| Ohio State Guide
Ohio is a Midwestern state of the United States. Part
of the Great Lakes region, Ohio is a cultural and geographical
crossroads, which was settled by people from New England, the Middle
States, Appalachia,
and the upper south. "This slice of the mid-west contains a bit
of everything American—part north-eastern and part southern, part
urban and part rural, part hardscrabble poverty and part booming
suburb," notes
The Economist. Prior to 1984, the United States Census Bureau
considered Ohio part of the North Central Region. That region
concept was renamed "Midwest" and
split into two divisions. Ohio is now in the East North Central
States division.
Ohio was the first state admitted to the Union under the Northwest Ordinance.
Its U.S. postal abbreviation is OH; its old-style abbreviation is O.
Ohio is an Iroquoian word meaning "good river." The name refers
to the Ohio River that forms its southern border.
The United States Navy has named several ships USS Ohio in honor of
this state.
Ohio State Guide - History
Native Americans
After the so-called Beaver Wars, the powerful Iroquois confederation
of the New York-area claimed much of the Ohio country as a hunting and,
probably most importantly, a beaver-trapping ground. After the devastation
of epidemics and war in the mid-1600s, which had largely emptied the
Ohio country of indigenous people by the mid-to-late seventeenth century,
the land gradually became repopulated by the mostly Algonquian-speaking
descendants of its ancient inhabitants, that is, descendants of the Adena,
Hopewell, and Mississippian cultures. Many of these Ohio-country nations
were multi-ethnic and sometimes mulit-linguistic societies born out of
the earlier devastation brought about by disease, subsequent social instability,
and the powerful Iroquois. They subsisted on agriculture (corn, sunflowers,
beans, etc.) supplemented by seasonal hunts. By the 1650s they were very
much part of a larger global economy brought about by fur trade.
The indigenous nations to inhabit Ohio in the historical period (most
clearly after 1700), included the Miamis (a large confederation), Wyandots
(made up of refugees, especially from the fractured Huron confederacy),
Delawares (pushed west from their historic homeland in New Jersey), Shawnees
(also pushed west, although they may be descended from the Fort Ancient
people of Ohio), Ottawas (more commonly associated with the upper Great
Lakes region), Mingos (like the Wyandot, a recently-formed composite
of refugees from Iroquois and other societies) and Eries (gradually absorbed
into the new, multi-ethnic "republics," namely the Wyandot).
Colonial and Revolutionary Eras
During the 18th century, the French set up a system of trading posts
to control the fur trade in the region.
In 1754, France and Great Britain fought a war known in the United States
as the French and Indian War. As a result of the Treaty of Paris, the
French ceded control of Ohio and the rest of the Old Northwest to Great
Britain. Pontiac's Rebellion in the 1760s challenged British military
control, which ended with the American victory in the American Revolution.
In the Treaty of Paris in 1783 Britain ceded all claims to Ohio to the
United States.
Northwest Territory: 1787-1803
The United States created the Northwest Territory under the Northwest
Ordinance of 1787. Slavery was not permitted. 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. 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. The old Northwest Territory originally included
areas that had previously been known as Ohio Country and Illinois Country.
As Ohio prepared for statehood, Indiana Territory was created, reducing
the Northwest Territory to approximately the size of present-day Ohio
plus the eastern half of the Lower Peninsula of Michigan and the eastern
tip of the Upper Peninsula.
Under the Northwest Ordinance, any of the states to be formed out of
the Northwest Territory would be admitted as a state once the population
exceeded 60,000. Although Ohio's population numbered only 45,000 in December
1801, Congress determined that the population was growing rapidly and
Ohio could begin the path to statehood with the assumption that it would
exceed 60,000 residents by the time it would become a state. On February
19, 1803, President Jefferson signed an act of Congress that approved
Ohio's boundaries and constitution. However, Congress never passed a
resolution formally admitting Ohio as the 17th state. The current custom
of Congress declaring an official date of statehood did not begin until
1812, with Louisiana's admission as the 18th state. Although no formal
resolution of admission was required, when the oversight was discovered
in 1953, Ohio congressman George H. Bender introduced a bill in Congress
to admit Ohio to the Union retroactive to March 1, 1803. 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,
D.C. on horseback. On August 7, 1953 (the year of Ohio's 150th anniversary),
President Eisenhower signed an act that officially declared March 1,
1803 the date of Ohio's admittance into the Union.
