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Wikipedia

Ohio

Ohio (/ˈh/ (listeni)) is a state in the Midwestern United States. Of the fifty U.S. states, it is the 34th-largest by area. With a population of nearly 11.8 million, Ohio is the seventh-most populous and tenth-most densely populated state. Its capital and largest city is Columbus, with other large population centers including Cleveland, Cincinnati, Dayton, Akron, and Toledo. Ohio is bordered by Lake Erie to the north, Pennsylvania to the east, West Virginia to the southeast, Kentucky to the southwest, Indiana to the west, and Michigan to the northwest. Ohio is nicknamed the "Buckeye State" after its Ohio buckeye trees, and Ohioans are also known as "Buckeyes".[10] Its state flag is the only non-rectangular flag of all the U.S. states.

Ohio
State of Ohio
Nickname(s)
The Buckeye State;
Birthplace of Aviation; The Heart of It All
Motto
Anthem: "Beautiful Ohio"[2]
Map of the United States with Ohio highlighted
CountryUnited States
Admitted to the UnionMarch 1, 1803; 220 years ago (1803-03-01)[3] (17th,
declared retroactively on
August 7, 1953; 70 years ago (1953-08-07)[4])
Capital
(and largest city)
Columbus[5][6]
Largest metro and urban areasGreater Cleveland (combined and urban)
Cincinnati (metro)
Columbus (metro)
(see footnotes)[a]
Government
 • GovernorMike DeWine (R)
 • Lieutenant GovernorJon Husted (R)
LegislatureGeneral Assembly
 • Upper houseSenate
 • Lower houseHouse of Representatives
JudiciarySupreme Court of Ohio
U.S. senatorsSherrod Brown (D)
J. D. Vance (R)
U.S. House delegation10 Republicans
5 Democrats (list)
Area
 • Total44,825 sq mi (116,096 km2)
 • Land40,948 sq mi (106,156 km2)
 • Water3,877 sq mi (10,040 km2)  8.7%
 • Rank34th
Dimensions
 • Length220 mi (355 km)
 • Width220 mi (355 km)
Elevation
850 ft (260 m)
Highest elevation1,549 ft (472 m)
Lowest elevation455 ft (139 m)
Population
 (2021)
 • Total11,780,017 [8]
 • Rank7th
 • Density282/sq mi (109/km2)
  • Rank10th
 • Median household income
$54,021[9]
 • Income rank
36th
Demonym(s)Ohioan; Buckeye[10] (colloq.)
Language
 • Official languageDe jure: None
De facto: English
 • Spoken languageEnglish 93.3%
Spanish 2.2%
Other 4.5%[11]
Time zoneUTC– 05:00 (Eastern)
 • Summer (DST)UTC– 04:00 (EDT)
USPS abbreviation
ISO 3166 codeUS-OH
Traditional abbreviationO., Oh.
Latitude38°24′ N to 41°59′ N
Longitude80°31′ W to 84°49′ W
Websiteohio.gov
State symbols of Ohio
List of state symbols
SloganThe Heart Of It All
Living insignia
AmphibianSpotted salamander
BirdCardinal (1933)[2]
Flower
FruitPawpaw
InsectLadybug (1975)[2]
MammalWhite-tailed deer (1987)[2]
ReptileBlack racer snake (1995)[2]
TreeBuckeye (1953)[2]
Inanimate insignia
BeverageTomato juice (1965)[2]
FossilIsotelus maximus, a trilobite (1985)[2]
GemstoneOhio flint (1965)[2]
State route marker
State quarter
Released in 2002
Lists of United States state symbols

Ohio takes its name from the Ohio River, which, in turn, originated from the Seneca word ohiːyo', meaning "good river", "great river", or "large creek".[13][14] The state arose from the lands west of the Appalachian Mountains that were contested from colonial times through the Northwest Indian Wars of the late 18th century. It was partitioned from the resulting Northwest Territory, which was the first frontier of the new United States, becoming the 17th state admitted to the Union on March 1, 1803, and the first under the Northwest Ordinance.[3][15] Ohio was the first post-colonial free state admitted to the union and became one of the earliest and most influential industrial powerhouses during the 20th century. Although it has transitioned to a more information- and service-based economy in the 21st century, it remains an industrial state, ranking seventh in GDP as of 2019,[16] with the third-largest manufacturing sector and second-largest automobile production.[17]

The government of Ohio is composed of the executive branch, led by the governor; the legislative branch, consisting of the bicameral Ohio General Assembly; and the judicial branch, led by the state Supreme Court. Ohio occupies 15 seats in the United States House of Representatives.[18] The state is known for its status as both a swing state and a bellwether in national elections.[19] Seven presidents of the United States have come from Ohio. This has led to it receiving the moniker "the Mother of Presidents".[20]

History

Indigenous settlement

 
Artists conception of the Fort Ancient SunWatch Indian Village in Dayton.

Archeological evidence of spear points of both the Folsom and Clovis types indicate that the Ohio Valley was inhabited by nomadic people as early as 13,000 BC.[21] These early nomads disappeared from Ohio by 1,000 BC.[21] Between 1,000 and 800 BC, the sedentary Adena culture emerged. The Adena were able to establish "semi-permanent" villages because they domesticated plants, including sunflowers, and "grew squash and possibly corn"; with hunting and gathering, this cultivation supported more settled, complex villages.[22] The most notable remnant of the Adena culture is the Great Serpent Mound, located in Adams County, Ohio.[22]

Around 100 BC, the Adena evolved into the Hopewell people who were also mound builders. Their complex, large and technologically sophisticated earthworks can be found in modern-day Marietta, Newark, and Circleville.[23] They were also a prolific trading society, their trading network spanning a third of the continent.[24] The Hopewell disappeared from the Ohio Valley about 600 AD. The Mississippian culture rose as the Hopewell culture declined. Many Siouan-speaking peoples from the plains and east coast claim them as ancestors and say they lived throughout the Ohio region until approximately the 13th century.[25]

There were three other cultures contemporaneous with the Mississippians: the Fort Ancient people, the Whittlesey Culture[25] and the Monongahela Culture.[26] All three cultures disappeared in the 17th century. Their origins are unknown. The Shawnees may have absorbed the Fort Ancient people.[25] It is also possible that the Monongahela held no land in Ohio during the Colonial Era. The Mississippian culture was close to and traded extensively with the Fort Ancient people.

 
Iroquois conquests during the Beaver Wars (mid-1600s), which largely depopulated the upper and mid-Ohio River valley.

Indians in the Ohio Valley were greatly affected by the aggressive tactics of the Iroquois Confederation, based in central and western New York.[27] After the Beaver Wars in the mid-17th century, the Iroquois claimed much of the Ohio country as hunting and, more importantly, beaver-trapping ground. After the devastation of epidemics and war in the mid-17th century, which largely emptied the Ohio country of indigenous people[dubious ] by the mid-to-late 17th century, the land gradually became repopulated by the mostly Algonquian. Many of these Ohio-country nations were multi-ethnic (sometimes multi-linguistic) societies born out of the earlier devastation brought about by disease,[clarification needed] war, and subsequent social instability. They subsisted on agriculture (corn, sunflowers, beans, etc.) supplemented by seasonal hunts. By the 18th century, they were part of a larger global economy brought about by European entry into the fur trade.[28]

Some of the indigenous nations which historically inhabited Ohio included the Iroquoian,[c] the Algonquian[d] and the Siouan.[e][29][30] Ohio country was also the site of Indian massacres, such as the Yellow Creek massacre and the Gnadenhutten massacre.[31] After the War of 1812, when Natives suffered serious losses such as at Tippecanoe, most Native tribes either left Ohio or had to live on only limited reservations. By 1842, all remaining Natives were forced out of the state.[32]

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. Beginning in 1754, the Kingdom of France and Kingdom of Great Britain fought in the French and Indian War, with various Native American tribes on each side. As a result of the Treaty of Paris, the French ceded control of Ohio and the remainder of the Old Northwest to Great Britain in 1763.[33]

Prior to the American Revolution, Britain thinly exercised sovereignty over Ohio Country by lackadaisical garrisoning of the French forts.[f] Just beyond Ohio Country was the great Miami capital of Kekionga which became the center of British trade and influence in Ohio Country and throughout the future Northwest Territory. By the Royal Proclamation of 1763, British lands west of Appalachia were forbidden to settlement by colonists.[34] The Treaty of Fort Stanwix in 1768 explicitly reserved lands north and west of the Ohio as Native lands.[35] British military occupation in the region contributed to the outbreak of Pontiac's War in 1763.[36] Ohio tribes participated in the war until an armed expedition in Ohio led by Colonel Henry Bouquet brought about a truce. Another colonial military expedition into the Ohio Country in 1774 brought Lord Dunmore's War, kicked off by the Yellow Creek massacre in Ohio, to a conclusion. In 1774, Britain passed the Quebec Act that formally annexed Ohio and other western lands to the Province of Quebec in order to provide a civil government and to centralize British administration of the Montreal-based fur trade.[37] The prohibition of settlement west of the Appalachians remained, contributing to the American Revolution.[38]

By the start of the American Revolutionary War, the movement of Natives and Americans between the Ohio Country and Thirteen Colonies had resulted in tension. Fort Pitt in Pennsylvania had become the main fort where expeditions into Ohio started. Intrusions into the area included General Edward Hand's 1778 movement of 500 Pennsylvania militiamen from Fort Pitt towards Mingo towns on the Cuyahoga River, where the British stored military supplies which they distributed to Indian raiding parties;[39] Colonel Daniel Brodhead's invasion in 1780 and destruction of the Lenape Indian capital of Coshocton;[40] a detachment of one hundred of George Rogers Clark's troops that were ambushed near the Ohio River by Indians led by Joseph Brant in the same year; a British and Native American attack on the U.S.' Fort Laurens;[41] and the 1782 detainment and murder of 96 Moravian Lenape pacifists by Pennsylvania militiamen in the Gnadenhutten massacre.[42][43]

The western theatre never had a decisive victor. In the Treaty of Paris in 1783, Britain ceded all claims to Ohio Country to the new United States after its victory in the American Revolutionary War.[44][45]

Northwest Territory

 
The Ohio Country indicating battle sites between American settlers and indigenous tribes, 1775–1794.

The United States created the Northwest Territory under the Northwest Ordinance of 1787.[46] Slavery was not permitted in the new territory. 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. Territorial surveyors from Fort Steuben began surveying an area of eastern Ohio called the Seven Ranges at about the same time.

The old Northwest Territory originally included areas previously known as Ohio Country and Illinois Country. As Ohio prepared for statehood, the 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 and a sliver of southeastern Indiana called "The Gore".

The coalition of Native American tribes, known as the Western Confederacy, was forced to cede extensive territory, including much of present-day Ohio, in the Treaty of Greenville in 1795.

Under the Northwest Ordinance, areas could be defined and admitted as states once their population reached 60,000. Although Ohio's population was only 45,000 in December 1801, Congress determined that it was growing rapidly enough and accelerated the process via the Enabling Act of 1802. In regards to the Leni Lenape natives, Congress decided that 10,000 acres on the Muskingum River in the present state of Ohio would "be set apart and the property thereof be vested in the Moravian Brethren ... or a society of the said Brethren for civilizing the Indians and promoting Christianity".[47]

Rufus Putnam, the "Father of Ohio"

 
Rufus Putnam by James Sharples, Jr., 1797

Rufus Putnam served in important military capacities in both the French and Indian War and the American Revolutionary War. He was one of the most highly respected men in the early years of the United States.[48]

In 1776, Putnam created a method of building portable fortifications, which enabled the Continental Army to drive the British from Boston. George Washington was so impressed that he made Putnam his chief engineer. After the war, Putnam and Manasseh Cutler were instrumental in creating the Northwest Ordinance, which opened up the Northwest Territory for settlement. This land was used to serve as compensation for what was owed to Revolutionary War veterans. Putnam organized and led the Ohio Company of Associates, who settled at Marietta, Ohio, where they built a large fort called Campus Martius.[49][50][51] He set substantial amounts of land aside for schools. In 1798, he created the plan for the construction of the Muskingum Academy (now Marietta College). In 1780, the directors of the Ohio Company appointed him superintendent of all its affairs relating to the settlement north of the Ohio River. In 1796, he was commissioned by President George Washington as Surveyor-General of United States Lands. In 1788, he served as a judge in the Northwest Territory's first court. In 1802, he served in the convention to form a constitution for the State of Ohio.[52][53][54]

Statehood and early years

On February 19, 1803, U.S. President Thomas Jefferson signed an act of Congress that approved Ohio's boundaries and constitution.[55] However, Congress had never passed a formal resolution admitting Ohio as the 17th state. Although no formal resolution of admission was required, when the oversight was discovered in 1953, as Ohio began preparations for celebrating its sesquicentennial, Ohio congressman George H. Bender introduced a bill in Congress to admit Ohio to the Union retroactive to March 1, 1803, the date on which the Ohio General Assembly first convened.[56] At a special session at the old state capital in Chillicothe, the Ohio state legislature approved a new petition for statehood which was delivered to Washington, D.C., on horseback, and approved that August.[56][57][58]

Ohio has had three capital cities: Chillicothe, Zanesville, and Columbus. Chillicothe was the capital from 1803 to 1810. The capital was then moved to Zanesville for two years, as part of a state legislative compromise to get a bill passed. The capital was then moved back to Chillicothe, which was the capital from 1812 to 1816. Finally, the capital was moved to Columbus, to have it near the geographic center of the state.

 
Battle of Lake Erie by William Henry Powell.

Although many Native Americans had migrated west to evade American encroachment, others remained settled in the state, sometimes assimilating in part. Starting around 1809, the Shawnee pressed resistance to encroachment again. Under Chief Tecumseh, Tecumseh's War officially began in Ohio in 1811. When the War of 1812 began, the British decided to attack from Upper Canada into Ohio and merge their forces with the Shawnee. This continued until Tecumseh was killed at the Battle of the Thames in 1813. Most of the Shawnee, excluding the Pekowi in Southwest Ohio, were forcibly relocated west.[59] Ohio played a key role in the War of 1812, as it was on the front line in the Western theater and the scene of several notable battles both on land and in Lake Erie. On September 10, 1813, the Battle of Lake Erie, one of the major battles, took place near Put-in-Bay, Ohio. The British eventually surrendered to Oliver Hazard Perry.

Ultimately, after the United States government used the Indian Removal Act of 1830 to force countless Native American tribes on the Trail of Tears, where all the southern states except for Florida were successfully emptied of Native peoples, the US government panicked because a majority of tribes did not want to be forced out of their own lands. Fearing further wars between Native tribes and American settlers, they pushed all remaining Native tribes in the East to migrate west against their own will, including all remaining tribes in Ohio.[60][61]

In 1835, Ohio fought with the Michigan Territory in the Toledo War, a mostly bloodless boundary war over the Toledo Strip. Only one person was injured in the conflict. Congress intervened, making Michigan's admittance as a state conditional on ending the conflict. In exchange for giving up its claim to the Toledo Strip, Michigan was given the western two-thirds of the Upper Peninsula, in addition to the eastern third which was already considered part of the territory.

Civil War and industrialization

 
The route of Morgan's Raid during the American Civil War.

