Ohio's agricultural outputs include soybeans, dairy products, corn, tomatoes, hogs, cattle, poultry, and eggs.
Ohio's system of public education is outlined in the state constitution's Article VI and Title XXXIII of the Ohio Revised Code.
When the oversight was discovered in 1953, Ohio's Rep. George H. Bender introduced a bill in Congress to admit Ohio to the Union retroactive to March 1, 1803.
During and following the civil war, Ohio built up their industrial structure, particularly in the northeast section of the state and around Lake Erie.
The 2006 study by Thomas J. Hennen, Jr. ranked Ohio as number one in a state-by-state comparison.
Interstate 75 between Cincinnati & Dayton is one of the heaviest section of traveled interstate in Ohio.
Eight U.S. presidents hailed from Ohio at the time of their elections, giving rise to the nickname "Mother of Presidents," a distinction it shares with Virginia.
Ohio's canal-building projects promoted economic development; some cities, like Dayton, owe their industrial emergence to location on canals.
The airplane was invented in Ohio, as the outcome of brothers Wilbur and Orville Wright's experiments in Dayton.
Ohio also offers the OhioLINK program, allowing Ohio's libraries (particularly those from colleges and universities) access to materials in other libraries.
The largest companies in Ohio are in healthcare, grocery and food products, tire and rubber products, and insurance.
Ohioans who cited American and British ancestry are present throughout the state as well, particularly in the south-central part of the state.
To the north, Lake Erie gives Ohio 312 miles (502 km) of coastline, which allows for numerous ports.
Nevertheless, there are well known Ohio consumer items including some Procter & Gamble products, Smuckers jams and jellies, and Day-Glo paints.
On February 19, 1803, President Jefferson signed an act of Congress approving Ohio's boundaries and constitution.
By the end of the Civil War, three leading Union generals were from Ohio: Grant, Sherman, and Sheridan.
Ohio is a major producer of machines, tires and rubber products, steel, processed foods, tools, and other manufactured goods.
The rugged southeastern quadrant of Ohio, stretching in an outward bow-like arc along the Ohio River from the West Virginia Panhandle to the outskirts of Cincinnati, forms a distinct socio-economic unit.
Under the Jeffersonian principle that laws should be reviewed once a generation, the constitution provided for a recurring question to appear on Ohio's general election ballots every 20 years.
OPLIN also provides Ohioans with free home access to high-quality, subscription research databases.
Ohio has the nation's tenth largest highway network, and is within a one-day drive of 50 percent of North America's population and 70 percent of North America's manufacturing capacity.
The Ohio Board of Regents governs and assists with Ohio's system of higher education, especially public colleges and universities.
The Bureau of Economic Analysis estimates that Ohio's gross state product in 2004 was $419 billion Per capita personal income in 2003 was $30,129, 25th in the nation.
At the same time, six Ohioans sat on the US Supreme Court and two served as Chief Justices….
Ohio is bounded by the Ohio River, but the river itself belongs mostly to Kentucky and West Virginia.
Ohio has many aerospace, defense, and NASA parts and systems suppliers scattered throughout the state as well.
Ohio's neighbors are Pennsylvania to the east, Michigan to the northwest, Ontario, Canada, to the north, Indiana to the west, Kentucky to the south, and West Virginia to the southeast.
At the time of European contact and in the years which followed, Native Americans in present day Ohio include the Iroquois, Miamis, and Wyandots.
Following the Ohio Company, the Miami Company (also referred to as the "Symmes Purchase") claimed the southwestern section and the Connecticut Land Company surveyed and settled the Connecticut Western Reserve in present-day Northeast Ohio.
Ohio's central position and its rapidly growing population gave it an important place during the Civil War.
Many of these Ohio-country nations were multi-ethnic and sometimes multi-linguistic societies emerging from the earlier devastation brought about by disease and subsequent social instability.
Ohio's borders were defined by metes and bounds in the Enabling Act of 1802.
Ohio's geographic location has proved to be an asset for economic growth and expansion.
Prior to 1984, the United States Census Bureau considered Ohio part of the North Central Region.
