Division 1 of Lokchimlag existed here in 1938-1940. After the camp closed deportees were relocated to the empty barracks. The deceased were buried in the camp cemetery until 1942. An exploratory local history expedition of the Kortkeross Centre for Children’s Extracurricular Education studied and drew up a plan of the burials in September 2005.
Drawing on the Komi Book of Remembrance and other sources, the online Memorial database (2025) lists 26 Lokchimlag inmates, one of whom was again imprisoned in 1937 and nine others who died in the camps between 1940 and 1943.
State of burials | Area | Boundaries |
---|---|---|
Ten grave depressions have survived
|
not determined
|
not delineated
|
[ Original texts & hyperlinks ]
Materials of the local history expedition of Kortkeross Centre for Children’s Extracurricular Education (2001, 2005) – Archive of the Pokayanie Museum (Pechora)
“Terebei village. Graveyard of Lokchimlag prisoners and deportees”, Virtual Museum of the Gulag [retrieved, 26 May 2022; no longer accessible]