Southwest Missouri
Carthage park signs carry the old marble story
Carthage's city park signage project uses remaining Carthage Marble pieces to keep a local stone and building-material story visible.
Carthage has a local stone story that still shows up in public space. A city parks article explains that Carthage Marble was locally quarried limestone that could be polished like marble and was used as a building material in the late 1800s and early to mid-1900s.
The same city source says the marble is no longer quarried or used as a building material, and that remaining pieces were being turned into customized signs for city parks.
That is good Jasper County color because it connects geology, building history, the courthouse-town image, and current city parks without making an unsupported claim. A local reader who wants the official version should start with the City of Carthage article.
References
Where this fits: this note belongs to Jasper County. See every local note for the county on its page.