Ohio's central position and its population gave it an important place during the Civil War. The Ohio River was a vital artery for troop and supply movements, as were Ohio's railroads. The industry of Ohio made the state one of the most important states in the Union during the Civil War. Ohio contributed more soldiers per capita than any other state in the Union. In 1862, the state's morale was badly shaken in the aftermath of the Battle of Shiloh, a costly victory in which Ohio forces suffered 2,000 casualties.[62] Later that year, when Confederate troops under the leadership of Stonewall Jackson threatened Washington, D.C., Ohio governor David Tod still could recruit 5,000 volunteers to provide three months of service.[63] From July 13 to 26, 1863, towns along the Ohio River were attacked and ransacked in Morgan's Raid, starting in Harrison in the west and culminating in the Battle of Salineville near West Point in the far east. While this raid was overall insignificant to the Confederacy, it aroused fear among people in Ohio and Indiana as it was the furthest advancement of troops from the South in the war.[64] Almost 35,000 Ohioans died in the conflict, and 30,000 were physically wounded.[65] By the end of the Civil War, the Union's top three generals – Ulysses S. Grant, William Tecumseh Sherman, and Philip Sheridan – were all from Ohio.[66]

 
The first Standard Oil refinery was opened in Cleveland by businessman John D. Rockefeller.

Throughout much of the 19th century, industry was rapidly introduced to complement an existing agricultural economy. One of the first iron manufacturing plants opened near Youngstown in 1804, called Hopewell Furnace. By the mid-19th century, 48 blast furnaces were operating in the state, most in the southern portions of the state.[67] Discovery of coal deposits aided the further development of the steel industry in the state, and by 1853 Cleveland was the third largest iron and steel producer in the country. The first Bessemer converter was purchased by the Cleveland Rolling Mill Company, which eventually became part of the U.S. Steel Corporation following the merger of Federal Steel Company and Carnegie Steel, the first billion-dollar American corporation.[67] The first open-hearth furnace used for steel production was constructed by the Otis Steel Company in Cleveland, and by 1892, Ohio ranked as the second-largest steel-producing state behind Pennsylvania.[67] Republic Steel was founded in Youngstown in 1899 and was at one point the nation's third-largest producer. Armco, now AK Steel, was founded in Middletown also in 1899.

20th century

The state legislature officially adopted the flag of Ohio on May 9, 1902.[68] Dayton natives Orville and Wilbur Wright made four brief flights at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina on December 17, 1903, inventing the first successful airplane.[69] Ohio was hit by its greatest natural disaster in the Great Flood of 1913, resulting in at least 428 fatalities and hundreds of millions of dollars in property damage, particularly around the Great Miami River basin.[70]

The National Football League was originally founded in Canton, Ohio in 1920 as the American Professional Football Conference.[71] It included Ohio League teams in five Ohio cities (Akron, Canton, Cleveland, Columbus, and Dayton), although none of these teams still exist. The first official game occurred on October 3, 1920, when the Dayton Triangles beat the Columbus Panhandles 14-0 in Dayton.[72] Canton would later be enshrined as the home of the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1963.[73]

 
Iron being converted to steel for wartime efforts at Youngstown's Republic Steel in 1941.

During the 1930s, the Great Depression struck the state hard. By 1933, more than 40% of factory workers and 67% of construction workers were unemployed in Ohio.[74] Approximately 50% of industrial workers in Cleveland and 80% in Toledo became unemployed, with the state unemployment rate reaching a high of 37.3%.[74] American Jews watched the rise of Nazi Germany with apprehension. Cleveland residents Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster created the Superman comic character in the spirit of the Jewish golem. Many of their comics portrayed Superman fighting and defeating the Nazis.[75][76] Approximately 839,000 Ohioans served in the U.S. armed forces during World War II, of which over 23,000 died or were missing in action.[77]

Artists, writers, musicians and actors developed in the state throughout the 20th century and often moved to other cities which were larger centers for their work. They included Zane Grey, Milton Caniff, George Bellows, Art Tatum, Roy Lichtenstein, and Roy Rogers. Alan Freed, who emerged from the swing dance culture in Cleveland, hosted the first live rock 'n roll concert in Cleveland in 1952. Famous filmmakers include Steven Spielberg, Chris Columbus and the original Warner Brothers, who set up their first movie theatre in Youngstown before that company later relocated to California. The state produced many popular musicians, including Dean Martin, Doris Day, The O'Jays, Marilyn Manson, Dave Grohl, Devo, Macy Gray and The Isley Brothers.

Two Ohio astronauts completed significant milestones in the space race in the 1960s: John Glenn becoming the first American to orbit the Earth, and Neil Armstrong becoming the first human to walk on the Moon. In 1967, Carl Stokes was elected mayor of Cleveland and became the first African American mayor of one of the nation's 10 most populous cities.[78]

In 1970, an Ohio Army National Guard unit fired at students during an anti-war protest at Kent State University, killing four and wounding nine. The Guard had been called onto campus after several protests in and around campus had become violent, including a riot in downtown Kent and the burning of an ROTC building. The main cause of the protests was the United States' invasion of Cambodia during the Vietnam War.[79]

Beginning in the 1980s, the state entered into international economic and resource cooperation treaties and organizations with other Midwestern states, as well as New York, Pennsylvania, Ontario, and Quebec, including the Great Lakes Charter, Great Lakes Compact, and the Council of Great Lakes Governors.

21st century

Ohio's economy has undergone significant change in the 21st century, as the trend of deindustrialization has greatly impacted the American Midwest and the Rust Belt. Manufacturing in the Midwest experienced a stark decline during the early 21st century,[80] a trend which greatly impacted Ohio. From 1990 to 2019, Ohio lost over 300,000 manufacturing jobs, but added over 1,000,000 non-manufacturing jobs during that same time.[80] Coinciding with this decline, Ohio has seen a large decline in union membership: 17.4% of Ohioan workers were union members in 2000, while 12.8% were union members in 2022.[81]

In the wake of these economic changes, Ohio's state government has looked to promoting new industries to offset manufacturing losses, such as the production of solar energy and electric vehicles.[82] One major program launched by the state's government was the "Third Frontier" program, created during the governorship of Bob Taft, which aims to increase investment in Ohio, and boost the state's technology sector.[83] As of 2010, the Ohio Department of Development attributes the creation of 9,500 jobs to this program, with an average of salary of $65,000,[84] while having a $6.6 billion economic impact with a return on investment of 9:1.[84] In 2010 the state won the International Economic Development Council's Excellence in Economic Development Award, celebrated as a national model of success.[citation needed]

Many of the state's former industrial centers turned to new industries, including Akron as a center for polymer and biomedical research, Cincinnati as the state's largest mercantile hub,[85][better source needed] Columbus as a center for technological research and development, education, and insurance,[85][better source needed] Cleveland in regenerative medicine research and manufacturing, Dayton as an aerospace and defense hub, and Toledo as a national center for solar technology.[86][87]

Ohio's economy was also heavily afflicted by the Great Recession, as the state's unemployment rate rose from 5.6% in the first two months of 2008 up to a peak of 11.1% in December 2009 and January 2010.[88] It took until August 2014 for the unemployment rate to return to 5.6%.[88] From December 2007 to September 2010, Ohio lost 376,500 jobs.[89] In 2009, Ohio had 89,053 foreclosures filings, a then-record for the state.[90] The median household income dropped 7% from 2006-2007 to 2008-200, and the poverty rate ballooned to 13.5% by 2009.[91]

In 2015, Ohio gross domestic product was $608.1 billion, the seventh-largest economy among the 50 states.[92] In 2015, Ohio's total GDP accounted for 3.4% of U.S. GDP and 0.8% of world GDP.[92]

Politically, Ohio has been long regarded as a swing state,[93] however, the success of many Republican Party candidates in Ohio since the late 2000s has led many to question whether Ohio remains an electoral battleground.[93][94][95]

On March 9, 2020, the Covid-19 pandemic was confirmed to reach Ohio, with three cases being reported.[96] As of February 2023, over 41,600 Ohioans have died from Covid-19.[96][97] Ohio's economy was also heavily impacted by the pandemic, as the state saw large job losses in 2020, as well as large amounts of subsequent stimulus spending.[98]

Geography

 
View of the Ohio River near Portsmouth, Ohio

Ohio's geographic location has proven 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 along 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.[99] To the north, Ohio has 312 miles (502 km) of coastline with Lake Erie,[100] which allows for numerous cargo ports such as Cleveland and Toledo. Ohio's southern border is defined by the Ohio River. Ohio's neighbors are Pennsylvania to the east, Michigan to the northwest, 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.

Ohio is bounded by the Ohio River, but nearly all of the river itself belongs to Kentucky and West Virginia. In 1980, the U.S. Supreme Court held that, based on the wording of the cessation of territory by Virginia (which at the time included what is now Kentucky and West Virginia), the boundary between Ohio and Kentucky (and, by implication, West Virginia) is the northern low-water mark of the river as it existed in 1792.[101] Ohio has only that portion of the river between the river's 1792 low-water mark and the present high-water mark.

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.

 
Geographic regions of Ohio.

Much of Ohio features glaciated till 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. Geologically similar to parts of West Virginia and southwestern Pennsylvania, this area's coal mining legacy, dependence on small pockets of old manufacturing establishments, and distinctive regional dialect set this section off from the rest of the state. In 1965 the United States Congress passed the Appalachian Regional Development Act, an attempt to "address the persistent poverty and growing economic despair of the Appalachian Region".[102] This act defines 29 Ohio counties as part of Appalachia.[103] While 1/3 of Ohio's land mass is part of the federally defined Appalachian region, only 12.8% of Ohioans live there (1.476 million people.)[104]

 
Map of Ohio cities and rivers.

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 River and then the Mississippi.

The worst weather disaster in Ohio history occurred along the Great Miami River in 1913. Known as the Great Dayton Flood, the entire Miami River watershed flooded, including the downtown business district of Dayton. As a result, the Miami Conservancy District was created as the first major floodplain engineering project in Ohio and the United States.[105]

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. This body of water, over 20 square miles (52 km2), was the largest artificial lake in the world when completed in 1845.[106] 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 their location on canals, and as late as 1910 interior canals carried much of the bulk freight of the state.

Climate

 
Köppen climate types of Ohio, using 1991–2020 climate normals.

The climate of Ohio is a humid continental climate (Köppen climate classification Dfa/Dfb) throughout most of the state, except in the extreme southern counties of Ohio's Bluegrass region section, which are located on the northern periphery of the humid subtropical climate (Cfa) and Upland South region of the United States. Summers are typically hot and humid throughout the state, while winters generally range from cool to cold. Precipitation in Ohio is moderate year-round. Severe weather is not uncommon in the state, although there are typically fewer tornado reports in Ohio than in states located in what is known as the Tornado Alley. Severe lake effect snowstorms are also not uncommon on the southeast shore of Lake Erie, which is located in an area designated as the Snowbelt.

Although predominantly not in a subtropical climate, some warmer-climate flora and fauna do reach well into Ohio. For instance, some trees with more southern ranges, such as the blackjack oak, Quercus marilandica, are found at their northernmost in Ohio just north of the Ohio River. Also evidencing this climatic transition from a subtropical to a continental climate, several plants such as the Southern magnolia (Magnolia grandiflora), 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 region of Ohio; but these same plants will simply not thrive in much of the rest of the state. This interesting 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.

Average daily maximum and minimum temperatures for selected cities in Ohio[107]
Location Region July (°F) July (°C) January (°F) January (°C)
Athens Appalachian 85/61 29/16 40/21 4/−6
Cincinnati Southwest 86/66 30/19 39/23 3/−5
Cleveland Northeast 82/64 28/18 34/21 1/−5
Columbus Central 85/65 29/18 36/22 2/−5
Dayton Miami Valley 87/67 31/19 36/22 2/−5
Toledo Northwest 84/62 29/17 32/18 0/−7
Youngstown Northeast 81/60 27/15 32/19 0/−7

Records

The highest recorded temperature was 113 °F (45 °C), near Gallipolis on July 21, 1934.[108] The lowest recorded temperature was −39 °F (−39 °C), at Milligan on February 10, 1899,[109] during the Great Blizzard of 1899.[110]

Earthquakes

Although few have registered as noticeable to the average resident, more than 200 earthquakes with a magnitude of 2.0 or higher have occurred in Ohio since 1776.[111] The Western Ohio Seismic Zone and a portion of the Southern Great Lakes Seismic Zone are located in the state, and numerous faults lie under the surface.[111][112]

The most substantial known earthquake in Ohio history was the Anna (Shelby County) earthquake,[113] which occurred on March 9, 1937. It was centered in western Ohio, with a magnitude of 5.4, and was of intensity VIII.[114]

Other significant earthquakes in Ohio include:[115] one of magnitude 4.8 near Lima on September 19, 1884;[116] one of magnitude 4.2 near Portsmouth on May 17, 1901;[117] and one of 5.0 in LeRoy Township in Lake County on January 31, 1986, which continued to trigger 13 aftershocks of magnitude 0.5 to 2.4 for two months.[118][119]

Notable Ohio earthquakes in the 21st century include one occurring on December 31, 2011, approximately 4 kilometers (2.5 mi) northwest of Youngstown,[120] and one occurring on June 10, 2019, approximately 5 kilometers (3.1 mi) north-northwest of Eastlake under Lake Erie;[121] both registered a 4.0 magnitude.

Major cities

 
 
Largest cities or towns in Ohio
Source: 2020 U.S. Census[122]
Rank Name County Pop. Rank Name County Pop.
 
Columbus
 
Cleveland
1 Columbus Franklin 905,748 11 Youngstown Mahoning 60,068  
Cincinnati
 
Toledo
2 Cleveland Cuyahoga 372,624 12 Springfield Clark 58,662
3 Cincinnati Hamilton 309,317 13 Kettering Montgomery 57,862
4 Toledo Lucas 270,871 14 Elyria Lorain 52,656
5 Akron Summit 190,469 15 Cuyahoga Falls Summit 51,114
6 Dayton Montgomery 137,644 16 Middletown Butler 50,987
7 Parma Cuyahoga 81,146 17 Lakewood Cuyahoga 50,942
8 Canton Stark 70,872 18 Newark Licking 49,934
9 Lorain Lorain 65,211 19 Euclid Cuyahoga 49,692
10 Hamilton Butler 62,082 20 Dublin Franklin 49,328
 
Ohio population density map.

Ohio's three largest cities are Columbus, Cleveland, and Cincinnati, all three of which anchor major metropolitan areas. Columbus is the capital of the state, located near its geographic center and is well known for Ohio State University. In 2019, the city had six corporations named to the U.S. Fortune 500 list: Alliance Data, Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company, American Electric Power, L Brands, Huntington Bancshares, and Cardinal Health in suburban Dublin.[123][124] Other major employers include hospitals (among others, Wexner Medical Center and Nationwide Children's Hospital), high tech research and development including the Battelle Memorial Institute, information-based companies such as OCLC and Chemical Abstracts Service, manufacturer Worthington Industries, and financial institutions such as JPMorgan Chase and Huntington Bancshares. Fast food chains Wendy's and White Castle are also headquartered in Columbus.

Located in Northeast Ohio along the Lake Erie shore, Cleveland is characterized by its New England heritage, ethnic immigrant cultures, and history as a major American manufacturing and healthcare center. It anchors the Cleveland–Akron–Canton Combined Statistical Area, of which the cities of Akron and Canton are constituent parts. Mansfield and Youngstown are also major cities in the region. Northeast Ohio is known for major industrial companies Goodyear Tire and Rubber and Timken, top-ranked colleges Case Western Reserve University, Oberlin College, and Kent State University, the Cleveland Clinic, and cultural attractions including the Cleveland Museum of Art, Big Five member Cleveland Orchestra, Cuyahoga Valley National Park, Playhouse Square, the Pro Football Hall of Fame, and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Cincinnati anchors Southwest Ohio and the Cincinnati Tri-State area, which also encompasses counties in the neighboring states of Kentucky and Indiana. The metropolitan area is home to Miami University and the University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati Union Terminal, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, and various Fortune 500 companies including Procter & Gamble, Kroger, Macy's, Inc., and Fifth Third Bank. Dayton and Springfield are located in the Miami Valley, which is home to the University of Dayton, the Dayton Ballet, and the extensive Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.

