Marion Station, Maryland

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Marion Station, Maryland
Marion
Marion Station Maryland MD 667.jpg
View looking west on Crisfield-Marion Road
USA Maryland location map.svg
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Marion Station
Usa edcp location map.svg
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Marion Station
Coordinates: 38°2′21″N75°46′15″W / 38.03917°N 75.77083°W / 38.03917; -75.77083
Country Flag of the United States.svg United States
State Flag of Maryland.svg  Maryland
County Flag of Somerset County, Maryland.svg Somerset
Elevation
2 m (7 ft)
Time zone UTC-5 (Eastern (EST))
  Summer (DST) UTC-4 (EDT)
ZIP code
21838
Area code(s) 410 & 443
GNIS feature ID590741 [1]

Marion Station, also known as Marion, is an unincorporated community in Somerset County, Maryland, United States. [1] It is located at the northern intersection of Maryland routes 413 and 667. After the arrival of the Pennsylvania Railroad arm known as the "Eastern Shore Railroad" toward Crisfield in 1866, Marion was locally hailed as the "strawberry capital of the world". After the trains stopped coming it went into decline, with some sources even hailing it as a ghost town. [2]

Contents

History

Marion Station was once known as Coulbourne Creek until the Pennsylvania Railroad line known as the Crisfield Secondary Branch of the Eastern Shore Railroad reached Crisfield. A train station was built in the town thanks to John C. Horsey, who paid for the right-of-way for the train and the station house. The town was then renamed Marion; the name was taken from Horsey's daughter. Because of the railroad, Marion Station experienced an economic boom, and became the world's leader in strawberry production, utilizing the railroad to ship strawberries across the country. Large trains came to Marion's train station every day to collect strawberries, pulling loaded ice-refrigeration cars out to sell them in large cities. [2] [3] The town saw the construction of several businesses along its Main Street (now Maryland Route 667) corridor: a movie house, grocery store, blacksmith shop, and pharmacy, including a primary school, and several churches. [4] A garage was also built, as was a bar and a volunteer fire department. Marion Station also possessed the first hospital ever built in Somerset County, [4] and the town grew to the point where it needed its own police force. [2]

After several decades, however, the town began to slip into decline. This occurred in the 1950s, when the trains stopped coming to Marion for strawberries. [2] The railroad line was officially abandoned on April 1, 1976 when Conrail was established, [5] and the steel rails were removed from the railroad bed later; however, the railroad was supplanted earlier by the construction of Maryland Route 413's current alignment. Many of the old buildings have been torn down or are now vacant. [4] The train station still stands in the town. In 1997, a revitalization project began to restore the building. It was reopened in the early 2000s as the new Accohannock Indian Museum, containing various relics from the time when Marion Station was a bustling city. [3] The fire department was moved across MD 667 to where it currently stands; the old building is now a flea market. The former pharmacy is located on the short stub of Charles Cannon Road between MD 413 and 667, and has been boarded up for decades. Even the two gas stations located in the town have both closed; the last one closed in the early 2000s.

The train station building, which is now the Accohannock Indian Museum. Train Station Marion Maryland.jpg
The train station building, which is now the Accohannock Indian Museum.

The lack of trains coming for the strawberries prompted the collapse of Marion's strawberry industry. The fields are now dominated by other food crops, such as soybeans and corn; other fields remain completely vacant, such as the field directly east of the center of the community (between Hudson's Corner Road and Tulls Corner Road). Additionally, Marion Station is home to a very large organic vegetable farm, which was started by sociologists from New Jersey. [2] In the 2000s, housing development began to arise in Marion Station, along the Charles Cannon Road corridor west of the community, making the community a retirement destination.

The Lankford House, Pomfret Plantation, Quindocqua United Methodist Church, Watkins Point Farm, and Williams' Conquest are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. [6]

Education

Marion Sarah Peyton School, as of November 2012 Marion Sarah Peyton School in Maryland.jpg
Marion Sarah Peyton School, as of November 2012

The building for Marion Sarah Peyton and Elementary School is located on MD 667: Hudson Corner Road, and once served grades 35 for the southern half of Somerset County. After the consolidation of schools which occurred in 2004, however, those grades were moved to Crisfield, and the school closed down. It was reopened in 2007 for adult GED classes. Living Hope Christian School is currently the only school in Marion Station. It is a recently added school opened in 2020 and located on the corner of Hollands Crossing and Crisfield Marion Road.

Transportation

Main roads

Maryland Route 667 is the main road of the community, housing most of the important facilities in years past and today, such as the volunteer fire department, the train station, the school, and the post office. The road crosses Tulls Corner and Charles Cannon Road; MD 667 is also known as Hudson Corner Road north of and CrisfieldMarion Road south of this intersection. At the turn of the 20th century, CrisfieldMarion Road was known as Main Street. MD 667 also links the town to Pocomoke and U.S. Route 13 southbound to Virginia. The speed limit on the road in town is 30 mph.

