, 1913The park was founded in the 1870s on the site of a Cossack village cemetery, originally named
Starokladbischensky Park (), which was destroyed in 1921. The only preserved graves belong to Leonilla Kolpakovsky, buried in 1860, and her grandson Vladimir Basilevsky, buried in 1882; the gravestone was restored in 2011. Mass grave memorials for victims of the 1887 earthquake are now lost. The park was later connected to a Catholic Garden and renamed
Urban Garden. In 1899, to commemorate the 100th anniversary of Russian poet
Alexander Pushkin (1799–1837), the park was renamed Pushkin Garden. Between 1904 and 1907, construction occurred on one of Almaty’s few surviving Tsarist-era buildings. In 1913, it hosted an agricultural and industrial exhibition for the
Romanov Tercentenary, organized by military engineer Andrey Zenkov. New buildings were constructed, with 28 state-owned and 15 private pavilions showcasing Kazakh national art and crafts. Nearby, the
Ascension Cathedral and the Verny City Council were equipped with electricity, enhancing the Garden City image.In 1919, the park was renamed
Park of the Fallen Heroes in honor of those who fought in the
Russian Civil War, later changing to
Lenin Local Park due to a prohibition on urban cemeteries. By 1927, as Alma-Ata became the capital of
Soviet Kazakhstan, it was renamed
Federation of Soviet Republics.On 5 May 1942, the park was renamed to 28 Panfilov Guardsmen Park in honour of the
Panfilov's Twenty-Eight Guardsmen of the 1075 regiment of the 312th rifle division, who
defended Moscow in November 1941. The park includes historical buildings from the early to mid-20th century, such as the Ascension Cathedral, which was built without nails, the
Kazakh Museum of Folk Musical Instruments, and the
House of Officers. Today, the park is a popular destination for locals and tourists. During
Victory Day celebrations, Almaty residents lay flowers and wreaths in memory of those who died in
World War II. Zenkov played a crucial role in the park's development and in improving Almaty. In 1982, the park's significant sites, including the museum, Ascension Cathedral, and Memorial of Glory, were listed as historical and cultural monuments of republican significance in Kazakhstan. ==Renaming==