After 1932 a special settlement for dekulakized peasant families was set up near the rail station. In 1937 camp outpost No. 17 of Taishetlag (later a camp outpost of Bamlag and Ozerlag) began its existence nearby. From 1937 onwards prisoners were buried in the cemetery there, in individual and common graves.
In the late 1990s the cemetery was studied by members of the Biryusa club for young school-age historians, led by Ye.S. Seleznyov.
Information about Taishetlag prisoners, where it survives, can be found in Memorial’s Victims of Political Terror database with its 3 million entries, or in the Open List database (“Victims of Political Repression in the USSR, 1917-1991”).
State of burials | Area | Boundaries |
---|---|---|
A few burial mounds and subsidence; grave markers of forced settlers have not survived
|
not determined
|
not delineated
|
[ Original texts & hyperlinks ]
Ye.S. Seleznyov, “Ascending the Golden Hill”, Biryusina dolina website