Special Weather Statement issued December 4 at 3:18PM EST by NWS Wilmington OH (details ...)
A cold front moves through tonight bringing the potential for snow showers. While accumulations will generally be less than an inch, quick bursts of snow will lead to reductions in visibility. In addition, rapidly falling temperatures will lead to the potential for slick spots on surfaces. Wind gusts from 30 to 40 mph are expected tonight, with localized gusts to 50 mph possible. These winds may blow around loose or light weight objects such as decorations, in particular inflatable decorations. Cold conditions are expected Thursday morning with wind chill values between -5 and 5 degrees.
Special Weather Statement issued December 4 at 5:17AM EST by NWS Wilmington OH (details ...)
Wind gusts of 40 MPH are possible from this afternoon through Thursday afternoon. Some locally higher gusts of 45 to 50 mph will be possible this evening. These winds may blow around loose or light weight objects such as decorations, in particular inflatable decorations.
A cold front moves through this evening bringing the potential for snow showers. While accumulations will generally be less than an inch, quick bursts of snow will lead to reductions in visibility. In addition, quickly falling temperatures will lead to the potential for slick spots on surfaces. Cold conditions are expected Thursday morning with wind chill values between -5 and 5 degrees.
Today 39° Today 39° chance 15° 15° Tomorrow 27° Tomorrow 27° chance 17° 17° chance
Wednesday, December 2nd

Judge says no to digging up remains of President Harding

This July 1920 file photo shows six thousand people gathering to hear Sen. Warren G. Harding, R-OH, speak from the porch of his home in Marion, Ohio. The centennial of President Warren G. Harding's election was marked Monday in his home county in Ohio with a modest radio tribute rather than the grand museum and homestead re-opening envisioned before the pandemic. Harding, a Republican, was elected Nov. 2, 1920, his 55th birthday, succeeding Democrat Woodrow Wilson. He beat a fellow Ohio newspaper publisher, James Cox, on a platform of restoring normalcy after World War I and the 1918 influenza pandemic. (AP Photo, File)

MARION, Ohio (AP) - U.S. President Warren G. Harding's remains will stay right where they have lain since 1927 after a judge rejected a request to exhume them.

The grandson of the nation's 29th president and his lover, Nan Britton, went to court in an effort to get the Republican's remains dug up from his presidential memorial in Marion, the Ohio city near where Harding was born in 1865.

James Blaesing said he was seeking Harding's disinterment as a way "to establish with scientific certainty" that he is Harding's blood relation.

A branch of the Harding family pushed back against the suit filed in May because they already don't dispute Blaesing's ancestry.

They said they already have accepted as fact DNA evidence that Blaesing's mother, Elizabeth Ann Blaesing, was the daughter of Harding and Britton and that she is set to be acknowledged in the museum. Harding had no other children.

This July 4, 1923 file photo shows the 29th President of the United States, Warren G. Harding, and his wife, first lady Florence Kling Harding. The centennial of President Warren G. Harding's election was marked Monday in his home county in Ohio with a modest radio tribute rather than the grand museum and homestead re-opening envisioned before the pandemic. Harding, a Republican, was elected Nov. 2, 1920, his 55th birthday, succeeding Democrat Woodrow Wilson. He beat a fellow Ohio newspaper publisher, James Cox, on a platform of restoring normalcy after World War I and the 1918 influenza pandemic. (AP Photo, File)

Marion County Family Court Judge Robert Fragale denied Blaesing's request in early November, saying there was no good reason to exhume the remains.

Doing so would only "create an unnecessary destruction of the memorial and grounds established to preserve the late President and his historical recognition," the judge said.

In 2015, a match between James Blaesing's DNA and that of two Harding descendants prompted AncestryDNA, a DNA-testing division of Ancestry.com, to declare his link to the president official.

At the time, Blaesing told The Associated Press he was delighted. Five years later, he told the AP his mother's legacy as the daughter of a U.S. president is shaping up to be little more than a footnote in the new museum and that he had not been approached to provide details of her life or even a photograph for the coming display.

This 1918 file photo shows President Warren G. Harding delivering an address in St. Louis, Mo. The centennial of President Warren G. Harding's election was marked Monday in his home county in Ohio with a modest radio tribute rather than the grand museum and homestead re-opening envisioned before the pandemic. Harding, a Republican, was elected Nov. 2, 1920, his 55th birthday, succeeding Democrat Woodrow Wilson. He beat a fellow Ohio newspaper publisher, James Cox, on a platform of restoring normalcy after World War I and the 1918 influenza pandemic. (AP Photo, File)