Inscription
Was born on this site Nov. 20, 1884. He graduated from Marion High School in 1901, Princeton University in 1905, and from Union Theological Seminary. Thomas, a clergyman, and the son of Marion’s Presbyterian minister, was a tireless worker for social security, civil rights, and human justice. Six time Socialist Party presidential candidate, he was a leader in the effort toward disarmament and world peace. He died Dec. 19, 1968, in Huntington, N.Y.
[Side B]: Same
Location
Sources
More markers in Marion
Sawyer Sanatorium at White Oaks Farm
Marion, OH
Doctors Charles Elmer Sawyer and his son, Carl Walker Sawyer, opened Sawyer Sanatorium on White Oaks Farm in 1911.
Old Marion Cemetery- Also known as the Quarry Street or Pioneer Cemetery
Marion, OH
Marion founder Eber Baker donated this two-acre plot for use as a cemetery shortly after platting the village in 1822.
Cummin’s Home
Marion, OH
Thomas Stinson Cummin, owner of a successful dry goods store, built his home in the early 1870s on the outskirts of the growing village...
Scioto Ordnance Plant Site
On March 2, 1942, four months after the U.S. entered WWII, farmers living between Marion-Williamsport and Marseilles-Galion Roads and...
Camp Marion, World War II Prisoners of War, 1944-1946
This site was once a twenty-four acre camp for Prisoners of War established on the grounds of the Marion Engineer Depot.
