Discover Our Shared Heritage Travel Itinerary Civil War Era National Cemeteries: Honoring Those Who Served |
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Marion, Indiana |
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Located on the grounds of the former Marion Branch of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers—now the VA Northern Indiana Health Care System – Marion Campus—Marion National Cemetery is the final resting place for more than 8,000 soldiers, including veterans of every major conflict from the Civil War to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The cemetery contains 12 burial sections and features several monuments, including one that honors the sailors who died aboard the U.S.S. Maine in 1898.
In 1888, Colonel George W. Steele, a United States congressman from Indiana, worked to establish a new branch of the National Home to serve Midwestern veterans. A site three miles south of Marion was selected in part because of the readily available supply of natural gas in the area. The National Home opened in 1890 on a 31-acre site that featured a picturesque landscape designed to conform to the natural topography. In 1920, the National Home became the Marion Sanatorium, a neuropsychiatric institution that primarily served World War I veterans, and in 1930, the Veterans Administration took over the facility. In order to provide a burial place for residents when they died, the National Home established a cemetery at the east corner of the campus. The first burials occurred in May 1890, just months after the opening of the home. The oldest section, Section 1 at the south end of the cemetery, is laid out in concentric rows of graves, while the graves in the newer sections to the north are arranged in straight lines running north and south. Today the cemetery covers more than 61 acres. The cemetery office and flagpole are at the northeast corner of the site, and a committal service shelter can be found near Section 9. The office, which dates to 1905, was originally a barn for the National Home, and the cupola, hoist beam, and the hayloft door are still visible.
Marion National Cemetery is the final resting place for recipients of the Medal of Honor, the nation’s highest military decoration, given for “conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty.”
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