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Marion Military Institute is an Alabama Historical Marker. [12] It is the home of two National Register of Historic Places - The MMI Chapel and Lovelace Hall, and the President's House. [13] [14] The Alabama Military Hall of Honor (the Old Marion City Hall), created by executive order of Gov. George Wallace in 1975, is also on campus. [2]
Marion Carl's memoir, Pushing the Envelope, coauthored with his friend Barrett Tillman, was published in 1994. [5] In 1998, at age 82, he was shot to death during a robbery, defending Edna from a home invader. [6] Carl had entered his living room late one evening and had found an intruder pointing a shotgun at his wife and demanding money and ...
Francis Marion was born in Berkeley County, Province of South Carolina around 1732. His father Gabriel Marion was a Huguenot who emigrated to the Thirteen Colonies from France at some point prior to 1700 due to the Edict of Fontainebleau and became a slaveowning planter. [3]
Otho Bane Rosenbaum was born in Marion, Virginia on August 26, 1871, the son of Confederate States Army veteran Thomas M. Rosenbaum and Nannie Virginia (Bane) Rosenbaum. [1] [2] He was raised and educated in Marion, and in 1890 received appointment to the United States Military Academy at West Point from U.S. Representative John A. Buchanan.
Commandants of Marion Military Institute (1 P) F. Marion Tigers football (2 C) P. Presidents of Marion Military Institute (2 P) Pages in category "Marion Military ...
The Marion County Record is a weekly newspaper published in Marion, ... reporting materials, and financial records. Joan Meyer, the 98-year-old co-owner, died the day ...
Houser's grave at the United States Naval Academy Cemetery in Annapolis, Maryland.. Houser was born in Fort Valley, Georgia to Emmett and Mary Mathews Houser. [2] Houser attended the Marion Military Institute, graduating in 1916, [3] before receiving an appointment to the United States Naval Academy on May 26, 1917.
On July 1, 1960, control of the Military Personnel Records Center was transferred to the General Services Administration. The three active-duty military records centers at MPRC—the Air Force Records Center, the Naval Records Management Center, and the Army Records Center—were consolidated into a single civil service-operated records center.