In August 1972, a newly formed corporation called American Train Heritage, Inc. purchased their first piece of a projected steam railroad tour train dream for the Crab Orchard and Egyptian Railroad. Continue reading
Category Archives: All Marion Content
Before there was a Crab Orchard National Wildlife Refuge, nearly the entire refuge was a heavily secured ordnance plant for the production of bombs and ammunition to supply the needs of World War II. A number of roads and railroad spurs used to weave in and out of various bunker storage locations with security checkpoints. This 1945 map shows the magnitude of the impact of WW II on the area.
(Map from 1995 History Edition of the Marion Daily Republican)
A raid into unspecified establishments in the city around 1958 yielded this large pile of scrap when the Marion Police Department was done with it. Shown are OfficerJack Stephens and Chief of Police Charles Edwards, both Marion residents.
(Photo courtesy of Williamson County Historical Society)
In 1922, a crowd on the public square in Marion, Illinois anxiously awaits the outcome of a Grand Jury to hand down verdicts related to the Herrin Mine massacres which occured earlier in the year. Scab mine workers who had been called in to work the mines during strikes at a mine just outside Herrin, Illinois had been brutally murdered and tortured.
(Photo from the Williamson County Historical Society)
The Chicago and Big Muddy Mine was opened in 1900 by Samuel H. Goodall as part of the Chicago and Big Muddy Coal and Coke Company, with headquarters in Chicago, and was one of the largest mines located near the edge of Marion, Illinois. Continue reading