Ohio is recognized for its health care, due to several flagship hospitals that operate in the northeast region of the state.
On August 7, 1953, (the year of Ohio's 150th anniversary), President Eisenhower signed an act officially declaring Ohio's admittance into the Union.
Ohio has a Department of Education, a State Board of Education, and then nearly 700 districts that have their own boards of education and administrations.
The worst weather disaster in Ohio history occurred along the Great Miami River in 1913.
Ohio also contributed more soldiers per-capita than any other state in the Union.
In 1835, the Great Moon Hoax fooled some people into thinking that exotic animals lived on the Moon.
Ohio's demographics cause many to consider the state as a microcosm of the nation as a whole.
Between the Civil War and 1920, seven Ohioans were elected to the presidency, ending with Harding's election in 1920.
German is the largest reported ancestry in most of the counties in Ohio, especially in the northwest.
The history of human habitation in the area that eventually became Ohio can be traced back more than 10,000 years from evidence of flint tools known as Clovis points.
At a special session at the old state capital in Chillicothe, the Ohio state legislature approved a new petition for statehood that was delivered to Washington, DC on horseback.
Southwestern Ohio, especially the suburbs of Cincinnati, Warren County, Butler County, and Clermont County is particularly Republican.
Most of Ohio is of low relief, but the unglaciated Allegheny Plateau features rugged hills and forests.
Settlement began with the founding of Marietta by the Ohio Company of Associates, which had been formed by a group of American Revolutionary War veterans.
The Ohlone or Costanoan people tell stories of hummingbirds and coyotes (Kroeber 1907) .
Ohio was a deciding state in the 2004 presidential election between George W. Bush and John Kerry.
The old Northwest Territory originally included areas that had previously been known as Ohio Country and Illinois Country.
Ohio was the first state admitted to the Union under the Northwest Ordinance.
Much of Ohio features glaciated plains, with an exceptionally flat area in the northwest known as the Great Black Swamp.
Part of the Great Lakes region, Ohio has long been a cultural and geographical crossroads.
During the Vietnam War, anti-war protests throughout America in the 1970s also hit Ohio, particularly Kent State University near Akron.
Ohio's demographics cause many to consider the state as a microcosm of the nation as a whole.
Interstate 75 between Cincinnati & Dayton is one of the heaviest section of traveled interstate in Ohio.
On April 7, 1788, Ebenezer Sproat and a group of American pioneers to the Northwest Territory, led by Rufus Putnam, arrived at the confluence of the Ohio and Muskingum rivers to establish Marietta, Ohio as the first permanent American settlement in the Northwest Territory. Marietta was founded by New Englanders.
However, Ohio also claims eight presidents with deep roots in the Buckeye State: William Henry Harrison, Ulysses Grant, Rutherford Hayes, James Garfield, Benjamin Harrison, William McKinley, William Taft and Warren Harding.Sep 10, 2014
Ohio has a strong manufacturing base, but it's also a leader in the production of soybeans, its largest crop, and corn. Greenhouse and nursery products comprise about 11% of Ohio's total agricultural receipts. Other field crops are wheat, hay, oats, and popcorn, much of it for livestock feed.
Lying in the humid continental zone, Ohio has a generally temperate climate. Winters are cold and summers mild in the eastern highlands. The southern region has the warmest temperatures and longest growing season—198 days on the average, compared with 150 to 178 days in the remainder of the state.
The coldest nights of winter at Cleveland drop down to 0 °F (-18 °C) or below. Just three nights a year on average does the city get that chilly. From November to March, Cleveland can remain below freezing all day long. The city typically has 36 days a year when the temperature never rises above 32 °F.
Totals and averagesAnnual high temperature:62.5°FAnnual low temperature:43.3°FAverage temperature:52.9°FAverage annual precipitation - rainfall:56.11 inchDays per year with precipitation - rainfall:133 days2 more rows
Precipitation in Ohio varies greatly from area to area. The general trend is for precipitation to be greatest in the south and east, diminishing in amount toward the northwest. Based on the 50-year period 1931-80, Ohio averages 37.57 inches of precipitation annually.