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  1. Marion is a city in and the county seat of Grant County, Indiana, United States, along the Mississinewa River. The population was 28,310 as of the 2020 census . It is named for Francis Marion , a brigadier general from South Carolina in the American Revolutionary War .

    • Marion

      Marion è un paese degli Stati Uniti d'America situata nella...

  2. Marion è un paese degli Stati Uniti d'America situata nella Contea di Grant, nello Stato dell'Indiana. La popolazione era di 30 830 abitanti nel censimento del 2006. Influenza culturale. È la città dove viene ambientata la serie animata, The Garfield Show. Altri progetti

    • Wayne W. Seybold (R)
    • Indiana
  3. Marion, city, seat (1831) of Grant county, north-central Indiana, U.S., on the Mississinewa River, 67 miles (108 km) northeast of Indianapolis. Settled in 1826, it was named for General Francis Marion of the American Revolutionary War. It developed as an agricultural town, but local oil and gas

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Marion County is located in the U.S. state of Indiana. The 2020 United States census reported a population of 977,203, [1] making it the most populous county in the state and the 54th-most populous county in the U.S. Indianapolis is the county seat , the state capital , and most populous city . [2]

  5. La contea di Marion (in inglese: Marion County) è una contea dello Stato dell'Indiana, negli Stati Uniti. La popolazione al censimento del 2010 era di 903 393 abitanti. Il capoluogo di contea è Indianapolis .

  6. Mar­i­on was named after the Rev­o­lu­tion­ary War Gen­er­al, Fran­cis Marion. The city was found­ed in 1831 by Mar­tin Boots and David Bran­son who each donat­ed 30 acres of land to devel­op a city by the flow­ing Mis­sissinewa Riv­er, after near­ly 20 years of set­tle­ment fol­low­ing the bloody, vic­to­ri­ous his ...

  7. wikimarion.orgWikiMarion

    8 mar 2016 · 1930 Marion Lynching. In 1930, Marion was the site of a brutal double lynching from which one man, James Cameron, escaped. Cameron's later activism reignited interest in the event, beginning in the 1980s and 1990s. In 2011, students from Marion High School created a series of articles examining the event from multiple angles.