In 1900, the cemetery and the village were incorporated into the city of Szczecin, and soon after there was constructed a chappel, and in 1905, it was expanded to the northwest.
[1][2] During the Second World War the cemetery was used as a burial ground for victims of the allied bombing air raids.
[1][2] The pathways layout of the cemetery have been preserved, and some gravestones were used to build walls next to Słowackiego and Niemierzyńska Streets.
There's also a European ash tree, overgrown with the common ivy, that has the status of a natural monument.
The garden also includes several Glacial erratic rocks, the largest of which is named in commemoration of Juliusz Słowacki, a 19th-century Romantic poet.