Toledo and Lima are the major cities in Northwest Ohio, an area known for its glass-making industry. It is home to Owens Corning and Owens-Illinois, two Fortune 500 corporations. Steubenville is the only metropolitan city in Appalachian Ohio, a region known for its mixed mesophytic forests.

Ohio is the US state with the highest number of cities with the same name as UK cities.[125]

Metropolitan areas

Largest metropolitan statistical areas in Ohio
Ohio rank U.S. rank Metropolitan statistical area[126] 2022 estimate[127] 2020 census[127] Change Counties[128]
1 30 Cincinnati, OH–KY–IN Metropolitan Statistical Area 2,258,099 2,249,797 +0.37% Brown, Butler, Clermont, Hamilton, Warren
2 32 Columbus, OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 2,161,511 2,138,926 +1.06% Delaware, Fairfield, Franklin, Hocking, Licking, Madison, Morrow, Perry, Pickaway, Union
3 33 Cleveland, OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 2,160,146 2,185,825 −1.17% Ashtabula, Cuyahoga, Geauga, Lake, Lorain, Medina
4 74 Dayton, OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 812,595 814,049 −0.18% Greene, Miami, Montgomery, Preble
5 85 Akron, OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 697,627 702,219 −0.65% Portage, Summit
6 96 Toledo, OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 600,406 606,240 −0.96% Fulton, Lucas, Wood
7 127 Youngstown–Warren, OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 426,279 430,591 −1.00% Mahoning, Trumbull
8 136 Canton–Massillon, OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 399,316 401,574 −0.56% Stark, Carroll
9 307 Springfield, OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 134,831 136,001 −0.86% Clark
10 324 Mansfield, OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 125,319 124,936 +0.31% Richland
11 338 Sandusky, OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 114,479 115,986 −1.30% Erie, Ottawa
12 340 Weirton–Steubenville, WV–OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 114,235 116,903 −2.28% Jefferson
13 361 Lima, OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 101,115 102,206 −1.07% Allen

The Cincinnati metropolitan area extends into Kentucky and Indiana, and the Steubenville metropolitan area extends into West Virginia. Other metropolitan areas that contain cities in Ohio, but are primarily in other states include:

Largest combined statistical areas in Ohio
Ohio rank U.S. rank Combined statistical areas 2020 census[129] 2010 census[129] Change Subdivisions
1 18 Cleveland-Akron-Canton, OH Combined Statistical Area 3,577,606 3,515,646 +1.76% Cleveland-Elyria, OH Metropolitan Statistical Area
Akron, OH Metropolitan Statistical Area
Canton-Massillon, OH Metropolitan Statistical Area
Ashtabula, OH Micropolitan Statistical Area
New Philadelphia-Dover, OH Micropolitan Statistical Area
Sandusky, OH Micropolitan Statistical Area
Norwalk, OH Micropolitan Statistical Area
2 26 Columbus-Marion-Zanesville, OH Combined Statistical Area 2,541,313 2,308,509 +10.08% Columbus, OH Metropolitan Statistical Area
Zanesville, OH Micropolitan Statistical Area
Chillicothe, OH Micropolitan Statistical Area
Marion, OH Micropolitan Statistical Area
Mount Vernon, OH Micropolitan Statistical Area
Bellefontaine, OH Micropolitan Statistical Area
Cambridge, OH Micropolitan Statistical Area
Washington Court House, OH Micropolitan Statistical Area
3 30 Cincinnati-Wilmington-Maysville, OH-KY-IN Combined Statistical Area 2,291,863 2,174,110 +5.42% Cincinnati, OH-KY-IN Metropolitan Statistical Area
Wilmington, OH Micropolitan Statistical Area
Maysville, KY Micropolitan Statistical Area
4 56 Dayton-Springfield-Kettering, OH Combined Statistical Area 1,081,343 1,080,044 +0.12% Dayton, OH Metropolitan Statistical Area
Springfield, OH Metropolitan Statistical Area
Greenville, OH Micropolitan Statistical Area
Sidney, OH Micropolitan Statistical Area
Urbana, OH Micropolitan Statistical Area
5 67 Toledo-Findlay-Tiffin, OH Combined Statistical Area 830,245 843,900 −1.62% Toledo, OH Metropolitan Statistical Area
Findlay, OH Micropolitan Statistical Area
Fremont, OH Micropolitan Statistical Area
Tiffin, OH Micropolitan Statistical Area
6 74 Youngstown-Warren, OH-PA Combined Statistical Area 632,538 673,614 −6.10% Youngstown-Warren-Boardman, OH-PA Metropolitan Statistical Area
Salem, OH Micropolitan Statistical Area

Additionally, 30 Ohio cities function as centers of micropolitan areas, urban clusters smaller than that of metropolitan areas. Many of these are included as part of larger combined statistical areas, as shown in the table above.

Demographics

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
180045,365
1810230,760408.7%
1820581,434152.0%
1830937,90361.3%
18401,519,46762.0%
18501,980,32930.3%
18602,339,51118.1%
18702,665,26013.9%
18803,198,06220.0%
18903,672,32914.8%
19004,157,54513.2%
19104,767,12114.7%
19205,759,39420.8%
19306,646,69715.4%
19406,907,6123.9%
19507,946,62715.0%
19609,706,39722.1%
197010,652,0179.7%
198010,797,6301.4%
199010,847,1150.5%
200011,353,1404.7%
201011,536,5041.6%
202011,799,4482.3%
2022 (est.)11,756,058−0.4%
Source: 1910–2020[130]

Population

From just over 45,000 residents in 1800, Ohio's population grew faster than 10% per decade (except for the 1940 census) until the 1970 census, which recorded just over 10.65 million Ohioans.[131] Growth then slowed for the next four decades.[132] The United States Census Bureau counted 11,808,848 in the 2020 census, a 2.4% increase since the 2010 United States census.[8] Ohio's population growth lags that of the entire United States, and whites are found in a greater density than the U.S. average. As of 2000, Ohio's center of population is located in Morrow County,[133] in the county seat of Mount Gilead.[134] This is approximately 6,346 feet (1,934 m) south and west of Ohio's population center in 1990.[133]

Graph of Ohio's population from 1800 to 2020 census.
 
Population growth by county in Ohio between the 2010 and 2020 censuses.
  -10 to -5 percent
  -5 to -2 percent
  -2 to 0 percent
  0 to 2 percent
  2 to 5 percent
  5 to 10 percent
  10 to 20 percent
   More than 20 percent

As of 2011, 27.6% of Ohio's children under the age of 1 belonged to minority groups.[135] Approximately 6.2% of Ohio's population was under five years of age, 23.7% under 18 years of age, and 14.1% were 65 or older; females made up an estimated 51.2% of the population.

According to HUD's 2022 Annual Homeless Assessment Report, there were an estimated 10,654 homeless people in Ohio.[136][137]

Birth data

Note: Births in table do not add up because Hispanics are counted both by their ethnicity and by their race, giving a higher overall number.

Live births by single race/ethnicity of mother
Race 2013[138] 2014[139] 2015[140] 2016[141] 2017[142] 2018[143] 2019[144] 2020[145] 2021[146]
White 109,749 (79.0%) 110,003 (78.9%) 109,566 (78.7%) ... ... ... ... ... ...
> non-Hispanic White 104,059 (74.9%) 104,102 (74.6%) 103,586 (74.4%) 100,225 (72.6%) 98,762 (72.1%) 97,423 (72.1%) 95,621 (71.1%) 92,033 (71.2%) 92,761 (71.5%)
Black 24,952 (18.0%) 24,931 (17.9%) 25,078 (18.0%) 22,337 (16.2%) 22,431 (16.4%) 22,201 (16.4%) 22,555 (16.8%) 21,447 (16.6%) 20,748 (16.0%)
Asian 3,915 (2.8%) 4,232 (3.0%) 4,367 (3.1%) 4,311 (3.1%) 4,380 (3.2%) 4,285 (3.2%) 4,374 (3.3%) 3,995 (3.1%) 3,862 (3.0%)
American Indian 320 (0.2%) 301 (0.2%) 253 (0.2%) 128 (0.1%) 177 (0.1%) 169 (0.1%) 204 (0.2%) 102 (>0.1%) 107 (>0.1%)
Hispanic (of any race) 6,504 (4.7%) 6,884 (4.9%) 6,974 (5.0%) 7,420 (5.4%) 7,468 (5.5%) 7,432 (5.5%) 7,725 (5.7%) 7,669 (5.9%) 8,228 (6.3%)
Total Ohio 138,936 (100%) 139,467 (100%) 139,264 (100%) 138,085 (100%) 136,832 (100%) 135,134 (100%) 134,461 (100%) 129,191 (100%) 129,791 (100%)
  • Since 2016, data for births of White Hispanic origin are not collected, but included in one Hispanic group; persons of Hispanic origin may be of any race.

Ancestry

 
Ethnic origins in Ohio
Ethnic composition as of the 2020 census
Race and ethnicity[147] Alone Total
White (non-Hispanic) 75.9% 75.9
 
79.9% 79.9
 
African American (non-Hispanic) 12.3% 12.3
 
14.0% 14
 
Hispanic or Latino[g] 4.4% 4.4
 
Asian 2.5% 2.5
 
3.1% 3.1
 
Native American 0.2% 0.2
 
1.7% 1.7
 
Pacific Islander 0.04% 0.04
 
0.1% 0.1
 
Other 0.4% 0.4
 
1.2% 1.2
 
Ohio historic racial breakdown of population
Racial and ethnic composition 1990[148] 2000[149] 2010[150]
White 87.8% 85.0% 82.7%
African American 10.6% 11.5% 12.2%
Asian 0.8% 1.2% 1.7%
Native 0.2% 0.2% 0.2%
Native Hawaiian and
other Pacific Islander
Other race 0.5% 0.8% 1.1%
Two or more races 1.4% 2.1%

In 2010, there were 469,700 foreign-born residents in Ohio, corresponding to 4.1% of the total population. Of these, 229,049 (2.0%) were naturalized U.S. citizens and 240,699 (2.1%) were not.[11] The largest groups were:[151] Mexico (54,166), India (50,256), China (34,901), Germany (19,219), Philippines (16,410), United Kingdom (15,917), Canada (14,223), Russia (11,763), South Korea (11,307), and Ukraine (10,681). Though predominantly white, Ohio has large black populations in all major metropolitan areas throughout the state, Ohio has a significant Hispanic population made up of Mexicans in Toledo and Columbus, and Puerto Ricans in Cleveland and Columbus, and also has a significant and diverse Asian population in Columbus.

 
Map of counties in Ohio by racial plurality, per the 2020 U.S. census

Ancestry groups (which the census defines as not including racial terms) in the state were:[11][152] 26.5% German, 14.1% Irish, 9.0% English, 6.4% Italian, 3.8% Polish, 2.5% French, 1.9% Scottish, 1.7% Hungarian, 1.6% Dutch, 1.5% Mexican, 1.2% Slovak, 1.1% Welsh, and 1.1% Scotch-Irish. Ancestries claimed by less than 1% of the population include Sub-Saharan African, Puerto Rican, Swiss, Swedish, Arab, Greek, Norwegian, Romanian, Austrian, Lithuanian, Finnish, West Indian, Portuguese and Slovene.

Languages

About 6.7% of the population age 5 years and older reported speaking a language other than English, with 2.2% of the population speaking Spanish, 2.6% speaking other Indo-European languages, 1.1% speaking Asian and Austronesian languages, and 0.8% speaking other languages.[11] Numerically: 10,100,586 spoke English, 239,229 Spanish, 55,970 German, 38,990 Chinese, 33,125 Arabic, and 32,019 French. In addition, 59,881 spoke a Slavic language and 42,673 spoke another West Germanic language according to the 2010 census.[153] Ohio also had the nation's largest population of Slovene speakers, second largest of Slovak speakers, second largest of Pennsylvania Dutch (German) speakers, and the third largest of Serbian speakers.[154]

Religion

Religious self-identification, per Public Religion Research Institute's 2021 American Values Survey[155]

  Protestantism (46%)
  Catholicism (18%)
  Unaffilated (30%)
  Judaism (2%)
  Hinduism (1%)
  Other (3%)
 
Amish children on their way to school

According to a Pew Forum poll in 2014, 73% of Ohioans identified as Christian.[156] Specifically, 29% of Ohio's population identified as Evangelical Protestant, 17% as Mainline Protestant, 7% as Historically Black Protestant, and 18% as Catholic.[156] Roughly 22% of the population were unaffiliated with any religious body.[156] Small minorities of Jews (1%), Jehovah's Witnesses (1%), Muslims (1%), Hindus (<1%), Buddhists (1%), Mormons (1%), and other faiths (1-1.5%) exist according to this study.[156]

According to the Association of Religion Data Archives (ARDA), in 2010 the largest Christian denominations by adherents were the Catholic Church with 1,992,567; the United Methodist Church with 496,232; the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America with 223,253, the Southern Baptist Convention with 171,000, the Christian Churches and Churches of Christ with 141,311, the United Church of Christ with 118,000, and the Presbyterian Church (USA) with 110,000.[157] With about 80,000 adherents in 2020, Ohio had the second largest Amish population of all U.S. states, only behind neighboring Pennsylvania.[158]

According to the same data from 2014's study, a majority of Ohioans, 56%, felt religion was "very important", 25% that it was "somewhat important", and 19% that religion was "not too important/not important at all".[156] Among them, 38% of Ohioans indicate that they attend religious services at least once weekly, 32% occasionally, and 30% seldom or never.[156]

Per ARDA's 2020 study,[159] Christianity remained the predominant religion. Non-denominational Christianity, numbering 1,411,863, were the largest Protestant cohort, although Catholicism remained the single-largest denomination with 1,820,233 adherents. According to the Public Religion Research Institute in 2021, overall, Christianity was 64% of the total population; the unaffiliated made up 30% of the population; altogether, those identifying with a religion or spiritual tradition were 70% of the state's population.