Statehood: 1803 - present
Eight U.S. presidents hailed from Ohio at the time of their elections,
giving rise to the nickname "Mother of Presidents". In comparison,
the State of Virginia is similarly known as the "Birthplace of Presidents" with
eight U.S. presidents born there. While Ohio is only second as the birthplace
of U.S. presidents (with seven), William Henry Harrison (born in Virginia)
and his grandson, Benjamin Harrison, (who also lived part of his adult
life in Indiana) settled in, led their political careers from and/or
were buried in North Bend, Ohio on the family compound, founded by William's
father-in-law John Cleves Symmes.
In 1835, Ohio fought a mostly bloodless boundary war with Michigan over
the Toledo Strip known as the Toledo War. Congress intervened and, as
a condition for admittance as a state of the Union, Michigan was forced
to accept the western two-thirds of the Upper Peninsula, in addition
to the eastern third that was already part of the state, in exchange
for giving up its claim to the Toledo Strip. (A war between two states
may be unusual, but the Toledo War is not unique; Pennsylvania and Maryland
fought Cresap's War over a border dispute a century earlier.)
Ohio's central position and its population gave it an important place
during the Civil War, and the Ohio River was a vital artery for troop
and supply movements, as were Ohio's railroads.
In 1912 a Constitutional Convention was held with Charles B. Galbreath
as Secretary. The result reflected the concerns of the Progressive Era.
It introduced the initiative and the referendum, allowed the General
Assembly to put questions on the ballot for the people to ratify laws
and constitutional amendments originating in the Legislature as well.
Under the Jeffersonian principle that laws should be reviewed once a
generation, the constituation provided for a recurring question to appear
on Ohio's general election ballots every 20 years. The question asks
whether a new convention is required. Although the question has appeared
in 1932, 1952, 1972, and 1992, it has never been approved. Instead constitutional
amendments have been proposed by petition and the legislature hundreds
of times and adopted in a majority of cases.
Ohio State Guide - Law and Government
Ohio's capital is Columbus, located close to the center
of the state. Bob Taft is the Governor until January 2007, when Ted Strickland
is set to take office. Ohio has 18 seats in the United States House of
Representatives.
Ohio State Guide - Geography
Ohio's geographic location has proved to be an asset
for economic growth and expansion. Because Ohio links the Northeast to
the Midwest, much cargo and business traffic passes through its borders
on its well-developed highways. Ohio has the nation's 10th largest highway
network, and is within a one-day drive of 50% of North America's population
and 70% of North America's manufacturing capacity. To the North, Lake
Erie gives Ohio 312 miles (502 km) of coastline, which allows for numerous
seaports. Ohio's southern border is defined by the Ohio River (with the
border being at the 1793 low-water mark on the north side of the river),
and much of the northern border is defined by Lake Erie. It borders Pennsylvania
on the east, Michigan in the northwest near Toledo, Ontario, Canada across
Lake Erie to the north, Indiana to the west, Kentucky on the south, and
West Virginia on the southeast.
Ohio's borders were defined by metes and bounds in the Enabling Act of
1802 as follows:
"
Bounded on the east by the Pennsylvania line, on the south by
the Ohio River, to the mouth of the Great Miami River, on the
west by the line drawn due north from the mouth of the Great
Miami aforesaid, and on the north by an east and west line drawn
through the southerly extreme of Lake Michigan, running east
after intersecting the due north line aforesaid, from the mouth
of the Great Miami until it shall intersect Lake Erie or the
territorial line, and thence with the same through Lake Erie
to the Pennsylvania line aforesaid."
Note that Ohio is bounded by the Ohio River, but the river itself belongs
mostly to Kentucky and West Virginia. The border with Michigan, has also
changed, as a result of the Toledo War, to angle slightly northeast to the
north shore of the mouth of the Maumee River.
