William E. Clark, one of Marion's old residents, died last evening at his home on the south-west corner of Canal and Main Streets, in this city. The Judge, as he is more familiarly known, had been afflicted with asthma and dropsy for the past six months and his death was not unexpected by those who had watched the once large man gradually waste away until at the time of his death he was nearly a skeleton. He was a man well-known here about, having once been a county officer and always a congenial citizen. He had resided in this county for almost fifty years and resided in Marion twenty years of that time. A devoted wife, with whom he had been married forty-seven years, and grown up family mourn his loss, besides his many friends. He was sixty years of age. Funeral will occur Monday afternoon.
William E. Clark, one of Marion's old residents, died last evening at his home on the south-west corner of Canal and Main Streets, in this city. The Judge, as he is more familiarly known, had been afflicted with asthma and dropsy for the past six months and his death was not unexpected by those who had watched the once large man gradually waste away until at the time of his death he was nearly a skeleton. He was a man well-known here about, having once been a county officer and always a congenial citizen. He had resided in this county for almost fifty years and resided in Marion twenty years of that time. A devoted wife, with whom he had been married forty-seven years, and grown up family mourn his loss, besides his many friends. He was sixty years of age. Funeral will occur Monday afternoon.
Inscription
NO STONE
Gravesite Details
Cemetery office confirmed that this burial is unmarked
Family Members
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