Economy

 
Cincinnati's Procter & Gamble is one of Ohio's largest companies in terms of revenue.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the total number of people employed in 2016 was 4,790,178. The total number of unique employer establishments was 252,201, while the total number of non-employer establishments was 785,833.[160] In 2010, Ohio was ranked second in the country for best business climate by Site Selection magazine, based on a business-activity database.[161] The state has also won three consecutive Governor's Cup awards from the magazine, based on business growth and developments.[162] As of 2016, Ohio's gross domestic product (GDP) was $626 billion.[163] This ranks Ohio's economy as the seventh-largest among all 50 states and Washington, D.C.[164]

The Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council ranked the state No. 10 for best business-friendly tax systems in their Business Tax Index 2009, including a top corporate tax and capital gains rate that were both ranked No. 6 at 1.9%.[165] Ohio was ranked No. 11 by the council for best friendly-policy states according to their Small Business Survival Index 2009.[166] The Directorship's Boardroom Guide ranked the state No. 13 overall for best business climate, including No. 7 for best litigation climate.[167] Forbes ranked the state No. 8 for best regulatory environment in 2009.[168] Ohio has five of the top 115 colleges in the nation, according to U.S. News & World Report's 2010 rankings,[169] and was ranked No. 8 by the same magazine in 2008 for best high schools.[170]

Ohio's unemployment rate stands at 4.5% as of February 2018,[171] down from 10.7% in May 2010.[172][173] The state still lacks 45,000 jobs compared to the pre-recession numbers of 2007.[174] The labor force participation as of April 2015 is 63%, slightly above the national average.[174] Ohio's per capita income stands at $34,874.[164][175] As of 2019, Ohio's median household income is $58,642,[176] and 13.1% of the population is below the poverty line.[177]

The manufacturing and financial activities sectors each compose 18.3% of Ohio's GDP, making them Ohio's largest industries by percentage of GDP.[164] Ohio has the third largest manufacturing workforce behind California and Texas.[178][179] Ohio has the largest bioscience sector in the Midwest, and is a national leader in the "green" economy. Ohio is the largest producer in the country of plastics, rubber, fabricated metals, electrical equipment, and appliances.[180] 5,212,000 Ohioans are currently employed by wage or salary.[164]

By employment, Ohio's largest sector is trade/transportation/utilities, which employs 1,010,000 Ohioans, or 19.4% of Ohio's workforce, while the health care and education sector employs 825,000 Ohioans (15.8%).[164] Government employs 787,000 Ohioans (15.1%), manufacturing employs 669,000 Ohioans (12.9%), and professional and technical services employs 638,000 Ohioans (12.2%).[164] Ohio's manufacturing sector is the third-largest of all fifty United States states in terms of gross domestic product.[164] Fifty-nine of the United States' top 1,000 publicly traded companies (by revenue in 2008) are headquartered in Ohio, including Procter & Gamble, Goodyear Tire & Rubber, AK Steel, Timken, Abercrombie & Fitch, and Wendy's.[181]

Ohio is also one of 41 states with its own lottery,[182] the Ohio Lottery.[183] As of 2020, the Ohio Lottery has contributed more than $26 billion to education beginning in 1974.[184]

Transportation

 
Map of Ohio showing Interurban Railways c. 1907
 
Ohio welcome sign in 2018

Roads

Many major east–west transportation corridors go through Ohio. One of those pioneer routes, known in the early 20th century as "Main Market Route 3", was chosen in 1913 to become part of the historic Lincoln Highway which was the first road across America, connecting New York City to San Francisco. In Ohio, the Lincoln Highway linked many towns and cities together, including Canton, Mansfield, Wooster, Lima, and Van Wert. The arrival of the Lincoln Highway to Ohio was a major influence on the development of the state. Upon the advent of the federal numbered highway system in 1926, the Lincoln Highway through Ohio became U.S. Route 30.

Ohio is home to 228 miles (367 km) of the historic National Road, now U.S. Route 40.

Ohio has a highly developed network of roads and interstate highways. Major east-west through routes include the Ohio Turnpike (I-80/I-90) in the north, I-76 through Akron to Pennsylvania, I-70 through Columbus and Dayton, and the Appalachian Highway (State Route 32) running from West Virginia to Cincinnati. Major north–south routes include I-75 in the west through Toledo, Dayton, and Cincinnati, I-71 through the middle of the state from Cleveland through Columbus and Cincinnati into Kentucky, and I-77 in the eastern part of the state from Cleveland through Akron, Canton, New Philadelphia and Marietta south into West Virginia. Interstate 75 between Cincinnati and Dayton is one of the heaviest traveled sections of interstate in Ohio.

Trails

Ohio also has a highly developed network of signed state bicycle routes. Many of them follow rail trails, with conversion ongoing. The Ohio to Erie Trail (route 1) connects Cincinnati, Columbus, and Cleveland. U.S. Bicycle Route 50 traverses Ohio from Steubenville to the Indiana state line outside Richmond.[185]

Ohio has several long-distance hiking trails, the most prominent of which is the Buckeye Trail which extends 1,444 mi (2,324 km) in a loop around the state of Ohio. Part of it is on roads and part is on wooded trail. Additionally, the North Country Trail (the longest of the eleven National Scenic Trails authorized by Congress) and the American Discovery Trail (a system of recreational trails and roads that collectively form a coast-to-coast route across the mid-tier of the United States) pass through Ohio. Much of these two trails coincide with the Buckeye Trail.

Rail

Ohio passenger rail

Ohio has an extensive rail network, though today most lines carry only freight traffic. Three Class I freight railroads operate in Ohio: CSX Transportation, Norfolk Southern Railway, and Canadian National Railway. Many local freight carriers also exist in the state.

Amtrak, the national passenger railroad, operates three long-distance rail routes through Ohio. The Lake Shore Limited serves Cleveland, Elyria, Toledo, Sandusky, and Bryan. The Capitol Limited stops in those cities as well as in Alliance. The Cardinal serves Cincinnati Union Terminal. From Ohio, passengers can ride directly to Chicago, New York, Boston, Washington, D.C., Indianapolis, Pittsburgh, Buffalo, and dozens of destinations in-between.

Columbus is the largest city in the United States without any form of passenger rail. Its Union Station was last served in 1979 by the National Limited.

Ohio is home to several scenic railways and museums, including the Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad through Cuyahoga Valley National Park, the Age of Steam Roundhouse museum, and the Hocking Valley Scenic Railway near Hocking Hills State Park.

Transit

 
Cincinnati Connector streetcar

Mass transit exists in many forms in Ohio cities, primarily through bus systems. The Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority (GCRTA) operates the RTA Rapid Transit system, which consists of one heavy rail line, three light rail lines, and three bus rapid transit lines. Cincinnati is served by the Southwest Ohio Regional Transit Authority (SORTA) bus network as well as a 3.6-mile (5.8 km) streetcar line, the Cincinnati Bell Connector. Other major transit agencies in Ohio include the Central Ohio Transit Authority (COTA) serving Columbus and the Greater Dayton Regional Transit Authority (GDRTA) serving Dayton.

Air travel

Ohio has four international airports, four commercial, and two military. The four international include Cleveland Hopkins International Airport, John Glenn Columbus International Airport, Dayton International Airport, and Rickenbacker International Airport (one of two military airfields). The other military airfield is Wright Patterson Air Force Base which is one of the largest Air Force bases in the United States. Other major airports are located in Toledo and Akron. Cincinnati's primary airport, Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport, is in Hebron, Kentucky, and therefore is not included in Ohio airport lists.

Waterways

Law and government

 
Current governor Mike DeWine

The state government of Ohio consists of the executive, legislative, and judicial branches.[186][187][188]

Executive branch

The executive branch is headed by the governor of Ohio.[186] The current governor is Mike DeWine since 2019, a member of the Republican Party.[189] A lieutenant governor succeeds the governor in the event of any removal from office, and performs any duties assigned by the governor.[190][191] The current lieutenant governor is Jon Husted. The other elected constitutional offices in the executive branch are the secretary of state (Frank LaRose), auditor (Keith Faber), treasurer (Robert Sprague), and attorney general (Dave Yost).[186] There are 21 state administrative departments in the executive branch.[192][193]

Legislative branch

 
The Ohio Statehouse in Columbus, home to the Ohio General Assembly.

The Ohio General Assembly is a bicameral legislature consisting of the Senate and House of Representatives.[194] The Senate is composed of 33 districts, each of which is represented by one senator. Each senator represents approximately 330,000 constituents.[195] The House of Representatives is composed of 99 members.[196] The Republican Party is the controlling party in both houses as of the 2020 election cycle.

In order to be enacted into law, a bill must be adopted by both houses of the General Assembly and signed by the Governor. If the Governor vetoes a bill, the General Assembly can override the veto with a three-fifths supermajority of both houses. A bill will also become a law if the Governor fails to sign or veto it within 10 days of its being presented. The session laws are published in the official Law of Ohio.[197] These in turn have been codified in the Ohio Revised Code.[198]

The General Assembly, with the approval of the Governor, draws the U.S. congressional district lines for Ohio's 16 seats in the United States House of Representatives. The Ohio Apportionment Board draws state legislative district lines in Ohio.

Judicial branch

 
The Thomas J. Moyer Ohio Judicial Center holds the Supreme Court of Ohio.

There are three levels of the Ohio state judiciary. The lowest level is the court of common pleas: each county maintains its own constitutionally mandated court of common pleas, which maintain jurisdiction over "all justiciable matters".[199] The intermediate-level court system is the district court system.[200] Twelve courts of appeals exist, each retaining jurisdiction over appeals from common pleas, municipal, and county courts in a set geographical area.[199] A case heard in this system is decided by a three-judge panel, and each judge is elected.[199]

The state's highest-ranking court is the Ohio Supreme Court.[201] A seven-justice panel composes the court, which, by its own discretion, hears appeals from the courts of appeals, and retains original jurisdiction over limited matters.[202]

Local government

There are also several levels of local government in Ohio: counties, municipalities (cities and villages), townships, special districts, and school districts.

Ohio is divided into 88 counties.[203] Ohio law defines a structure for county government, although they may adopt charters for home rule.[204][205] Summit County[204] and Cuyahoga County[206] have chosen an alternate form of government. The other counties have a government with a three-member board of county commissioners,[207] a sheriff,[208] coroner,[209] auditor,[210] treasurer,[211] clerk of the court of common pleas[212] prosecutor,[213] engineer,[214] and recorder.[215]

There are two kinds of incorporated municipalities, 251 cities and 681 villages.[204][216][217] If a municipality has five thousand or more residents as of the last United States Census it is a city, otherwise it is a village.[204][218] Municipalities have full home rule powers, may adopt a charter, ordinances and resolutions for self-government.[219] Each municipality chooses its own form of government, but most have elected mayors and city councils or city commissions. City governments provide much more extensive services than county governments, such as police forces and paid (as opposed to volunteer) fire departments.

The entire area of the state is encompassed by townships.[204] When the boundaries of a township are coterminous with the boundaries of a city or village, the township ceases to exist as a separate government (called a paper township).[204] Townships are governed by a three-member board of township trustees.[204] Townships may have limited home rule powers.[220]

There are more than 600 city, local, and exempted village school districts providing K-12 education in Ohio, as well as about four dozen joint vocation school districts, which are separate from the K-12 districts. Each city school district, local school district, or exempted village school district is governed by an elected board of education.[204] A school district previously under state supervision (municipal school district) may be governed by a board whose members either are elected or appointed by the mayor of the municipality containing the greatest portion of the district's area.[204]

Politics

Party affiliation as of October 1, 2021[221]
Party Registered voters Percentage
Unaffiliated 6,196,547 77.63%
Democratic 947,027 11.86%
Republican 836,080 10.47%
Libertarian 2,847 0.04%
Total 7,982,501 100%

"Mother of presidents"

Six U.S. presidents hailed from Ohio at the time of their elections, giving rise to its nickname "mother of presidents", a sobriquet it shares with Virginia. It is also termed "modern mother of presidents", in contrast to Virginia's status as the origin of presidents earlier in American history. Seven presidents were born in Ohio, making it second to Virginia's eight. Virginia-born William Henry Harrison lived most of his life in Ohio and is also buried there. Harrison conducted his political career while living on the family compound, founded by his father-in-law, John Cleves Symmes, in North Bend, Ohio. The seven presidents born in Ohio were Ulysses S. Grant (elected from Illinois), Rutherford B. Hayes, James A. Garfield, Benjamin Harrison (grandson of William Henry Harrison & elected from Indiana), William McKinley, William Howard Taft and Warren G. Harding.[222] All seven were Republicans.

Electoral history

 
Presidential election results by county for 2020
  Democratic
  Republican

Ohio has been considered a swing state, being won by either the Democratic or Republican candidates reasonably each election. As such, Ohio is usually targeted by both major-party campaigns, especially in competitive elections.[223] Pivotal in the election of 1888, Ohio has been a regular swing state since 1980 and has been considered a bellwether.[224][225] This status, however, was called into question after incumbent Republican Donald Trump won the state by a comfortable eight-point margin in the 2020 presidential election despite losing nationally to Democratic challenger Joe Biden.[226]

Historian R. Douglas Hurt asserts that not since Virginia "had a state made such a mark on national political affairs".[227] The Economist notes that "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".[228] Since 1896, Ohio has had only three misses in the general election (Thomas E. Dewey in 1944, Richard Nixon in 1960, and Donald Trump in 2020) and had the longest perfect streak of any state, voting for the winning presidential candidate in each election from 1964 to 2016, and in 33 of the 38 held since the Civil War. No Republican has ever won the presidency without winning Ohio.

As of 2019, there are more than 7.8 million registered Ohioan voters, with 1.3 million Democrats and 1.9 million Republicans. They are disproportionate in age, with a million more over 65 than there are 18- to 24-year-olds.[229] Since the 2010 midterm elections, Ohio's voter demographic has leaned towards the Republican Party.[230] The governor, Mike DeWine, is Republican, as are all other non-judicial statewide elected officials, including Lieutenant Governor Jon A. Husted, Attorney General Dave Yost, State Auditor Keith Faber, Secretary of State Frank LaRose and State Treasurer Robert Sprague. In the Ohio State Senate the Republicans are the majority, 25–8, and in the Ohio House of Representatives the Republicans control the delegation 64–35.

Losing one seat in the U.S. House of Representatives following the 2020 census, Ohio has 15 seats for the two presidential elections of the decade in 2024 and 2028.[231] As of the 2022 cycle, ten federal representatives are Republicans while five are Democrats. Marcy Kaptur (D-09) is the most senior member of the Ohio delegation to the U.S. House of Representatives.[232] The senior U.S. senator, Sherrod Brown, is a Democrat, while the junior, J. D. Vance, is a Republican.[233][234]

Allegations of voter suppression

Since 1994, the state has had a policy of purging infrequent voters from its rolls. In April 2016, a lawsuit was filed, challenging this policy on the grounds that it violated the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA) of 1993[235] and the Help America Vote Act of 2002.[236] In June, the federal district court ruled for the plaintiffs and entered a preliminary injunction applicable only to the November 2016 election. The preliminary injunction was upheld in September by the Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. Had it not been upheld, thousands of voters would have been purged from the rolls just a few weeks before the election.[235][237]

It was estimated in 2017 that the state has removed up to two million voters since 2011.[238][better source needed]

In a 2020 study, Ohio was ranked as the 17th hardest state for citizens to vote in.[239]

Education

Ohio's system of public education is outlined in Article VI of the state constitution, and in Title XXXIII of the Ohio Revised Code. Ohio University, the first university in the Northwest Territory, was also the first public institution in Ohio. Substantively, Ohio's system is similar to those found in other states. At the State level, the Ohio Department of Education, which is overseen by the Ohio State Board of Education, governs primary and secondary educational institutions. At the municipal level, there are approximately 700 school districts statewide. The Ohio Board of Regents coordinates and assists with Ohio's institutions of higher education which have recently been reorganized into the University System of Ohio under Governor Strickland. The system averages an annual enrollment of more than 400,000 students, making it one of the five largest state university systems in the U.S.

Colleges and universities

 
University Hall at the Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio's largest university by enrollment[240]

Ohio schools consistently ranking in the top 50 nationally of the U.S. News & World Report of liberal arts colleges are Ohio Big Three; Denison University, Oberlin College, and Kenyon College. Ranking in the top 100 of national research universities typically includes Case Western Reserve University, Ohio State University and Miami University.[241]

 
Bosworth Hall at Oberlin College in northeast Ohio, the first college in the U.S. to admit women[242]

Libraries

Ohio is home to some of the nation's highest-ranked public libraries.[243] The 2008 study by Thomas J. Hennen Jr. ranked Ohio as number one in a state-by-state comparison.[244] For 2008, 31 of Ohio's library systems were all ranked in the top ten for American cities of their population category.[243]

The Ohio Public Library Information Network (OPLIN) is an organization that provides Ohio residents with internet access to their 251 public libraries. OPLIN also provides Ohioans with free home access to high-quality, subscription research databases.