Much of Ohio features glaciated plains, with an exceptionally flat area
in the northwest being known as the Great Black Swamp. This glaciated region
in the northwest and central state is bordered to the east and southeast
first by a belt known as the glaciated Allegheny Plateau, and then by another
belt known as the unglaciated Allegheny Plateau. Most of Ohio is of low
relief, but the unglaciated Allegheny Plateau features rugged hills and
forests.
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. Known somewhat erroneously
as Ohio's "Appalachian Counties" (they are actually in the Allegheny
Plateau), this area's coal mining legacy, dependence on small pockets of
old manufacturing establishments, and even distinctive regional dialect
set this section off from the rest of the state and, unfortunately, create
a limited opportunity to participate in the generally high economic standards
of Ohio.
Significant rivers within the state include the Cuyahoga River, Great Miami
River, Maumee River, Muskingum River, and Scioto River. The rivers in the
northern part of the state drain into the northern Atlantic Ocean via Lake
Erie and the St. Lawrence River, and the rivers in the southern part of
the state drain into the Gulf of Mexico via the Ohio and then the Mississippi.
Grand Lake St. Marys in the west central part of the state was constructed
as a supply of water for canals in the canal-building era of 1820–1850.
For many years this body of water, over 20 square miles (52 km²), was
the largest artificial lake in the world. It should be noted that Ohio's
canal-building projects were not the economic fiasco that similar efforts
were in other states. Some cities, such as Dayton, owe their industrial
emergence to location on canals, and as late as 1910 interior canals carried
much of the bulk freight of the state.
Ohio State Guide - Climate
The climate of all of Ohio is a humid continental climate,
although in the extreme southern counties along the Ohio River where
the climate begins to border on the humid subtropical climate of the
Southeastern United States. Evidencing this change, several plants such
as the Southern magnolia, Albizia julibrissin(mimosa), Crape Myrtle,
and even the occasional Needle Palm are hardy landscape materials regularly
used as street, yard, and garden plantings in the Bluegrass section of
Ohio; but, these same plants will simply not thrive in much of the rest
of the State. This intersting change may be observed while traveling
through Ohio on Interstate 75 from Cincinnati to Toledo; the observant
traveler of this diverse state may even catch a glimpse of Cincinnati's
common wall lizard, one of the few examples of permanent "subtropical" fauna
in Ohio.
The highest recorded temperature was 113 °F (45 °C), near Gallipolis
on July 21, 1934. The lowest recorded temperature was -39 °F (-39 °C),
at Milligan on February 10, 1899.
Ohio State Guide - Important Cities
Below are the 2003 population estimates for the nine
largest cities in Ohio and the 2000 Census figures for their accompanying
metropolitan areas:
* Akron city 212,215, metropolitan area 694,960
* Canton city 79,255, metropolitan area 406,934
* Cincinnati city 317,361, metropolitan area 2,009,632
* Cleveland city 461,324, metropolitan area 2,148,143
* Columbus city 728,432, metropolitan area 1,612,694
* Dayton city 161,696, metropolitan area 848,153
* Springfield city 64,483, metropolitan area 144,742
* Toledo city 308,973, metropolitan area 659,188
* Youngstown city 79,271, metropolitan area 602,964
Ohio State Guide - Economy
Ohio is a major producer of machines, tires and rubber
products, steel, processed foods, tools, and other manufactured goods.
This is not immediately obvious because Ohio specializes in capital goods
(goods used to make other goods, such as machine tools, automobile parts,
industrial chemicals, and plastic moldings). Nevertheless, there are
well known Ohio consumer items including some Procter & Gamble products,
Smuckers jams and jellies, and Day-Glo paints.
Ohio is the site of the invention of the airplane, resulting from the
experiments of the Wright brothers in Dayton. Production of aircraft
in the USA is now centered elsewhere, but a large experimental and design
facility, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base has been located near Dayton
and serves in the co-ordination of production of US military aircraft.
On the base are located Wright Hill and Huffman Prairie, where many of
the earliest aerodynamic experiments of the Wright brothers were performed.