Tulls Corner Road leads east out of the town, to the ghost town of Tulls Corner. It passes by a facility for the elderly. Between this facility and Marion, the road was Maryland Route 357 until the early 1990s. [7] Charles Cannon Road is a continuation of Tulls Corner Road after it intersects both MD 413 and MD 667, and eventually leads north to Kingston, also granting access to the boat dock. A small portion of this road, between MD 413 and the subtransmission power line crossing, was also MD 357. Both Tulls Corner Road and Charles Cannon Road largely serve residences in the community.

Also important to the community is Maryland Route 413, the main highway between Crisfield and points north on US 13. It is paralleled closely by MD 667 through the community and carries a speed limit of 55 miles per hour (89 km/h).

The Big Annemessex River passes by the town, with a small local arm known as Coulbourne's Creek. The convergence of these two bodies of water is accessible by Coulbourne Creek Road, off Charles Cannon Road, where a public boat dock is located. The activity in Marion was centered around this area before the economic boom brought about by the Eastern Shore Railroad and the shift to strawberry farming.

Public transportation

Shore Transit has two routes which serve the community: Route 706 North and Route 706 South. The bus is accessible from two stops within the area: Marion Volunteer Fire Department and the former Marion Sarah Peyton Elementary School, and both operate along the MD 667 corridor within the business area before returning to MD 413.

See also

Related Research Articles

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">U.S. Route 13 in Maryland</span> U.S. Highway in Maryland

U.S. Route 13 (US 13) is a United States Numbered Highway running from Fayetteville, North Carolina, north to Morrisville, Pennsylvania. In the U.S. state of Maryland, the route runs 42.48 miles (68.36 km) from the Virginia border south of Pocomoke City in Worcester County north to the Delaware border in Delmar, Wicomico County, where the route intersects Maryland Route 54 (MD 54)/Delaware Route 54 (DE 54), which runs along the state line. The majority of the route within Maryland is a four-lane divided highway that passes through rural areas of woodland and farmland. The route also runs through a few municipalities including Pocomoke City and Princess Anne and it bypasses Fruitland and Salisbury to the east on the Salisbury Bypass, which is a freeway. US 13 intersects many major roads including the southern terminus of US 113 in Pocomoke City, MD 413 in Westover, and MD 12 and US 50 where the route is on the Salisbury Bypass. The route shares a concurrency with US 50 along a portion of the Salisbury Bypass.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Maryland Route 361</span>

Maryland Route 361 is a state highway in the U.S. state of Maryland. Known as Fairmount Road, the state highway runs 5.62 miles (9.04 km) from the beginning of state maintenance in Upper Fairmount east to MD 413 in Westover. MD 361 provides access to the villages of Manokin and Upper Fairmount. The state highway was constructed from the Westover end beginning in 1926. MD 361 was completed west through Upper Fairmount in the early 1930s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Maryland Route 358</span>

Maryland Route 358 is a state highway located in Somerset County in the U.S. state of Maryland. Known as Jacksonville Road, the state highway runs 1.13 miles (1.82 km) from MD 413 in Crisfield north to the end of state maintenance near Alfred J. Lawson Road. MD 358 connects Crisfield with Janes Island State Park and Crisfield Municipal Airport. MD 358 was constructed on the south side of Crisfield in the mid-1920s. What is now MD 358 north of MD 413 was originally MD 475, which was built in the early 1930s. MD 358 was extended north through Crisfield in the 1940s, taking over MD 475. The portion of MD 358 south of MD 413 was later returned to the city of Crisfield and Somerset County.

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Tulls Corner is an unincorporated community in Somerset County, Maryland, United States. Tulls Corner is at the intersection of Tulls Corner Road and L.Q. Powell Road, south-southeast of Marion Station.

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References

  1. 1 2 "Marion Station". Geographic Names Information System . United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Johnson, Kelcey. "Marion - Ghost Town" . Retrieved February 26, 2010.
  3. 1 2 "Marion, Strawberry Capitol (sic) of the World" . Retrieved February 26, 2010.
  4. 1 2 3 "A Short History of Marion Station, Maryland" . Retrieved February 12, 2009.
  5. "PRR CHRONOLOGY 1976" (PDF). The Pennsylvania Railroad Technical & Historical Society. November 2005. Retrieved March 25, 2009.
  6. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places . National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  7. MD Roads: Routes 340-359. 02/12/2009.

38°2′20″N75°46′15″W / 38.03889°N 75.77083°W / 38.03889; -75.77083