Marion, Ohio City of Marion West Center Street in downtown Marion in 2007.

West Center Street in downtown Marion in 2007.

Flag of City of Marion Location of Marion in Marion County and the state of Ohio Location of Marion in Marion County and the state of Ohio County Marion Marion is a town/city in and the governmental center of county of Marion County, Ohio, United States. The municipality is positioned in north-central Ohio, approximately 50 miles (80 km) north of Columbus.

According to the US Enumeration 2008 estimate Ohio's Columbus Marion Chillicothe Combined Travel Destination has 2,002,604 citizens . Marion is the county's biggest city and the center of the Marion Micropolitan Travel Destination (as defined by the United States Enumeration Bureau in 2003).

Harding, a former owner of the Marion Star, was a resident of Marion for much of his adult life. The town/city is home to a several historic properties, some listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Marion County, Ohio.

12.4 Marion Cemetery City Hall building in downtown Marion.

A curious visitor to the Marion Cemetery inspects the moving sphere up on the Merchant family grave marker.

Marion was one of Ohio's primary industrial centers until the 1970s.

Products of the Marion Steam Shovel Company (later Marion Power Shovel) assembled the Panama Canal and in the 1960s, NASA contracted with Power Shovel to construct the crawler-transporters that moved the assembled Saturn V rockets, used by Project Apollo, to the launch pad.

In 1911, 80% of the nation's steam shovel and heavy duty earth moving equipment was produced in Marion, Ohio.

Marion has long been a center of grain based (corn and popcorn) snack and other products (Conagra, Wyandot Snacks, General Mills) given its close adjacency to close-by growing regions in adjoining counties.

Whirlpool Corporation of Benton Harbor, Michigan is the biggest employer in the town/city operating the biggest clothes dryer manufacturing facility in the world. Nucor Steel's facility in Marion is the biggest producer of rebar and signpost in Ohio.

Marion is positioned at 40 35 12 N 83 7 35 W (40.586579, -83.126404). The town/city is positioned about 50 miles (80 km) north of Ohio's capital city, Columbus, due north along U.S.

Marion is situated in most of Marion Township, which is positioned just outside the town/city limits.

According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the town/city has a total region of 11.82 square miles (30.61 km2), of which 11.74 square miles (30.41 km2) is territory and 0.08 square miles (0.21 km2) is water. While Marion and the encircling area is generally rural, it is a primary manufacturing center for Ohio with a hub of talent drawn from the US and internationally, as well as a well-positioned transit hub.

One of the biggest intermodal facilities is positioned in Marion, which provides rail and small-town truck bringy services for Whirlpool, International Paper and primary automotive parts manufacturers, among many others.

Whirlpool's dryer manufacturing facility in Marion is the biggest in the world.

According to the Marion Chamber of Commerce and Marion Can - Do (the economic evolution office of Marion), the biggest industrial employers in the town/city are: 4 Marion Industries 302 Marion has been experiencing an economic resurgence since 2015.

Ohio is the second biggest steel producing state in the US, and small-town employer Nucor Steel, whose Marion facility is the biggest manufacturer of rebar and signposts in Ohio, announced in March 2017 it was spending $85 million on a modernization program.

Post Office (Marion, Ohio) was assembled in 1910.

The building is now used as the Heritage Hall exhibition of the Marion County Historical Society.

The exhibition is dedicated to the preservation of Marion County, Ohio history.

And Florence Kling Home A nationwide presidential site, the Harding Home was the residence of Warren G.

Harding, twenty-ninth president of the United States.

The site is being period to include a Presidential Center for Harding, expected to be opened in 2020, the 100th anniversary of Harding's election to the Presidency.

Marion Union Station and Museum More than 100 trains pass by Union Station every day.

The exhibition showcases an impressive compilation of memorabilia and the AC Tower, which was once the chief switching facility for the Erie Railroad, Marion Division.

Marion is home to the Marion Popcorn Festival, an annual event that is held in downtown Marion in September, the weekend following Labor Day.

The Marion County Fair is held every year in Marion amid the first week of July.