Ohio today also has many aerospace, defense, and NASA parts and systems
suppliers scattered throughout the state.
As part of the Corn Belt, agriculture also plays an important role in
the state's economy. There is also a small commercial fishing sector
on Lake Erie, and the principal catch is yellow perch. In addition, Ohio's
historical attractions, varying landscapes, and recreational opportunities
are the basis for a thriving tourist industry. Over 2,500 lakes and 43,000
miles (70,000 km) of river landscapes are a paradise for boaters, fishermen,
and swimmers. Three major amusement parks, Cedar Point, Geauga Lake,
and Paramount's Kings Island, are also important to the tourism industry.
Of special historical interest are the Native American archaeological
sites—including grave mounds and other sites.
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. Ohio's agricultural outputs are
soybeans, dairy products,
corn, tomatoes, hogs, cattle, poultry and eggs. Its industrial
outputs are transportation equipment, fabricated metal products,
machinery, food
processing, and electricity equipment.
Ohio State Guide - Demographics
As of 2005, Ohio has an estimated population of 11,464,042,
which is an increase of 13,899, or 0.1%, from the prior year and an increase
of 110,897 since the year 2000. This includes a natural increase since
the last census of 217,877 people (that is 789,312 births minus 571,435
deaths) and an increase from net migration of 66,000 (from other U.S.
states). Immigration from outside the United States contributed of a
growth of 200,000 people, most coming from Asia, yet migration of native
Ohioans within the country resulted in a decrease of 74,000 people. Although
Ohio grows slowly, it grows faster than states such as New York or Michigan.
Ohio has witnessed an increase in the Laotian American and Thai American
populations, as well as Asian Indians and Latin Americans. This growth
is projected to help Ohio's population increase again.
The center of population of Ohio is also located in Morrow County, in
the county seat of Mount Gilead.
As of 2004, Ohio's population included about 390,000 foreign-born
(3.4%).
The largest ancestry groups in Ohio are German (25.2%), Irish (12.7%),
African American (11.5%), English (9.2%), American (8.5%), and Italian
(6.0%).
German is the largest reported ancestry in most of the counties in Ohio,
especially in the northwest. Ohioans who cited American and British ancestry
are present throughout the state as well, particularly in the south-central
part of the state. The cities of Cleveland and Cincinnati contain large
black communities. The cities of Cleveland and Toledo have sizeable Hispanic
populations, while the Cleveland and Columbus areas have the largest
Asian populations. Greater Cleveland is home to a notably large Jewish
community. Other Ohio cities, such as Cincinnati, also have sizable Jewish
populations.
6.6% of Ohio's population were reported as under 5, 25.4% under 18,
and 13.3% were 65 or older. Females made up approximately 51.4% of the
population.
Ohio State Guide - Political Demographics and History
Politically, Ohio is considered a swing state. The mixture
of urban and rural areas, and the presence of both large blue-collar
industries and significant white-collar commercial districts leads
to a balance of conservative and liberal population that (together
with the state's 20 electoral votes, more than most swing states)
makes the
state very important to the outcome of national elections. Ohio
was a deciding state in the 2004 presidential election between
George
W. Bush
and John Kerry. Bush narrowly won the state's 20 electoral votes
by a margin of 2 percentage points and 50.8% of the vote. The state
supported Democrat Bill Clinton in 1992 and 1996, but supported
Republican George W. Bush in 2000 and 2004. Ohio was
also a deciding
factor in the 1948 presidential election when Democrat Harry S.
Truman defeated Republican Thomas Dewey (who had won the state
four years
earlier)
and in the 1976 presidential election when Democrat Jimmy Carter
defeated Republican Gerald Ford by a slim margin in Ohio and took
the election.
Ohio's demographics cause many to consider the state as a microcosm
of the nation as a whole. A Republican presidential candidate has never
won the White House without winning Ohio, and Ohio has gone to the winner
of the election in all but two contests since 1892, backing only losers
Thomas E. Dewey in 1944 (Ohio's John Bricker was his running mate) and
Richard M. Nixon in 1960. Consequently, the state is very important to
the campaigns of both major parties. Ohio had 20 electoral votes in the
Electoral College in 2004.