Ohio also offers the OhioLINK program, allowing Ohio's libraries (particularly those from colleges and universities) access to materials for the other libraries. The program is largely successful in allowing researchers for access to books and other media that might not be otherwise available.

Culture

Arts

Music

 
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland.

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Rhythm and Blues Music Hall of Fame are both located in Cleveland. Cleveland disc jockey Alan Freed is credited with coining the term and promoting rock and roll in the early 1950s. Cincinnati is home to the American Classical Music Hall of Fame and Museum.

Popular musicians from Ohio include Mamie Smith, Dean Martin, Dave Grohl, Tyler Joseph and Josh Dun of Twenty One Pilots, Frankie Yankovic, Doris Day, the McGuire Sisters, the Isley Brothers, Bobby Womack, Howard Hewett, Shirley Murdock, Boz Scaggs, John Legend, Marilyn Manson, Nine Inch Nails, Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney of the Black Keys, Griffin Layne, Joe Dolce, Kid Cudi, Benjamin Orr of the Cars, Chrissie Hynde of the Pretenders, William "Bootsy" Collins, Stephanie Eulinberg of Kid Rock's Twisted Brown Trucker Band, and Devo. Five Ohio musicians[who?] are Rock and Roll Hall of Fame members.

Performing arts

 
The Cleveland Orchestra (pictured performing at the Teatro Regio) is one of the historic Big Five orchestras in the U.S.

Playhouse Square in downtown Cleveland is the second-largest performing arts center in the United States, home to ten theaters.[245] The Cleveland Orchestra is one of the historic Big Five orchestras in the U.S., and is considered among the best worldwide.[246]

Many other Ohio cities are home to their own orchestras, including Akron, Blue Ash, Canton, Cincinnati, Columbus, Dayton, Toledo, and Youngstown. Cincinnati is home to its own ballet, symphony orchestra, pops orchestra, and opera, all housed at the Cincinnati Music Hall. Dayton is also home to a ballet, orchestra, and opera, collectively known as the Dayton Performing Arts Alliance.

The Columbus Association for the Performing Arts manages seven historic Columbus area theaters.[247]

Within the marching arts, Winter Guard International has hosted national championships in performing arts at the University of Dayton 18 times between 1983 and 2003, and has permanently since 2005. The Bluecoats Drum and Bugle Corps are Ohio's highest fielding drum corps, competing in the Drum Corps International World Class circuit out of Canton.

Visual arts

 
With about 770,000 annual visitors, the Cleveland Museum of Art is among the most visited art museums in the United States.[248]

Ohio is home to 30 art institutions, including the Columbus Museum of Art, Cincinnati Art Museum, Cleveland Museum of Art, and other entities. The full list includes:

The Cincinnati Art Museum holds over 100,000 works spanning 6,000 years of human history, being among the most comprehensive collections in the Midwest. Among its notable collections are works by Master of San Baudelio, Jorge Ingles, Sandro Botticelli (Judith with Head of Holofernes), Matteo di Giovanni, Domenico Tintoretto (Portrait of Venetian dux Marino Grimani), Mattia Preti, Bernardo Strozzi, Frans Hals, Bartolomé Esteban Murillo (St. Thomas of Villanueva), Peter Paul Rubens (Samson and Delilah) and Aert van der Neer. The collection also includes works by Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Camille Pissarro, Claude Monet (Rocks At Belle Isle), and Pablo Picasso. The museum also has a large collection of paintings by American painter Frank Duveneck (Elizabeth B. Duveneck).

The Cleveland Museum of Art is internationally renowned for its substantial holdings of Asian and Egyptian art, and has a permanent collection of more than 61,000 works from around the world.[249] It is the fourth-wealthiest art museum in the United States.[250]

The Columbus Museum of Art holds nineteenth and early twentieth-century American and European art, including early Cubist paintings by Pablo Picasso and Juan Gris, works by François Boucher, Paul Cézanne, Mary Cassatt, Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, Edgar Degas, Henri Matisse, Claude Monet, Edward Hopper, and Norman Rockwell, and installations by Mel Chin, Josiah McElheny, Susan Philipsz, and Allan Sekula. Also in Columbus, the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum collection includes 450,000 original cartoons, 36,000 books, 51,000 serial titles, and 3,000 feet (910 m) of manuscript materials, plus 2.5 million comic strip clippings and tear sheets, making it the largest research library for cartoon art.

Youngstown's Butler Institute of American Art was the first museum to be dedicated exclusively to American art.[251]

Sports

Professional sports teams

 
Great American Ball Park, home to the Cincinnati Reds baseball team.

Ohio is home to eight professional sports teams across the five different major leagues in the United States. Current teams include the Cincinnati Reds and Cleveland Guardians of Major League Baseball,[252][253] the Columbus Crew SC and FC Cincinnati of Major League Soccer,[254] the Cleveland Cavaliers of the National Basketball Association,[255] the Cincinnati Bengals and Cleveland Browns of the National Football League,[256] and the Columbus Blue Jackets of the National Hockey League.[257]

Ohio has brought home seven World Series titles (Reds 1919, 1940, 1975, 1976, 1990; Indians 1920, 1948), two MLS Cups (Crew 2008, 2020), one NBA Championship (Cavaliers 2016), and nine NFL Championships (Pros 1920; Bulldogs 1922, 1923, 1924; Rams 1945; Browns 1950, 1954, 1955, 1964). Despite this success in the NFL in the first half of the 20th century, no Ohio team has won the Super Bowl since its inception in 1967. No Ohio team has made an appearance in the Stanley Cup Finals.

 
The Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton.

Ohio played a central role in the development of both Major League Baseball and the National Football League. Baseball's first fully professional team, the Cincinnati Red Stockings of 1869, were organized in Ohio.[258] An informal early-20th-century American football association, the Ohio League, was the direct predecessor of the modern NFL, although neither of Ohio's modern NFL franchises trace their roots to an Ohio League club. The NFL itself was founded in Canton, Ohio in 1920 as the American Professional Football Conference.[71] The first official game occurred on October 3, 1920, when the Dayton Triangles beat the Columbus Panhandles 14-0 in Dayton.[72] Canton would later be enshrined as the home of the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1963.[73]

On a smaller scale, Ohio hosts minor league baseball, arena football, indoor football, mid-level hockey, and lower division soccer.

Individual sports

The Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course has hosted several auto racing championships, including CART World Series, IndyCar Series, NASCAR Nationwide Series, Can-Am, Formula 5000, IMSA GT Championship, American Le Mans Series and Rolex Sports Car Series. The Grand Prix of Cleveland also hosted CART races from 1982 to 2007. The Eldora Speedway is a major dirt oval that hosts NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, World of Outlaws Sprint Cars and USAC Silver Crown Series races.

Ohio hosts two PGA Tour events, the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational and Memorial Tournament. The Cincinnati Masters is an ATP World Tour Masters 1000 and WTA Premier 5 tennis tournament.

College sports

 
Ohio Stadium in Columbus, home to the Ohio State Buckeyes football team, is the fifth largest stadium in the world.

Ohio has eight NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision college football teams, divided among three different conferences. It has also experienced considerable success in the secondary and tertiary tiers of college football divisions.

There are two programs in the Power Five conferences; the Ohio State Buckeyes of the Big Ten Conference and the Cincinnati Bearcats of the Big 12 Conference. The Ohio State Buckeyes football team is second in all-time winning percentage, with a 931–327–53 overall record and a 25–26 bowl record as of 2020. The program has produced seven Heisman Trophy winners, forty conference titles, and eight undisputed national championships. The men's basketball program has appeared in the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament 27 times.

The Cincinnati Bearcats men's basketball team has over 1,800 wins and 33 March Madness appearances, whilst the Bearcats football team became the first so-called "Group of Five" team to qualify to the College Football Playoff in 2022.[259]

In the Group of Five conferences, six teams are represented in the Mid-American Conference: the Akron Zips, Bowling Green Falcons, Kent State Golden Flashes, Miami RedHawks, Ohio Bobcats and the Toledo Rockets. The MAC headquarters are in Cleveland. The Cincinnati–Miami rivalry game has been played in southwest Ohio every year since 1888 and is the oldest current non-conference NCAA football rivalry.

Other Division I schools, either part of the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision or not fielding in football include the Cleveland State Vikings, Xavier Musketeers, Wright State Raiders, and Youngstown State Penguins. Xavier's men's basketball has performed particularly well, with 27 March Madness appearances. Youngstown State's football has the third most NCAA Division I Football Championship wins, with 3.

There are 12 NCAA Division II universities and 22 NCAA Division III universities in Ohio.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ According to the U.S. Census July 2017 Annual Estimate December 27, 1996, at the Wayback Machine, Greater Columbus is the largest Metropolitan statistical area (MSA) that is entirely within Ohio, with a population of 2,078,725; and Greater Cincinnati is the largest MSA that is at least partially within Ohio, with a population of 2,179,082, approximately 25% of which is in Indiana or Kentucky. Which MSA is the largest in Ohio depends on the context.
  2. ^ a b Elevation adjusted to North American Vertical Datum of 1988.
  3. ^ Petun, Erie, Chonnonton, Wyandot, the Mingo Seneca and the Iroquois Confederacy
  4. ^ Miami, Mascouten Lenape Shawnee and Odawa
  5. ^ Mosopelea
  6. ^ The last French Fort in Ohio Country, Fort Sandusky, was destroyed in 1763 during Pontiac's Rebellion.
  7. ^ Persons of Hispanic or Latino origin are not distinguished between total and partial ancestry.

