The roots of this cemetery trace back to the early 1930s, when Old Colony Mennonite families, conservative descendants of Russian Mennonite communities, began arriving in the Vauxhall region. Drawn by Canada’s block-settlement policies, which encouraged homogenous cultural groups to settle together, these families saw in the irrigated southern Alberta plains an opportunity for agricultural livelihood and communal solidarity.
In 1937 services began in a modest meeting house built from recycled lumber on private property. A few years later, in 1938, the Vauxhall-Grantham Mennonite Church was officially organized, with 26 charter members.
Tragedy struck in 1940, during a time of heightened anti-German sentiment amid the Second World War. Both the Mennonite Brethren meeting house and the Mennonite conference’s meeting house in the area were destroyed by fire. In 1944 the community built a new church, and in the years that followed it was expanded (notably in 1953) to accommodate its growing membership.
In 1963, a significant institutional shift occurred, the Vauxhall-Grantham congregation amalgamated with the nearby Hays Mennonite Mission Church, at which point it adopted the name ‘Vauxhall Mennonite Church’.
In October 2000, the congregation formally dissolved with the remaining members joining other Mennonite communities.
The Vauxhall Mennonite Cemetery preserves the memory of the community’s founders and families across generations. Its modest gravestones and serene prairie setting reflect the Old Colony Mennonite values of simplicity, humility, and devotion.
Highway 36 and Township Road 140
Nearest Populated Centre: Vauxhall,
Province: Alberta
Latitude, Longitude
50.13428, -112.07547
Map Location
| Surname | Given Name | Born | Died | Age | Photos | Cemetery | R Code |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|