The most solidly Democratic areas of the state are in the northeast,
including Cleveland, Youngstown, and other industrial areas. Specifically,
the core of this region includes eight counties stretching east along
Lake Erie from Erie County to the Pennsylvania border and south to Mahoning
County. Southwestern Ohio, especially the suburbs of Cincinnati, Warren
County, Butler County, and Clermont County is particularly Republican.
Ohio is known as the "Modern Mother of Presidents," having
sent eight of its native sons to the White House. Seven of them were
Republicans, and the other was a member of the Whig Party.
"Ohio has excelled as a recruiting-ground for national political
leaders. Between the Civil War and 1920, seven Ohioans were elected to
the presidency, ending with Harding's election in 1920. At the same time,
six Ohioans sat on the US Supreme Court and two served as Chief Justices....'Not
since the Virginia dynasty dominated national government during the early
years of the Republic' notes historian R. Douglas Hurt, 'had a state
made such a mark on national political affairs.'
Ohioans dominated national politics for seventy years, because Ohio
was to a large extent a microcosm of the nation. Hurt writes that the
elements of that microcosm were 'the diversity of the people, the strength
of the industrial and agricultural economy, and the balance between rural
and urban populations.' He continues: 'The individuals who played major
roles in national affairs appealed to broad national constituencies because
they learned their skills in Ohio, where political success required candidates
to reconcile wide differences among the voters. Ohioans were northerners
and southerners as well as easterners and westerners. Consequently, Ohio's
politicians addressed constituencies that were the same as those across
the nation.' Finally, the pragmatic and centrist character of Ohio politics,
Hurt asserts, has made it 'job-oriented rather than issue oriented.
Ohio State Guide - Colleges and Universities
Ohio's system of public education is outlined in the
state constitution's Article VI and Ohio's Revised Code Title XXXIII.
Ohio's system is substantially similar to other states. 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 Ohio
Board of Regents governs and assists with Ohio's system of higher education,
especially public colleges and universities.
* 13 state universities
o University of Akron, Akron, Ohio
o Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, Ohio
o Central State University, Wilberforce, Ohio
o University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio
o Cleveland State University, Cleveland, Ohio
o Kent State University, Kent, Ohio
o Miami University, Oxford, Ohio
o Ohio University, Athens, Ohio
o Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio
o Shawnee State University, Portsmouth, Ohio
o University of Toledo, Toledo, Ohio
o Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio (Fairborn, Ohio)
o Youngstown State University, Youngstown, Ohio
(note: the University of Dayton is not one of Ohio's state universities;
it is a private, Roman Catholic university run by the Society of Mary)
* 24 state university branch and regional campuses
* 46 liberal arts colleges and universities
* 6 free-standing state-assisted medical schools
o University of Toledo College of Medicine (formerly Medical University of
Ohio)
o Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine
o Ohio State University College of Medicine and Public Health
o Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine
o University of Cincinnati College of Medicine
o Wright State University Boonshoft School of Medicine
* 2 private medical schools
o Ohio College of Podiatric Medicine
o Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine
* 15 community colleges
* 8 technical colleges
* over 24 independent non-profit colleges
Ohio State Guide - Sports Teams
* Major League Baseball
o Cincinnati Reds
o Cleveland Indians
* National Football League
o Cincinnati Bengals
o Cleveland Browns
* National Basketball Association
o Cleveland Cavaliers
* National Hockey League
o Columbus Blue Jackets
* Major League Soccer
o Columbus Crew
* Arena Football League
o Columbus Destroyers
* Minor League Baseball
o Akron Aeros
o Chillicothe Paints
o Columbus Clippers
o Dayton Dragons
o Lake County Captains
o Mahoning Valley Scrappers
o Toledo Mud Hens
* Central Hockey League
o Youngstown Steelhounds
* East Coast Hockey League
o Dayton Bombers
o Toledo Storm
o Cincinnati Cyclones
* National Indoor Football League
o Cincinnati Marshals
Article Source: Wikipedia
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