Famous Animal Gravesites Around the World

It's not just Kentucky Derby winners that are buried with great honor

  • By Robin T. Reid
  • Smithsonian.com, April 28, 2010
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Man o War racehorse Jim the Wonder Dog Keiko the Orca Ham the Chimpanzee Sirius the Dog Elsa the Lioness
Keiko the Orca

(Kevin Schafer / Photolibrary)


Keiko the Orca

The beloved orca made a huge splash in 1993 as the star of Free Willy, a movie about a boy who saves an orca from captivity. In Keiko’s case, the story rang all too true; the killer whale had spent most of his life in a variety of aquariums since he was captured as a youngster off the coast of Iceland in 1979. His sad plight in a Mexican aquarium galvanized the movie studio and millions of animal lovers across the globe to raise money to liberate him. In 1996, he was transported—courtesy of UPS—to new digs in Oregon, where he was nursed back to health and rehabilitated so he could be returned to the wild.

Keiko was released off the coast of Iceland in 2002, and eventually took up residence near the Norwegian fishing village of Halsa. In December of the following year, the orca beached himself on the shore and died, probably of pneumonia. Vets estimated he was 26 years old.

Some of Keiko’s caregivers and fans in Halsa used a machine to dig a grave for him and moved his six-ton body over the snow and into it. The site is covered with a cairn of hundreds of stones, some from as far away as Ecuador.

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Comments (13)

The title has no relationship to the results shown. It’s so National Geographic in that it appeals to kids. Going farther, I find this totally disrespectful to the locations that have monuments and histories equal to and in many cases beyond the ones represented here. Animals deserve respect. Obviously this is not well thought out at all. The issue here lends itself to marginalizing all the information presented at this site. That is not good, unless of course it is your intention. I can not solve this problem for you. [Looks at posting rules to see if I have violated threatening/ offensive/ whatever]

Im a proud owner of a retired race horse named Coker Road who is a descendant of the great Man o War! Coker raced 40 races and pursed $50,000. He has been trained and shown in jumping. Now he is my friend and trail riding partner :D. He is chestnut with three white socks and a blaze and is currently age 11. I LOVE HIM!

He is such a hero!

Strolling Jim, Tennessee's first grand champion walking horse in 1938, is buried "quietly" at Wartrace, Tenn., the cradle of Tennessee Walking Horse Country.
Shaker's Shocker, who carried the first woman, Betty Sain, to win the breed's biggest Celebration in 1966, is buried in the rolling hills of Middle Tennessee about five miles from Strolling Jim's grave...

Can we please stop calling yellow labs "golden"?

This website is cool and i love animals lol i think they are soooo cute ;]

Hachiko, who faithfully waited for his owner every day at the Shibuya train station for 9 years after his death, died on March 8, 1935. His stuffed remains are mounted at the National Science Museum of Japan in Ueno,Tokyo. He has become an international symbol of loyalty.

Smokey the Bear in Capitan, New Mexico. Originally rescued as a cub (1950), became famous as "posterboy" in campaign against forest fires, lived at the National Zoo in Washington DC, returned to Lincoln National Forest for burial after his death in 1976.

Where was Smokey the Bear???

Smokey was/is truly an American Icon and has one of the most touching stories of survival and the human impact on nature.

No GREYFRIARS BOBBY?? For Shame.

she has days to live

the world first creation first went into space great.

A tiny cub in 1959 and about 5 years old when she died in 1961...

Don't mind placing this comment, just remove the error please.



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