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ohio, this, article, about, state, other, uses, disambiguation, listen, state, midwestern, united, states, fifty, states, 34th, largest, area, with, population, nearly, million, seventh, most, populous, tenth, most, densely, populated, state, capital, largest,. This article is about the U S state For other uses see Ohio disambiguation Ohio oʊ ˈ h aɪ oʊ listen i is a state in the Midwestern United States Of the fifty U S states it is the 34th largest by area With a population of nearly 11 8 million Ohio is the seventh most populous and tenth most densely populated state Its capital and largest city is Columbus with other large population centers including Cleveland Cincinnati Dayton Akron and Toledo Ohio is bordered by Lake Erie to the north Pennsylvania to the east West Virginia to the southeast Kentucky to the southwest Indiana to the west and Michigan to the northwest Ohio is nicknamed the Buckeye State after its Ohio buckeye trees and Ohioans are also known as Buckeyes 10 Its state flag is the only non rectangular flag of all the U S states OhioStateState of OhioFlagSealNickname s The Buckeye State Birthplace of Aviation The Heart of It AllMotto With God all things are possible 1 Anthem Beautiful Ohio 2 source source Map of the United States with Ohio highlightedCountryUnited StatesAdmitted to the UnionMarch 1 1803 220 years ago 1803 03 01 3 17th declared retroactively onAugust 7 1953 70 years ago 1953 08 07 4 Capital and largest city Columbus 5 6 Largest metro and urban areasGreater Cleveland combined and urban Cincinnati metro Columbus metro see footnotes a Government GovernorMike DeWine R Lieutenant GovernorJon Husted R LegislatureGeneral Assembly Upper houseSenate Lower houseHouse of RepresentativesJudiciarySupreme Court of OhioU S senatorsSherrod Brown D J D Vance R U S House delegation10 Republicans 5 Democrats list Area Total44 825 sq mi 116 096 km2 Land40 948 sq mi 106 156 km2 Water3 877 sq mi 10 040 km2 8 7 Rank34thDimensions Length220 mi 355 km Width220 mi 355 km Elevation850 ft 260 m Highest elevation Campbell Hill 7 b 1 549 ft 472 m Lowest elevation Ohio River at Indiana border 7 b 455 ft 139 m Population 2021 Total11 780 017 8 Rank7th Density282 sq mi 109 km2 Rank10th Median household income 54 021 9 Income rank36thDemonym s Ohioan Buckeye 10 colloq Language Official languageDe jure NoneDe facto English Spoken languageEnglish 93 3 Spanish 2 2 Other 4 5 11 Time zoneUTC 05 00 Eastern Summer DST UTC 04 00 EDT USPS abbreviationOH 12 ISO 3166 codeUS OHTraditional abbreviationO Oh Latitude38 24 N to 41 59 NLongitude80 31 W to 84 49 WWebsiteohio wbr govState symbols of OhioList of state symbolsFlag of OhioSeal of OhioSloganThe Heart Of It AllLiving insigniaAmphibianSpotted salamanderBirdCardinal 1933 2 FlowerRed carnation 1904 2 Great white trillium 1986 2 wildflower FruitPawpawInsectLadybug 1975 2 MammalWhite tailed deer 1987 2 ReptileBlack racer snake 1995 2 TreeBuckeye 1953 2 Inanimate insigniaBeverageTomato juice 1965 2 FossilIsotelus maximus a trilobite 1985 2 GemstoneOhio flint 1965 2 State route markerState quarterReleased in 2002Lists of United States state symbolsOhio takes its name from the Ohio River which in turn originated from the Seneca word ohiːyo meaning good river great river or large creek 13 14 The state arose from the lands west of the Appalachian Mountains that were contested from colonial times through the Northwest Indian Wars of the late 18th century It was partitioned from the resulting Northwest Territory which was the first frontier of the new United States becoming the 17th state admitted to the Union on March 1 1803 and the first under the Northwest Ordinance 3 15 Ohio was the first post colonial free state admitted to the union and became one of the earliest and most influential industrial powerhouses during the 20th century Although it has transitioned to a more information and service based economy in the 21st century it remains an industrial state ranking seventh in GDP as of 2019 update 16 with the third largest manufacturing sector and second largest automobile production 17 The government of Ohio is composed of the executive branch led by the governor the legislative branch consisting of the bicameral Ohio General Assembly and the judicial branch led by the state Supreme Court Ohio occupies 15 seats in the United States House of Representatives 18 The state is known for its status as both a swing state and a bellwether in national elections 19 Seven presidents of the United States have come from Ohio This has led to it receiving the moniker the Mother of Presidents 20 Contents 1 History 1 1 Indigenous settlement 1 2 Colonial and Revolutionary eras 1 3 Northwest Territory 1 3 1 Rufus Putnam the Father of Ohio 1 4 Statehood and early years 1 5 Civil War and industrialization 1 6 20th century 1 7 21st century 2 Geography 2 1 Climate 2 1 1 Records 2 2 Earthquakes 3 Major cities 3 1 Metropolitan areas 4 Demographics 4 1 Population 4 2 Birth data 4 3 Ancestry 4 4 Languages 4 5 Religion 5 Economy 6 Transportation 6 1 Roads 6 2 Trails 6 3 Rail 6 4 Transit 6 5 Air travel 6 6 Waterways 7 Law and government 7 1 Executive branch 7 2 Legislative branch 7 3 Judicial branch 7 4 Local government 8 Politics 8 1 Mother of presidents 8 2 Electoral history 8 3 Allegations of voter suppression 9 Education 9 1 Colleges and universities 9 2 Libraries 10 Culture 10 1 Arts 10 1 1 Music 10 1 2 Performing arts 10 1 3 Visual arts 10 2 Sports 10 2 1 Professional sports teams 10 2 2 Individual sports 10 2 3 College sports 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Bibliography 15 External linksHistoryMain articles Prehistory of Ohio and History of Ohio Indigenous settlement Artists conception of the Fort Ancient SunWatch Indian Village in Dayton Archeological evidence of spear points of both the Folsom and Clovis types indicate that the Ohio Valley was inhabited by nomadic people as early as 13 000 BC 21 These early nomads disappeared from Ohio by 1 000 BC 21 Between 1 000 and 800 BC the sedentary Adena culture emerged The Adena were able to establish semi permanent villages because they domesticated plants including sunflowers and grew squash and possibly corn with hunting and gathering this cultivation supported more settled complex villages 22 The most notable remnant of the Adena culture is the Great Serpent Mound located in Adams County Ohio 22 Around 100 BC the Adena evolved into the Hopewell people who were also mound builders Their complex large and technologically sophisticated earthworks can be found in modern day Marietta Newark and Circleville 23 They were also a prolific trading society their trading network spanning a third of the continent 24 The Hopewell disappeared from the Ohio Valley about 600 AD The Mississippian culture rose as the Hopewell culture declined Many Siouan speaking peoples from the plains and east coast claim them as ancestors and say they lived throughout the Ohio region until approximately the 13th century 25 There were three other cultures contemporaneous with the Mississippians the Fort Ancient people the Whittlesey Culture 25 and the Monongahela Culture 26 All three cultures disappeared in the 17th century Their origins are unknown The Shawnees may have absorbed the Fort Ancient people 25 It is also possible that the Monongahela held no land in Ohio during the Colonial Era The Mississippian culture was close to and traded extensively with the Fort Ancient people Iroquois conquests during the Beaver Wars mid 1600s which largely depopulated the upper and mid Ohio River valley Indians in the Ohio Valley were greatly affected by the aggressive tactics of the Iroquois Confederation based in central and western New York 27 After the Beaver Wars in the mid 17th century the Iroquois claimed much of the Ohio country as hunting and more importantly beaver trapping ground After the devastation of epidemics and war in the mid 17th century which largely emptied the Ohio country of indigenous people dubious discuss by the mid to late 17th century the land gradually became repopulated by the mostly Algonquian Many of these Ohio country nations were multi ethnic sometimes multi linguistic societies born out of the earlier devastation brought about by disease clarification needed war and subsequent social instability They subsisted on agriculture corn sunflowers beans etc supplemented by seasonal hunts By the 18th century they were part of a larger global economy brought about by European entry into the fur trade 28 Some of the indigenous nations which historically inhabited Ohio included the Iroquoian c the Algonquian d and the Siouan e 29 30 Ohio country was also the site of Indian massacres such as the Yellow Creek massacre and the Gnadenhutten massacre 31 After the War of 1812 when Natives suffered serious losses such as at Tippecanoe most Native tribes either left Ohio or had to live on only limited reservations By 1842 all remaining Natives were forced out of the state 32 Colonial and Revolutionary eras Main articles New France Canada New France Ohio Country French and Indian War Treaty of Paris 1763 Province of Quebec 1763 1791 Indian Reserve 1763 American Revolutionary War Western theater of the American Revolutionary War and Treaty of Paris 1783 During the 18th century the French set up a system of trading posts to control the fur trade in the region Beginning in 1754 the Kingdom of France and Kingdom of Great Britain fought in the French and Indian War with various Native American tribes on each side As a result of the Treaty of Paris the French ceded control of Ohio and the remainder of the Old Northwest to Great Britain in 1763 33 Prior to the American Revolution Britain thinly exercised sovereignty over Ohio Country by lackadaisical garrisoning of the French forts f Just beyond Ohio Country was the great Miami capital of Kekionga which became the center of British trade and influence in Ohio Country and throughout the future Northwest Territory By the Royal Proclamation of 1763 British lands west of Appalachia were forbidden to settlement by colonists 34 The Treaty of Fort Stanwix in 1768 explicitly reserved lands north and west of the Ohio as Native lands 35 British military occupation in the region contributed to the outbreak of Pontiac s War in 1763 36 Ohio tribes participated in the war until an armed expedition in Ohio led by Colonel Henry Bouquet brought about a truce Another colonial military expedition into the Ohio Country in 1774 brought Lord Dunmore s War kicked off by the Yellow Creek massacre in Ohio to a conclusion In 1774 Britain passed the Quebec Act that formally annexed Ohio and other western lands to the Province of Quebec in order to provide a civil government and to centralize British administration of the Montreal based fur trade 37 The prohibition of settlement west of the Appalachians remained contributing to the American Revolution 38 By the start of the American Revolutionary War the movement of Natives and Americans between the Ohio Country and Thirteen Colonies had resulted in tension Fort Pitt in Pennsylvania had become the main fort where expeditions into Ohio started Intrusions into the area included General Edward Hand s 1778 movement of 500 Pennsylvania militiamen from Fort Pitt towards Mingo towns on the Cuyahoga River where the British stored military supplies which they distributed to Indian raiding parties 39 Colonel Daniel Brodhead s invasion in 1780 and destruction of the Lenape Indian capital of Coshocton 40 a detachment of one hundred of George Rogers Clark s troops that were ambushed near the Ohio River by Indians led by Joseph Brant in the same year a British and Native American attack on the U S Fort Laurens 41 and the 1782 detainment and murder of 96 Moravian Lenape pacifists by Pennsylvania militiamen in the Gnadenhutten massacre 42 43 The western theatre never had a decisive victor In the Treaty of Paris in 1783 Britain ceded all claims to Ohio Country to the new United States after its victory in the American Revolutionary War 44 45 Northwest Territory Main articles Northwest Ordinance and Northwest Territory The Ohio Country indicating battle sites between American settlers and indigenous tribes 1775 1794 The United States created the Northwest Territory under the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 46 Slavery was not permitted in the new territory 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 Territorial surveyors from Fort Steuben began surveying an area of eastern Ohio called the Seven Ranges at about the same time The old Northwest Territory originally included areas previously known as Ohio Country and Illinois Country As Ohio prepared for statehood the 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 and a sliver of southeastern Indiana called The Gore The coalition of Native American tribes known as the Western Confederacy was forced to cede extensive territory including much of present day Ohio in the Treaty of Greenville in 1795 Under the Northwest Ordinance areas could be defined and admitted as states once their population reached 60 000 Although Ohio s population was only 45 000 in December 1801 Congress determined that it was growing rapidly enough and accelerated the process via the Enabling Act of 1802 In regards to the Leni Lenape natives Congress decided that 10 000 acres on the Muskingum River in the present state of Ohio would be set apart and the property thereof be vested in the Moravian Brethren or a society of the said Brethren for civilizing the Indians and promoting Christianity 47 Rufus Putnam the Father of Ohio Rufus Putnam by James Sharples Jr 1797Rufus Putnam served in important military capacities in both the French and Indian War and the American Revolutionary War He was one of the most highly respected men in the early years of the United States 48 In 1776 Putnam created a method of building portable fortifications which enabled the Continental Army to drive the British from Boston George Washington was so impressed that he made Putnam his chief engineer After the war Putnam and Manasseh Cutler were instrumental in creating the Northwest Ordinance which opened up the Northwest Territory for settlement This land was used to serve as compensation for what was owed to Revolutionary War veterans Putnam organized and led the Ohio Company of Associates who settled at Marietta Ohio where they built a large fort called Campus Martius 49 50 51 He set substantial amounts of land aside for schools In 1798 he created the plan for the construction of the Muskingum Academy now Marietta College In 1780 the directors of the Ohio Company appointed him superintendent of all its affairs relating to the settlement north of the Ohio River In 1796 he was commissioned by President George Washington as Surveyor General of United States Lands In 1788 he served as a judge in the Northwest Territory s first court In 1802 he served in the convention to form a constitution for the State of Ohio 52 53 54 Statehood and early years Main articles Admission to the Union and List of U S states by date of admission to the Union On February 19 1803 U S President Thomas Jefferson signed an act of Congress that approved Ohio s boundaries and constitution 55 However Congress had never passed a formal resolution admitting Ohio as the 17th state Although no formal resolution of admission was required when the oversight was discovered in 1953 as Ohio began preparations for celebrating its sesquicentennial Ohio congressman George H Bender introduced a bill in Congress to admit Ohio to the Union retroactive to March 1 1803 the date on which the Ohio General Assembly first convened 56 At a special session at the old state capital in Chillicothe the Ohio state legislature approved a new petition for statehood which was delivered to Washington D C on horseback and approved that August 56 57 58 Ohio has had three capital cities Chillicothe Zanesville and Columbus Chillicothe was the capital from 1803 to 1810 The capital was then moved to Zanesville for two years as part of a state legislative compromise to get a bill passed The capital was then moved back to Chillicothe which was the capital from 1812 to 1816 Finally the capital was moved to Columbus to have it near the geographic center of the state Battle of Lake Erie by William Henry Powell Although many Native Americans had migrated west to evade American encroachment others remained settled in the state sometimes assimilating in part Starting around 1809 the Shawnee pressed resistance to encroachment again Under Chief Tecumseh Tecumseh s War officially began in Ohio in 1811 When the War of 1812 began the British decided to attack from Upper Canada into Ohio and merge their forces with the Shawnee This continued until Tecumseh was killed at the Battle of the Thames in 1813 Most of the Shawnee excluding the Pekowi in Southwest Ohio were forcibly relocated west 59 Ohio played a key role in the War of 1812 as it was on the front line in the Western theater and the scene of several notable battles both on land and in Lake Erie On September 10 1813 the Battle of Lake Erie one of the major battles took place near Put in Bay Ohio The British eventually surrendered to Oliver Hazard Perry Ultimately after the United States government used the Indian Removal Act of 1830 to force countless Native American tribes on the Trail of Tears where all the southern states except for Florida were successfully emptied of Native peoples the US government panicked because a majority of tribes did not want to be forced out of their own lands Fearing further wars between Native tribes and American settlers they pushed all remaining Native tribes in the East to migrate west against their own will including all remaining tribes in Ohio 60 61 In 1835 Ohio fought with the Michigan Territory in the Toledo War a mostly bloodless boundary war over the Toledo Strip Only one person was injured in the conflict Congress intervened making Michigan s admittance as a state conditional on ending the conflict In exchange for giving up its claim to the Toledo Strip Michigan was given the western two thirds of the Upper Peninsula in addition to the eastern third which was already considered part of the territory Civil War and industrialization The route of Morgan s Raid during the American Civil War Ohio s central position and its population gave it an important place during the Civil War The Ohio River was a vital artery for troop and supply movements as were Ohio s railroads The industry of Ohio made the state one of the most important states in the Union during the Civil War Ohio contributed more soldiers per capita than any other state in the Union In 1862 the state s morale was badly shaken in the aftermath of the Battle of Shiloh a costly victory in which Ohio forces suffered 2 000 casualties 62 Later that year when Confederate troops under the leadership of Stonewall Jackson threatened Washington D C Ohio governor David Tod still could recruit 5 000 volunteers to provide three months of service 63 From July 13 to 26 1863 towns along the Ohio River were attacked and ransacked in Morgan s Raid starting in Harrison in the west and culminating in the Battle of Salineville near West Point in the far east While this raid was overall insignificant to the Confederacy it aroused fear among people in Ohio and Indiana as it was the furthest advancement of troops from the South in the war 64 Almost 35 000 Ohioans died in the conflict and 30 000 were physically wounded 65 By the end of the Civil War the Union s top three generals Ulysses S Grant William Tecumseh Sherman and Philip