Fun Facts about Ohio State’s Geography
- Ohio map outline
- City Guide: Visit Ohio City Guide for a look at geography, local history, architecture, and culture.
- Ohio has an area of 116,103 sq miles. It ranks 34th in state size.
- Columbus is the state capital and Ohio’s largest city.
- 50% of the United States population lives within a 500 mile radius of Columbus.
- Dresden is the home of the world’s largest basket. It is located at Basket Village USA.
- Fostoria is the only city to be situated in three counties (Seneca, Hancock & Wood).
- The Glacial Grooves on the north side of Kelleys Island are the largest easily accessible such grooves in the world. They were scoured into solid limestone bedrock about 18,000 years ago by the great ice sheet that covered part of North America.
Ohio State Symbols Trivia
- Ohio Buckeye is the official state tree of Ohio.
- The official state flower of Ohio Scarlet is Carnation
- Ohio State Bird is called the Cardinal
- On March 1, 1803 Ohio was the 17th state to enter the union.
- “Hang On Sloopy” is the official state rock song.
- Cincinnati Reds were the first professional baseball team.
- The official state motto of Ohio is ‘With God, all things are possible’
- The Y Bridge in Zanesville was first built in 1814 to span the confluence of the Licking and Muskingum Rivers. The current bridge is the fifth construction at the same location. “Ripley’s Believe It or Not” proclaimed it the only bridge in the world which you can cross and still be on the same side of the river.
- Akron was the first city to use police cars.
- On November 29, 1802, Ohio adopted its first constitution that established the provision for a state seal without describing it
- Cincinnati had the first professional city fire department.
- Akron is the rubber capital of the world.
- Cleveland is home to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
- The “Buckeye State,” received its nickname because of the many buckeye trees that once covered its hills and plains.
- Ohio is the leading producer of greenhouse and nursery plants.
- The Pro Football Hall of Fame is located in Canton.
- The official song of the state of Ohio is called ‘Beautiful Ohio’
- Ohio’s state flag is a pennant design. It is the only state flag of that design in the United States.
Historical Facts about the State of Ohio
- The first ambulance service was established in Cincinnati in 1865.
- Cleveland boasts America’s first traffic light. It began on Aug. 5, 1914.
- Ermal Fraze invented the pop-top can in Kettering.
- OH is the Two-letter or Postal Abbreviation and Ohio is the Traditional or Standard Abbreviation for the State of Ohio.
- James J. Ritty, of Dayton, invented the cash register in 1879 to stop his patrons from pilfering house profits.
- The American Federation of Labor was founded in Columbus.
- Ohio senator John Glenn became the oldest man to venture into outer space.
- On February 20, 1962 he was the first American to orbit the earth. In October of 1998 at age 77 he returned to the space program and traveled back into space.
- Neil Armstrong became the first man to walk on the moon. He was from Wapakoneta.
- Find out the interesting facts about the famous people born in Ohio.
- The Wright Brothers are acknowledged as inventors of the first airplane they were from Dayton.
- The popular television sit-com, “The Drew Cary Show” is set in Cleveland.
- Ohio quarter was issued on March 11, 2002.
- East Liverpool was the beginning point of the United States Public Land Survey. The location was the area from which a rectangular-grid land survey system was established under the Ordinance of 1785. The survey provided for administration and subdivision of land in the Old Northwest Territory. The Ordinance stipulated that all public lands were to be divided into townships six miles square.
- Seven United States presidents were born in Ohio. They are: Ulysses S. Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes, James A. Garfield, Benjamin Harrison, William McKinley, William H. Taft, and Warren G. Harding.
- Some well-known personalities were born in Ohio. Among them Steven Spielberg, Paul Newman, Annie Oakley, Arsenio Hall and Clark Gable.
- The first full time automobile service station was opened in 1899 in Ohio.
- In 1852 Ohio was the first state to enact laws protecting working women.
- Ohio gave America its first hot dog in 1900. Harry M. Stevens created the popular dining dog.
- Ohio became the 17th state on March 1, 1803.
- East 105th Street and Euclid Avenue in Cleveland was the site of the first pedestrian button for the control of a traffic light. The boy chosen for the 1948 newsreel to demonstrate its operation was Louis Spronze.
- Ohio University was founded in 1804 at Athens and is recognized as the first university in Ohio and in the Northwest Territory.
- Oberlin College was founded in 1833.It was the first interracial and coeducational college in the United States.
- Marietta was Ohio’s first permanent settlement. Founded in 1788 by General Rufus Putnam and named in honor of Marie Antoinette, then queen of France.
- Chillicothe was Ohio’s first capital city.
- Cleveland became the world’s first city to be lighted electrically in 1879.
- Ohio is known as the Buckeye State.
- Thomas A. Edison from Milan developed the incandescent light bulb, phonograph, and early motion picture camera.
- John Lambert of Ohio City made America’s first automobile in 1891.
- Charles Kettering of Loundonville invented the automobile self-starter in 1911.
- Charles Goodyear of Akron developed the process of vulcanizing rubber in 1839.
- Roy J. Plunkett of New Carlisle invented Teflon in 1938.
- You know you’re from Ohio if…
- W.F. Semple of Mount Vernon patented chewing gum in 1869.
- John Mercer Langston is believed to have been the first African American elected to public office. He was elected clerk of Brownhelm in 1854.
- Long jumper DeHart Hubbard was the first African American to earn an Olympic Gold Medal. The award occurred during the 1924 Olympics games held in Paris. He set the record for long jumping.
- Jesse Owens grew up in Cleveland. He won four gold medals in the 1936 Olympics in Berlin.
- Paul Laurence Dunbar of Dayton is known as the poet laureate of African Americans.
Thanks to: Greg Maxedon, Kathy Liess, Robert Whitworth, J Williams, Laura Campbell, SanTan Man, Pat Holz