N -122.0931°W
Type:United States National Cemetery
Size:158.3acres
Interments:>63,000
Website:Official
Findagraveid:109448

Tahoma National Cemetery is a United States National Cemetery in unincorporated King County, Washington. It encompasses, and as of the end of 2019, had over 60,000 interments, compared to the end of 2008 with 23,479 interments, and 15,924 interments in 2005. Administered by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, it was the only national cemetery in the state of Washington[1] until 2020, when the Vancouver Barracks National Cemetery was established.[2]

History

Tahoma National Cemetery was established by the Department of Veteran Affairs on November 11, 1993, purchasing from the Washington State Department of Natural Resources for $1.6 million. It was intended to house 13,000 graves and reach capacity by 2040.[3] Congress approved $10.6 million in funding to build the cemetery in 1994 and design work began the following year.[4] The cemetery was dedicated on September 26, 1997, and opened for interments on October 1.[5] [6]

Until Tahoma was completed, Washington was one of eleven states without a national cemetery; the closest had been the Willamette National Cemetery in Portland, Oregon, where some Washingtonians were buried.[7] A second Washington national cemetery was proposed in 2006 for the Spokane area.[8]

A second phase of construction was completed in 2005.

Noteworthy monuments

Notable interments

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Cary . Collins . Edward Claplanhoo’s Lifetime of Service . . 2014-03-04 . 2014-03-16 . https://archive.today/20140316115843/http://www.voiceofthevalley.com/community_news/news/article_f68fa3ea-a42a-11e3-89e3-001a4bcf6878.html . 2014-03-16 . dead .
  2. News: Hair . Calley . May 31, 2020 . VA assumes management of renamed Vancouver Barracks National Cemetery . The Columbian.
  3. News: Aweeka . Charles . November 19, 1993 . State's veterans await new national cemetery in South King County . B1 . The Seattle Times.
  4. News: June 30, 1994 . Money OK'd for national cemetery . B2 . The Seattle Times.
  5. News: Henderson . Diedtra . May 26, 1997 . At long last, a final resting place . A1 . The Seattle Times.
  6. News: Whyte . Murray . September 27, 1997 . Local veterans given a national cemetery . A1 . The Seattle Times.
  7. News: Westneat . Danny . October 3, 1995 . Tahoma site of new veterans cemetery . B1 . The Seattle Times.
  8. News: January 24, 2006 . 5 sites eyed for Spokane military cemetery . B5 . The Seattle Times . Associated Press.
  9. News: Paige. Dickerson . Ed Claplanhoo dies at age 81; Makah elder's legacy includes deeds for tribe, veterans . . 2010-03-17 . 2014-03-15.