United States Department of Veterans Affairs
United States Department of Veterans Affairs

Burial & Memorials

New National Cemeteries

The Veterans Millennium Health Care and Benefits Act of 1999 requires VA to establish six additional national cemeteries in areas of the United States in which the need for burial space is greatest. Those areas are: Atlanta, Georgia; Detroit, Michigan; Miami, Florida; Sacramento, California; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; and, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Fort Sill National Cemetery near Oklahoma City opened for interments in 2001, the National Cemetery of the Alleghenies near Pittsburgh, Pa. and the Great Lakes National Cemetery near Detroit opened in 2005, the Georgia National Cemetery, and the Sacramento Valley VA National Cemetery opened in 2006, the South Florida VA National Cemetery near Miami, opened in 2007.


The National Cemetery Act of 2003 authorizes VA to establish new national cemeteries to serve veterans in the areas of Bakersfield, Calif.; Birmingham, Ala.; Jacksonville, Fla.; Sarasota County, Fla.; southeastern Pennsylvania; and Columbia-Greenville, S.C. All six areas have veteran populations exceeding 170,000, which is the threshold VA has established for new national cemeteries.


Reports to Congress on the Establishment of Additional National Cemeteries:


To read PDF documents, you need a PDF viewer. You can download a free copy of Acrobat Reader.

May 2008 Report (PDF)


May 2007 Report (PDF)


May 2006 Report (PDF)


Alabama National Cemetery (PDF)

Bakersfield National Cemetery (PDF)

Ft. Jackson National Cemetery (PDF)

Jacksonville National Cemetery (PDF)

Sarasota National Cemetery (PDF)

Washington Crossing National Cemetery (PDF)