Huntsville cemetery (Huntsville) is located near the hamlet of Iron Springs, a rural community in Lethbridge County that emerged in the late 19th and early 20th centuries as settlers established ranches and small farms in the fertile coulee-fringed landscape. Many of these early homesteaders would later be interred at Huntsville Cemetery, which became the final resting place for generations of local families.
Although formal records of the cemetery’s founding date are sparse, burial listings and headstone records indicate that Huntsville Cemetery was actively used for burials throughout the early to mid-20th members of families from the Iron Springs and broader Lethbridge area were laid to rest there, including individuals such as Gerrit Wouter Johannes Van Asch (1944–2003) and others whose memorials preserve the biographical traces of local pioneers and settlers.
Huntsville Cemetery at Iron Springs is more than a collection of graves; it is a touchstone for the rural heritage of southern Alberta. Its stones and markers speak of families, migrations, and the rhythms of life and death on the southern Alberta prairies, preserving a quiet but persistent link to the region’s early settlers.
Range Road 204 & Township Road 112
Nearest Populated Centre: Iron Springs,
Province: Alberta
Latitude, Longitude
49.90281, -112.68861
Map Location
| Surname | Given Name | Born | Died | Age | Photos | Cemetery | R Code |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|