Sheridan were all from Ohio 66 The first Standard Oil refinery was opened in Cleveland by businessman John D Rockefeller Throughout much of the 19th century industry was rapidly introduced to complement an existing agricultural economy One of the first iron manufacturing plants opened near Youngstown in 1804 called Hopewell Furnace By the mid 19th century 48 blast furnaces were operating in the state most in the southern portions of the state 67 Discovery of coal deposits aided the further development of the steel industry in the state and by 1853 Cleveland was the third largest iron and steel producer in the country The first Bessemer converter was purchased by the Cleveland Rolling Mill Company which eventually became part of the U S Steel Corporation following the merger of Federal Steel Company and Carnegie Steel the first billion dollar American corporation 67 The first open hearth furnace used for steel production was constructed by the Otis Steel Company in Cleveland and by 1892 Ohio ranked as the second largest steel producing state behind Pennsylvania 67 Republic Steel was founded in Youngstown in 1899 and was at one point the nation s third largest producer Armco now AK Steel was founded in Middletown also in 1899 See also Petroleum industry in Ohio 20th century The state legislature officially adopted the flag of Ohio on May 9 1902 68 Dayton natives Orville and Wilbur Wright made four brief flights at Kitty Hawk North Carolina on December 17 1903 inventing the first successful airplane 69 Ohio was hit by its greatest natural disaster in the Great Flood of 1913 resulting in at least 428 fatalities and hundreds of millions of dollars in property damage particularly around the Great Miami River basin 70 The National Football League was originally founded in Canton Ohio in 1920 as the American Professional Football Conference 71 It included Ohio League teams in five Ohio cities Akron Canton Cleveland Columbus and Dayton although none of these teams still exist The first official game occurred on October 3 1920 when the Dayton Triangles beat the Columbus Panhandles 14 0 in Dayton 72 Canton would later be enshrined as the home of the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1963 73 Iron being converted to steel for wartime efforts at Youngstown s Republic Steel in 1941 During the 1930s the Great Depression struck the state hard By 1933 more than 40 of factory workers and 67 of construction workers were unemployed in Ohio 74 Approximately 50 of industrial workers in Cleveland and 80 in Toledo became unemployed with the state unemployment rate reaching a high of 37 3 74 American Jews watched the rise of Nazi Germany with apprehension Cleveland residents Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster created the Superman comic character in the spirit of the Jewish golem Many of their comics portrayed Superman fighting and defeating the Nazis 75 76 Approximately 839 000 Ohioans served in the U S armed forces during World War II of which over 23 000 died or were missing in action 77 Artists writers musicians and actors developed in the state throughout the 20th century and often moved to other cities which were larger centers for their work They included Zane Grey Milton Caniff George Bellows Art Tatum Roy Lichtenstein and Roy Rogers Alan Freed who emerged from the swing dance culture in Cleveland hosted the first live rock n roll concert in Cleveland in 1952 Famous filmmakers include Steven Spielberg Chris Columbus and the original Warner Brothers who set up their first movie theatre in Youngstown before that company later relocated to California The state produced many popular musicians including Dean Martin Doris Day The O Jays Marilyn Manson Dave Grohl Devo Macy Gray and The Isley Brothers Two Ohio astronauts completed significant milestones in the space race in the 1960s John Glenn becoming the first American to orbit the Earth and Neil Armstrong becoming the first human to walk on the Moon In 1967 Carl Stokes was elected mayor of Cleveland and became the first African American mayor of one of the nation s 10 most populous cities 78 In 1970 an Ohio Army National Guard unit fired at students during an anti war protest at Kent State University killing four and wounding nine The Guard had been called onto campus after several protests in and around campus had become violent including a riot in downtown Kent and the burning of an ROTC building The main cause of the protests was the United States invasion of Cambodia during the Vietnam War 79 Beginning in the 1980s the state entered into international economic and resource cooperation treaties and organizations with other Midwestern states as well as New York Pennsylvania Ontario and Quebec including the Great Lakes Charter Great Lakes Compact and the Council of Great Lakes Governors 21st century Ohio s economy has undergone significant change in the 21st century as the trend of deindustrialization has greatly impacted the American Midwest and the Rust Belt Manufacturing in the Midwest experienced a stark decline during the early 21st century 80 a trend which greatly impacted Ohio From 1990 to 2019 Ohio lost over 300 000 manufacturing jobs but added over 1 000 000 non manufacturing jobs during that same time 80 Coinciding with this decline Ohio has seen a large decline in union membership 17 4 of Ohioan workers were union members in 2000 while 12 8 were union members in 2022 81 In the wake of these economic changes Ohio s state government has looked to promoting new industries to offset manufacturing losses such as the production of solar energy and electric vehicles 82 One major program launched by the state s government was the Third Frontier program created during the governorship of Bob Taft which aims to increase investment in Ohio and boost the state s technology sector 83 As of 2010 the Ohio Department of Development attributes the creation of 9 500 jobs to this program with an average of salary of 65 000 84 while having a 6 6 billion economic impact with a return on investment of 9 1 84 In 2010 the state won the International Economic Development Council s Excellence in Economic Development Award celebrated as a national model of success citation needed Many of the state s former industrial centers turned to new industries including Akron as a center for polymer and biomedical research Cincinnati as the state s largest mercantile hub 85 better source needed Columbus as a center for technological research and development education and insurance 85 better source needed Cleveland in regenerative medicine research and manufacturing Dayton as an aerospace and defense hub and Toledo as a national center for solar technology 86 87 Ohio s economy was also heavily afflicted by the Great Recession as the state s unemployment rate rose from 5 6 in the first two months of 2008 up to a peak of 11 1 in December 2009 and January 2010 88 It took until August 2014 for the unemployment rate to return to 5 6 88 From December 2007 to September 2010 Ohio lost 376 500 jobs 89 In 2009 Ohio had 89 053 foreclosures filings a then record for the state 90 The median household income dropped 7 from 2006 2007 to 2008 200 and the poverty rate ballooned to 13 5 by 2009 91 In 2015 Ohio gross domestic product was 608 1 billion the seventh largest economy among the 50 states 92 In 2015 Ohio s total GDP accounted for 3 4 of U S GDP and 0 8 of world GDP 92 Politically Ohio has been long regarded as a swing state 93 however the success of many Republican Party candidates in Ohio since the late 2000s has led many to question whether Ohio remains an electoral battleground 93 94 95 On March 9 2020 the Covid 19 pandemic was confirmed to reach Ohio with three cases being reported 96 As of February 2023 over 41 600 Ohioans have died from Covid 19 96 97 Ohio s economy was also heavily impacted by the pandemic as the state saw large job losses in 2020 as well as large amounts of subsequent stimulus spending 98 GeographyFurther information List of Ohio counties List of cities in Ohio List of villages in Ohio List of Ohio townships Ohio public lands and List of lakes in Ohio View of the Ohio River near Portsmouth OhioOhio s geographic location has proven 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 along 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 99 To the north Ohio has 312 miles 502 km of coastline with Lake Erie 100 which allows for numerous cargo ports such as Cleveland and Toledo Ohio s southern border is defined by the Ohio River Ohio s neighbors are Pennsylvania to the east Michigan to the northwest 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 Ohio is bounded by the Ohio River but nearly all of the river itself belongs to Kentucky and West Virginia In 1980 the U S Supreme Court held that based on the wording of the cessation of territory by Virginia which at the time included what is now Kentucky and West Virginia the boundary between Ohio and Kentucky and by implication West Virginia is the northern low water mark of the river as it existed in 1792 101 Ohio has only that portion of the river between the river s 1792 low water mark and the present high water mark 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 Geographic regions of Ohio Much of Ohio features glaciated till 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 Geologically similar to parts of West Virginia and southwestern Pennsylvania this area s coal mining legacy dependence on small pockets of old manufacturing establishments and distinctive regional dialect set this section off from the rest of the state In 1965 the United States Congress passed the Appalachian Regional Development Act an attempt to address the persistent poverty and growing economic despair of the Appalachian Region 102 This act defines 29 Ohio counties as part of Appalachia 103 While 1 3 of Ohio s land mass is part of the federally defined Appalachian region only 12 8 of Ohioans live there 1 476 million people 104 Map of Ohio cities and rivers 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 River and then the Mississippi The worst weather disaster in Ohio history occurred along the Great Miami River in 1913 Known as the Great Dayton Flood the entire Miami River watershed flooded including the downtown business district of Dayton As a result the Miami Conservancy District was created as the first major floodplain engineering project in Ohio and the United States 105 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 This body of water over 20 square miles 52 km2 was the largest artificial lake in the world when completed in 1845 106 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 their location on canals and as late as 1910 interior canals carried much of the bulk freight of the state Climate See also Climate change in Ohio Koppen climate types of Ohio using 1991 2020 climate normals The climate of Ohio is a humid continental climate Koppen climate classification Dfa Dfb throughout most of the state except in the extreme southern counties of Ohio s Bluegrass region section which are located on the northern periphery of the humid subtropical climate Cfa and Upland South region of the United States Summers are typically hot and humid throughout the state while winters generally range from cool to cold Precipitation in Ohio is moderate year round Severe weather is not uncommon in the state although there are typically fewer tornado reports in Ohio than in states located in what is known as the Tornado Alley Severe lake effect snowstorms are also not uncommon on the southeast shore of Lake Erie which is located in an area designated as the Snowbelt Although predominantly not in a subtropical climate some warmer climate flora and fauna do reach well into Ohio For instance some trees with more southern ranges such as the blackjack oak Quercus marilandica are found at their northernmost in Ohio just north of the Ohio River Also evidencing this climatic transition from a subtropical to a continental climate several plants such as the Southern magnolia Magnolia grandiflora 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 region of Ohio but these same plants will simply not thrive in much of the rest of the state This interesting 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 Average daily maximum and minimum temperatures for selected cities in Ohio 107 Location Region July F July C January F January C Athens Appalachian 85 61 29 16 40 21 4 6Cincinnati Southwest 86 66 30 19 39 23 3 5Cleveland Northeast 82 64 28 18 34 21 1 5Columbus Central 85 65 29 18 36 22 2 5Dayton Miami Valley 87 67 31 19 36 22 2 5Toledo Northwest 84 62 29 17 32 18 0 7Youngstown Northeast 81 60 27 15 32 19 0 7Records The highest recorded temperature was 113 F 45 C near Gallipolis on July 21 1934 108 The lowest recorded temperature was 39 F 39 C at Milligan on February 10 1899 109 during the Great Blizzard of 1899 110 Earthquakes Although few have registered as noticeable to the average resident more than 200 earthquakes with a magnitude of 2 0 or higher have occurred in Ohio since 1776 111 The Western Ohio Seismic Zone and a portion of the Southern Great Lakes Seismic Zone are located in the state and numerous faults lie under the surface 111 112 The most substantial known earthquake in Ohio history was the Anna Shelby County earthquake 113 which occurred on March 9 1937 It was centered in western Ohio with a magnitude of 5 4 and was of intensity VIII 114 Other significant earthquakes in Ohio include 115 one of magnitude 4 8 near Lima on September 19 1884 116 one of magnitude 4 2 near Portsmouth on May 17 1901 117 and one of 5 0 in LeRoy Township in Lake County on January 31 1986 which continued to trigger 13 aftershocks of magnitude 0 5 to 2 4 for two months 118 119 Notable Ohio earthquakes in the 21st century include one occurring on December 31 2011 approximately 4 kilometers 2 5 mi northwest of Youngstown 120 and one occurring on June 10 2019 approximately 5 kilometers 3 1 mi north northwest of Eastlake under Lake Erie 121 both registered a 4 0 magnitude Major citiesSee also List of cities in Ohio Largest cities or towns in Ohio Source 2020 U S Census 122 Rank Name County Pop Rank Name County Pop Columbus Cleveland 1 Columbus Franklin 905 748 11 Youngstown Mahoning 60 068 Cincinnati Toledo2 Cleveland Cuyahoga 372 624 12 Springfield Clark 58 6623 Cincinnati Hamilton 309 317 13 Kettering Montgomery 57 8624 Toledo Lucas 270 871 14 Elyria Lorain 52 6565 Akron Summit 190 469 15 Cuyahoga Falls Summit 51 1146 Dayton Montgomery 137 644 16 Middletown Butler 50 9877 Parma Cuyahoga 81 146 17 Lakewood Cuyahoga 50 9428 Canton Stark 70 872 18 Newark Licking 49 9349 Lorain Lorain 65 211 19 Euclid Cuyahoga 49 69210 Hamilton Butler 62 082 20 Dublin Franklin 49 328 Ohio population density map Ohio s three largest cities are Columbus Cleveland and Cincinnati all three of which anchor major metropolitan areas Columbus is the capital of the state located near its geographic center and is well known for Ohio State University In 2019 the city had six corporations named to the U S Fortune 500 list Alliance Data Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company American Electric Power L Brands Huntington Bancshares and Cardinal Health in suburban Dublin 123 124 Other major employers include hospitals among others Wexner Medical Center and Nationwide Children s Hospital high tech research and development including the Battelle Memorial Institute information based companies such as OCLC and Chemical Abstracts Service manufacturer Worthington Industries and financial institutions such as JPMorgan Chase and Huntington Bancshares Fast food chains Wendy s and White Castle are also headquartered in Columbus Located in Northeast Ohio along the Lake Erie shore Cleveland is characterized by its New England heritage ethnic immigrant cultures and history as a major American manufacturing and healthcare center It anchors the Cleveland Akron Canton Combined Statistical Area of which the cities of Akron and Canton are constituent parts Mansfield and Youngstown are also major cities in the region Northeast Ohio is known for major industrial companies Goodyear Tire and Rubber and Timken top ranked colleges Case Western Reserve University Oberlin College and Kent State University the Cleveland Clinic and cultural attractions including the Cleveland Museum of Art Big Five member Cleveland Orchestra Cuyahoga Valley National Park Playhouse Square the Pro Football Hall of Fame and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Cincinnati anchors Southwest Ohio and the Cincinnati Tri State area which also encompasses counties in the neighboring states of Kentucky and Indiana The metropolitan area is home to Miami University and the University of Cincinnati Cincinnati Union Terminal Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra and various Fortune 500 companies including Procter amp Gamble Kroger Macy s Inc and Fifth Third Bank Dayton and Springfield are located in the Miami Valley which is home to the University of Dayton the Dayton Ballet and the extensive Wright Patterson Air Force Base Toledo and Lima are the major cities in Northwest Ohio an area known for its glass making industry It is home to Owens Corning and Owens Illinois two Fortune 500 corporations Steubenville is the only metropolitan city in Appalachian Ohio a region known for its mixed mesophytic forests Ohio is the US state with the highest number of cities with the same name as UK cities 125 Metropolitan areas Largest metropolitan statistical areas in Ohio Ohio rank U S rank Metropolitan statistical area 126 2022 estimate 127 2020 census 127 Change Counties 128 1 30 Cincinnati OH KY IN Metropolitan Statistical Area 2 258 099 2 249 797 0 37 Brown Butler Clermont Hamilton Warren2 32 Columbus OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 2 161 511 2 138 926 1 06 Delaware Fairfield Franklin Hocking Licking Madison Morrow Perry Pickaway Union3 33 Cleveland OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 2 160 146 2 185 825 1 17 Ashtabula Cuyahoga Geauga Lake Lorain Medina4 74 Dayton OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 812 595 814 049 0 18 Greene Miami Montgomery Preble5 85 Akron OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 697 627 702 219 0 65 Portage Summit6 96 Toledo OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 600 406 606 240 0 96 Fulton Lucas Wood7 127 Youngstown Warren OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 426 279 430 591 1 00 Mahoning Trumbull8 136 Canton Massillon OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 399 316 401 574 0 56 Stark Carroll9 307 Springfield OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 134 831 136 001 0 86 Clark10 324 Mansfield OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 125 319 124 936 0 31 Richland11 338 Sandusky OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 114 479 115 986 1 30 Erie Ottawa12 340 Weirton Steubenville WV OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 114 235 116 903 2 28 Jefferson13 361 Lima OH Metropolitan Statistical Area 101 115 102 206 1 07 AllenThe Cincinnati metropolitan area extends into Kentucky and Indiana and the Steubenville metropolitan area extends into West Virginia Other metropolitan areas that contain cities in Ohio but are primarily in other states include Huntington Ashland WV KY OH Metropolitan Statistical Area Lawrence County Wheeling WV OH Metropolitan Statistical Area Belmont County Largest combined statistical areas in Ohio Ohio rank U S rank Combined statistical areas 2020 census 129 2010 census 129 Change Subdivisions1 18 Cleveland Akron