The Marion Star, presented daily, is the city's only newspaper. Among Marion's airways broadcasts are WMRN (94.3 - FM) nation music station, WMRN (1490 - AM) news/talk (clear channel), WOSB (91.1 - FM) NPR News and classical music station, WYNT (95.9 - FM) adult intact station, WDCM (97.5 - FM) improve radio, and WWGH-LP (107.1) talk radio.

WMNO-CD, also known as TV-22 Marion, is a Class A broadcast tv station featuring small-town news and initial programming. WOCB-CD is an autonomous Christian inspirational low-power tv station on digital UHF channel 39, transmitting small-town church services and programs and enhance affairs throughout central Ohio. Marion is the home of the Marion Blue Racers, an indoor football team in X-League Indoor Football, that plays at Veterans Memorial Coliseum.

Marion was home to the Marion Mayhem, also an indoor football team in the CIFL, that also played at the Veterans Memorial Coliseum from 2006 - 2010.

Marion previously had a experienced ice hockey team, the Marion Barons, who played in the International Hockey League amid the 1953-54 season.

Marion has been home to various individual and team high school state championships.

The Oorang Indians, a traveling NFL team based in close-by La - Rue, played their only true "home" game in Marion in 1923.

Marion City Marion City Schools enroll 4,418 students in enhance major and secondary schools. The precinct administers 8 enhance schools including six elementary schools, one middle school, and one high school.

Marion is also home to Tri-Rivers Career Center and Center for Adult Education offering longterm position technical educations to high school and adult students in Central Ohio.

Marion is home to two establishments of higher learning.

Ohio State University has a county-wide ground at Marion.

Marion Technical College a improve college that shares the Marion Campus with OSU.

The Marion Municipal Airport is positioned three nautical miles (4 mi, 6 km) northeast of the central company district. Harding, twenty-ninth president of the United States.

The Harding Memorial, as it was called by thousands of citizens , including schoolchildren who donated to its assembly fund, is the burial locale (tomb) of the 29th President of the United States, Warren G.

Harding's visitors who came to Marion after his presidency.

Marion Cemetery Marion Cemetery is the home to the Merchant family grave marker, known for its unintended movements.

The Marion Cemetery Receiving Vault is a funerary structure in the chief cemetery of Marion, Ohio, United States.

Constructed in the 1870s, this receiving vault originally fulfilled the normal purposes of such structures, but it attained eminence as the semipermanent resting place of Marion's most prominent citizen, U.S.

Marion is both the hometown and burial locale of President Warren G.

Harding's sister, Carolyn Harding Votaw, also lived in Marion.

Elsie Janis, the Broadway musical theatre star, Hollywood screenwriter, composer and actress, and "Sweetheart of the American Expeditionary Forces" (AEF) amid World War I, was a native of Marion County.

Mary Ellen Withrow (nee Hinamon), Treasurer of the United States from 1994 until 2001 is a Marion County native.

Withrow is the only person in the history of the United States to have held the governmental position of Treasurer on the Local (Marion County Ohio Treasurer), State (Treasurer of the State of Ohio) and Federal levels of Government.

Jim Thorpe spent time in Marion County as the coach and lead player for the Native American-led National Football League Oorang Indians.

While the team was based in La - Rue the Indians played at "home" in Marion.

Other notable citizens who lived in Marion include: Ozias Bowen (1805 1871) was an Ohio Supreme Court Judge 1856-1858; his residence is owned by the Marion County Historical Association, which operates it as the Stengel-True Museum Harding and the Marion Daily Star: How Newspapering Shaped a President.

"Marion Area Chamber of Commerce...presents".

Portman Welcomes Expected Multi-Million Investment to Modernize Nucor Steel Facility in Marion County.

A Theatre History of Marion, Ohio: John Eberson's Palace and Beyond.

"The Marion Star".

The Marion Star.

WMNO TV-22 Marion Web site.

"Marion City School District Profile".

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Marion, Ohio.

Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclop dia Britannica article Marion (Ohio).

Marion Area Convention & Visitors Bureau Municipalities and communities of Marion County, Ohio, United States County seat: Marion Big Island Bowling Green Claridon Grand Grand Prairie Green Camp Marion Montgomery Pleasant Prospect Richland Salt Rock Scott Tully Waldo

Categories:
County seats in Ohio - Cities in Marion County, Ohio - Populated places established in 1822 - Marion, Ohio - 1822 establishments in Ohio