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On Aug. 10, 1923, an estimated 100,000 mourners gathered in Marion to pay their respects ... Today, the Harding home is managed by the Ohio History Connection and is open for guided tours.
Editor's note: This is the fifth in a series of travel stories on Ohio presidents, which we are publishing in the months leading up to the Republican National Convention in Cleveland in July.
Harding was born in 1865 in tiny Blooming Grove, east of Marion, moved to nearby Caledonia as a child, then finally to Marion, where he bought the fledgling Marion Star newspaper at age 19.
Once upon a time, Warren G. Harding was one of America’s “worst” presidents. But the lessons of history, like those of fairy tales, can shift with changing times. The history of Harding ...
Harding's home and build a 15,000-square-foot presidential ... Harding's presidential papers would be moved to Marion from the Ohio History Center in Columbus. The house became nationally known ...
More: Harding vs. Cox: Two Ohio newspapermen vied for presidency ... "They're going to feel at home in Marion and he's counting on that because this town is what he's all about." ...
This year’s Warren G Harding Symposium, set for July 18-19, examines the front porch campaigns of Harding and three other U.S ...
Marion Harding's boys tennis team needed comebacks in four of its five matches against Pleasant in an MOAC showdown.
MARION — Ed McCants found his why when he was hired April 28 as the newest girls basketball coach at Marion Harding ... he was named second-team All-Ohio in Division IV after scoring 493 ...
Today, the Harding home is managed by the Ohio History Connection and is open ... Harding's funeral in Marion in 1923 drew an estimated 100,000 mourners ...
Harding’s home and build a 15,000-square-foot presidential ... Harding's presidential papers would be moved to Marion from the Ohio History Center in Columbus. The house became nationally ...