Was being used from 1885 to 1962, now it is a cultural heritage. The cemitory was opened by decision of the Tyumen City Council (6(18) June and 18(30) July 1885) in the Bukina village of the Bogadinskaya volost.
It occupies 5 hectares in a rectangle, which is limited: on the north side, by the Scientific and Analytical Center of the Rational Using of Mineral Resources named after V. I. Shpilman, school number 5, Yunnatov Square and Kholodilnaya street; from the northeast side - Tekutyevsky Boulevard and Republic Street; on the southeast side - by the Wedding Palace, Memory Square, Apple Grove, West Siberian Innovation Center and Melnikaite Street; from the south-west side - Taimyrskaya street. There are about 12,000 graves in the cemetery, so far approximately 1,200 graves have been found. The search for burial detection is carried out by the Granit detachment from Tyumen school No.6 in the middle of the cemetery, on the southeast side, there is a Jewish sector with 25 tombstones, and a Muslim sector near the West Siberian Innovation Center. Old trees of more than a century of age are preserved on the territory: poplars and birches - up to 110 years old, pine trees - up to 120 years old, spruce trees - up to 130 years old. They are a valuable object for studying the history of the city's climate in the 20th century. Since 2005, the cemetery has been recognized as a cultural heritage site, however, its improvement still leaves much to be desired.
It was opened outside the city limits not far from the mill with a steam engine belonging to the local businessman Tekutiev, that is why his name is attached to the churchyard. The rapid growth of Tyumen in the second half of the 20th century led to the fact that the cemetery turned out to be in the middle of urban development (Tyumen, 96 Republic St.)