Canton OH Combined Statistical Area 3 577 606 3 515 646 1 76 Cleveland Elyria OH Metropolitan Statistical AreaAkron OH Metropolitan Statistical AreaCanton Massillon OH Metropolitan Statistical AreaAshtabula OH Micropolitan Statistical AreaNew Philadelphia Dover OH Micropolitan Statistical AreaSandusky OH Micropolitan Statistical AreaNorwalk OH Micropolitan Statistical Area2 26 Columbus Marion Zanesville OH Combined Statistical Area 2 541 313 2 308 509 10 08 Columbus OH Metropolitan Statistical AreaZanesville OH Micropolitan Statistical AreaChillicothe OH Micropolitan Statistical AreaMarion OH Micropolitan Statistical AreaMount Vernon OH Micropolitan Statistical AreaBellefontaine OH Micropolitan Statistical AreaCambridge OH Micropolitan Statistical AreaWashington Court House OH Micropolitan Statistical Area3 30 Cincinnati Wilmington Maysville OH KY IN Combined Statistical Area 2 291 863 2 174 110 5 42 Cincinnati OH KY IN Metropolitan Statistical AreaWilmington OH Micropolitan Statistical AreaMaysville KY Micropolitan Statistical Area4 56 Dayton Springfield Kettering OH Combined Statistical Area 1 081 343 1 080 044 0 12 Dayton OH Metropolitan Statistical AreaSpringfield OH Metropolitan Statistical AreaGreenville OH Micropolitan Statistical AreaSidney OH Micropolitan Statistical AreaUrbana OH Micropolitan Statistical Area5 67 Toledo Findlay Tiffin OH Combined Statistical Area 830 245 843 900 1 62 Toledo OH Metropolitan Statistical AreaFindlay OH Micropolitan Statistical AreaFremont OH Micropolitan Statistical AreaTiffin OH Micropolitan Statistical Area6 74 Youngstown Warren OH PA Combined Statistical Area 632 538 673 614 6 10 Youngstown Warren Boardman OH PA Metropolitan Statistical AreaSalem OH Micropolitan Statistical AreaAdditionally 30 Ohio cities function as centers of micropolitan areas urban clusters smaller than that of metropolitan areas Many of these are included as part of larger combined statistical areas as shown in the table above DemographicsHistorical population CensusPop Note 180045 365 1810230 760408 7 1820581 434152 0 1830937 90361 3 18401 519 46762 0 18501 980 32930 3 18602 339 51118 1 18702 665 26013 9 18803 198 06220 0 18903 672 32914 8 19004 157 54513 2 19104 767 12114 7 19205 759 39420 8 19306 646 69715 4 19406 907 6123 9 19507 946 62715 0 19609 706 39722 1 197010 652 0179 7 198010 797 6301 4 199010 847 1150 5 200011 353 1404 7 201011 536 5041 6 202011 799 4482 3 2022 est 11 756 058 0 4 Source 1910 2020 130 Population From just over 45 000 residents in 1800 Ohio s population grew faster than 10 per decade except for the 1940 census until the 1970 census which recorded just over 10 65 million Ohioans 131 Growth then slowed for the next four decades 132 The United States Census Bureau counted 11 808 848 in the 2020 census a 2 4 increase since the 2010 United States census 8 Ohio s population growth lags that of the entire United States and whites are found in a greater density than the U S average As of 2000 update Ohio s center of population is located in Morrow County 133 in the county seat of Mount Gilead 134 This is approximately 6 346 feet 1 934 m south and west of Ohio s population center in 1990 133 Graphs are temporarily unavailable due to technical issues Graph of Ohio s population from 1800 to 2020 census Population growth by county in Ohio between the 2010 and 2020 censuses 10 to 5 percent 5 to 2 percent 2 to 0 percent 0 to 2 percent 2 to 5 percent 5 to 10 percent 10 to 20 percent More than 20 percentAs of 2011 27 6 of Ohio s children under the age of 1 belonged to minority groups 135 Approximately 6 2 of Ohio s population was under five years of age 23 7 under 18 years of age and 14 1 were 65 or older females made up an estimated 51 2 of the population According to HUD s 2022 Annual Homeless Assessment Report there were an estimated 10 654 homeless people in Ohio 136 137 Birth data Note Births in table do not add up because Hispanics are counted both by their ethnicity and by their race giving a higher overall number Live births by single race ethnicity of mother Race 2013 138 2014 139 2015 140 2016 141 2017 142 2018 143 2019 144 2020 145 2021 146 White 109 749 79 0 110 003 78 9 109 566 78 7 gt non Hispanic White 104 059 74 9 104 102 74 6 103 586 74 4 100 225 72 6 98 762 72 1 97 423 72 1 95 621 71 1 92 033 71 2 92 761 71 5 Black 24 952 18 0 24 931 17 9 25 078 18 0 22 337 16 2 22 431 16 4 22 201 16 4 22 555 16 8 21 447 16 6 20 748 16 0 Asian 3 915 2 8 4 232 3 0 4 367 3 1 4 311 3 1 4 380 3 2 4 285 3 2 4 374 3 3 3 995 3 1 3 862 3 0 American Indian 320 0 2 301 0 2 253 0 2 128 0 1 177 0 1 169 0 1 204 0 2 102 gt 0 1 107 gt 0 1 Hispanic of any race 6 504 4 7 6 884 4 9 6 974 5 0 7 420 5 4 7 468 5 5 7 432 5 5 7 725 5 7 7 669 5 9 8 228 6 3 Total Ohio 138 936 100 139 467 100 139 264 100 138 085 100 136 832 100 135 134 100 134 461 100 129 191 100 129 791 100 Since 2016 data for births of White Hispanic origin are not collected but included in one Hispanic group persons of Hispanic origin may be of any race Ancestry Ethnic origins in OhioEthnic composition as of the 2020 census Race and ethnicity 147 Alone TotalWhite non Hispanic 75 9 75 9 79 9 79 9 African American non Hispanic 12 3 12 3 14 0 14 Hispanic or Latino g 4 4 4 4 Asian 2 5 2 5 3 1 3 1 Native American 0 2 0 2 1 7 1 7 Pacific Islander 0 04 0 04 0 1 0 1 Other 0 4 0 4 1 2 1 2 Ohio historic racial breakdown of population Racial and ethnic composition 1990 148 2000 149 2010 150 White 87 8 85 0 82 7 African American 10 6 11 5 12 2 Asian 0 8 1 2 1 7 Native 0 2 0 2 0 2 Native Hawaiian andother Pacific Islander Other race 0 5 0 8 1 1 Two or more races 1 4 2 1 In 2010 there were 469 700 foreign born residents in Ohio corresponding to 4 1 of the total population Of these 229 049 2 0 were naturalized U S citizens and 240 699 2 1 were not 11 The largest groups were 151 Mexico 54 166 India 50 256 China 34 901 Germany 19 219 Philippines 16 410 United Kingdom 15 917 Canada 14 223 Russia 11 763 South Korea 11 307 and Ukraine 10 681 Though predominantly white Ohio has large black populations in all major metropolitan areas throughout the state Ohio has a significant Hispanic population made up of Mexicans in Toledo and Columbus and Puerto Ricans in Cleveland and Columbus and also has a significant and diverse Asian population in Columbus Map of counties in Ohio by racial plurality per the 2020 U S census Non Hispanic White 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 90 Ancestry groups which the census defines as not including racial terms in the state were 11 152 26 5 German 14 1 Irish 9 0 English 6 4 Italian 3 8 Polish 2 5 French 1 9 Scottish 1 7 Hungarian 1 6 Dutch 1 5 Mexican 1 2 Slovak 1 1 Welsh and 1 1 Scotch Irish Ancestries claimed by less than 1 of the population include Sub Saharan African Puerto Rican Swiss Swedish Arab Greek Norwegian Romanian Austrian Lithuanian Finnish West Indian Portuguese and Slovene Languages About 6 7 of the population age 5 years and older reported speaking a language other than English with 2 2 of the population speaking Spanish 2 6 speaking other Indo European languages 1 1 speaking Asian and Austronesian languages and 0 8 speaking other languages 11 Numerically 10 100 586 spoke English 239 229 Spanish 55 970 German 38 990 Chinese 33 125 Arabic and 32 019 French In addition 59 881 spoke a Slavic language and 42 673 spoke another West Germanic language according to the 2010 census 153 Ohio also had the nation s largest population of Slovene speakers second largest of Slovak speakers second largest of Pennsylvania Dutch German speakers and the third largest of Serbian speakers 154 Religion Religious self identification per Public Religion Research Institute s 2021 American Values Survey 155 Protestantism 46 Catholicism 18 Unaffilated 30 Judaism 2 Hinduism 1 Other 3 Amish children on their way to schoolAccording to a Pew Forum poll in 2014 73 of Ohioans identified as Christian 156 Specifically 29 of Ohio s population identified as Evangelical Protestant 17 as Mainline Protestant 7 as Historically Black Protestant and 18 as Catholic 156 Roughly 22 of the population were unaffiliated with any religious body 156 Small minorities of Jews 1 Jehovah s Witnesses 1 Muslims 1 Hindus lt 1 Buddhists 1 Mormons 1 and other faiths 1 1 5 exist according to this study 156 According to the Association of Religion Data Archives ARDA in 2010 the largest Christian denominations by adherents were the Catholic Church with 1 992 567 the United Methodist Church with 496 232 the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America with 223 253 the Southern Baptist Convention with 171 000 the Christian Churches and Churches of Christ with 141 311 the United Church of Christ with 118 000 and the Presbyterian Church USA with 110 000 157 With about 80 000 adherents in 2020 Ohio had the second largest Amish population of all U S states only behind neighboring Pennsylvania 158 According to the same data from 2014 s study a majority of Ohioans 56 felt religion was very important 25 that it was somewhat important and 19 that religion was not too important not important at all 156 Among them 38 of Ohioans indicate that they attend religious services at least once weekly 32 occasionally and 30 seldom or never 156 Per ARDA s 2020 study 159 Christianity remained the predominant religion Non denominational Christianity numbering 1 411 863 were the largest Protestant cohort although Catholicism remained the single largest denomination with 1 820 233 adherents According to the Public Religion Research Institute in 2021 overall Christianity was 64 of the total population the unaffiliated made up 30 of the population altogether those identifying with a religion or spiritual tradition were 70 of the state s population EconomyMain article Economy of Ohio See also Ohio locations by per capita income Cincinnati s Procter amp Gamble is one of Ohio s largest companies in terms of revenue According to the U S Census Bureau the total number of people employed in 2016 was 4 790 178 The total number of unique employer establishments was 252 201 while the total number of non employer establishments was 785 833 160 In 2010 Ohio was ranked second in the country for best business climate by Site Selection magazine based on a business activity database 161 The state has also won three consecutive Governor s Cup awards from the magazine based on business growth and developments 162 As of 2016 update Ohio s gross domestic product GDP was 626 billion 163 This ranks Ohio s economy as the seventh largest among all 50 states and Washington D C 164 The Small Business amp Entrepreneurship Council ranked the state No 10 for best business friendly tax systems in their Business Tax Index 2009 including a top corporate tax and capital gains rate that were both ranked No 6 at 1 9 165 Ohio was ranked No 11 by the council for best friendly policy states according to their Small Business Survival Index 2009 166 The Directorship s Boardroom Guide ranked the state No 13 overall for best business climate including No 7 for best litigation climate 167 Forbes ranked the state No 8 for best regulatory environment in 2009 168 Ohio has five of the top 115 colleges in the nation according to U S News amp World Report s 2010 rankings 169 and was ranked No 8 by the same magazine in 2008 for best high schools 170 Ohio s unemployment rate stands at 4 5 as of February 2018 171 down from 10 7 in May 2010 172 173 The state still lacks 45 000 jobs compared to the pre recession numbers of 2007 174 The labor force participation as of April 2015 is 63 slightly above the national average 174 Ohio s per capita income stands at 34 874 164 175 As of 2019 update Ohio s median household income is 58 642 176 and 13 1 of the population is below the poverty line 177 The manufacturing and financial activities sectors each compose 18 3 of Ohio s GDP making them Ohio s largest industries by percentage of GDP 164 Ohio has the third largest manufacturing workforce behind California and Texas 178 179 Ohio has the largest bioscience sector in the Midwest and is a national leader in the green economy Ohio is the largest producer in the country of plastics rubber fabricated metals electrical equipment and appliances 180 5 212 000 Ohioans are currently employed by wage or salary 164 By employment Ohio s largest sector is trade transportation utilities which employs 1 010 000 Ohioans or 19 4 of Ohio s workforce while the health care and education sector employs 825 000 Ohioans 15 8 164 Government employs 787 000 Ohioans 15 1 manufacturing employs 669 000 Ohioans 12 9 and professional and technical services employs 638 000 Ohioans 12 2 164 Ohio s manufacturing sector is the third largest of all fifty United States states in terms of gross domestic product 164 Fifty nine of the United States top 1 000 publicly traded companies by revenue in 2008 are headquartered in Ohio including Procter amp Gamble Goodyear Tire amp Rubber AK Steel Timken Abercrombie amp Fitch and Wendy s 181 Ohio is also one of 41 states with its own lottery 182 the Ohio Lottery 183 As of 2020 update the Ohio Lottery has contributed more than 26 billion to education beginning in 1974 184 Transportation Map of Ohio showing Interurban Railways c 1907 Ohio welcome sign in 2018Roads See also List of Interstate Highways in Ohio List of U S Routes in Ohio and List of state routes in Ohio Many major east west transportation corridors go through Ohio One of those pioneer routes known in the early 20th century as Main Market Route 3 was chosen in 1913 to become part of the historic Lincoln Highway which was the first road across America connecting New York City to San Francisco In Ohio the Lincoln Highway linked many towns and cities together including Canton Mansfield Wooster Lima and Van Wert The arrival of the Lincoln Highway to Ohio was a major influence on the development of the state Upon the advent of the federal numbered highway system in 1926 the Lincoln Highway through Ohio became U S Route 30 Ohio is home to 228 miles 367 km of the historic National Road now U S Route 40 Ohio has a highly developed network of roads and interstate highways Major east west through routes include the Ohio Turnpike I 80 I 90 in the north I 76 through Akron to Pennsylvania I 70 through Columbus and Dayton and the Appalachian Highway State Route 32 running from West Virginia to Cincinnati Major north south routes include I 75 in the west through Toledo Dayton and Cincinnati I 71 through the middle of the state from Cleveland through Columbus and Cincinnati into Kentucky and I 77 in the eastern part of the state from Cleveland through Akron Canton New Philadelphia and Marietta south into West Virginia Interstate 75 between Cincinnati and Dayton is one of the heaviest traveled sections of interstate in Ohio Trails Ohio also has a highly developed network of signed state bicycle routes Many of them follow rail trails with conversion ongoing The Ohio to Erie Trail route 1 connects Cincinnati Columbus and Cleveland U S Bicycle Route 50 traverses Ohio from Steubenville to the Indiana state line outside Richmond 185 Ohio has several long distance hiking trails the most prominent of which is the Buckeye Trail which extends 1 444 mi 2 324 km in a loop around the state of Ohio Part of it is on roads and part is on wooded trail Additionally the North Country Trail the longest of the eleven National Scenic Trails authorized by Congress and the American Discovery Trail a system of recreational trails and roads that collectively form a coast to coast route across the mid tier of the United States pass through Ohio Much of these two trails coincide with the Buckeye Trail Rail vteOhio passenger railLegendCapitol Limitedto Chicago Lake Shore Limitedto Chicago BryanCardinalto Chicago ToledoCincinnati SanduskyCardinalto New York City Elyria Cleveland Alliance Lake Shore Limitedto New York BostonCapitol Limitedto Washington See also List of Ohio railroads and List of Ohio train stations Ohio has an extensive rail network though today most lines carry only freight traffic Three Class I freight railroads operate in Ohio CSX Transportation Norfolk Southern Railway and Canadian National Railway Many local freight carriers also exist in the state Amtrak the national passenger railroad operates three long distance rail routes through Ohio The Lake Shore Limited serves Cleveland Elyria Toledo Sandusky and Bryan The Capitol Limited stops in those cities as well as in Alliance The Cardinal serves Cincinnati Union Terminal From Ohio passengers can ride directly to Chicago New York Boston Washington D C Indianapolis Pittsburgh Buffalo and dozens of destinations in between Columbus is the largest city in the United States without any form of passenger rail Its Union Station was last served in 1979 by the National Limited Ohio is home to several scenic railways and museums including the Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad through Cuyahoga Valley National Park the Age of Steam Roundhouse museum and the Hocking Valley Scenic Railway near Hocking Hills State Park Transit Cincinnati Connector streetcarMass transit exists in many forms in Ohio cities primarily through bus systems The Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority GCRTA operates the RTA Rapid Transit system which consists of one heavy rail line three light rail lines and three bus rapid transit lines Cincinnati is served by the Southwest Ohio Regional Transit Authority SORTA bus network as well as a 3 6 mile 5 8 km streetcar line the Cincinnati Bell Connector Other major transit agencies in Ohio include the Central Ohio Transit Authority COTA serving Columbus and the Greater Dayton Regional Transit Authority GDRTA serving Dayton Air travel See also List of airports in Ohio Ohio has four international airports four commercial and two military The four international include Cleveland Hopkins International Airport John Glenn Columbus International Airport Dayton International Airport and Rickenbacker International Airport one of two military airfields The other military airfield is Wright Patterson Air Force Base which is one of the largest Air Force bases in the United States Other major airports are located in Toledo and Akron Cincinnati s primary airport Cincinnati Northern Kentucky International Airport is in Hebron Kentucky and therefore is not included in Ohio airport lists Waterways Main articles Lake Erie List of rivers of Ohio and Historic Ohio CanalsLaw and governmentMain article Government of Ohio Current governor Mike DeWineThe state government of Ohio consists of the executive legislative and judicial branches 186 187 188 Executive branch The executive branch is headed by the governor of Ohio 186 The current governor is Mike DeWine since 2019 a member of the Republican Party 189 A lieutenant governor succeeds the governor in the event of any removal from office and performs any duties assigned by the governor 190 191 The current lieutenant governor is Jon Husted The other elected constitutional offices in the executive branch are the secretary of state Frank LaRose auditor Keith Faber treasurer Robert Sprague and attorney general Dave Yost 186 There are 21 state administrative departments in the executive branch 192 193 Legislative branch The Ohio Statehouse in Columbus home to the Ohio General Assembly The Ohio General Assembly is a bicameral legislature consisting of the Senate and House of Representatives 194 The Senate is composed of 33 districts each of which is represented by one senator Each senator represents approximately 330 000 constituents 195 The House of Representatives is composed of 99 members 196 The Republican Party is the controlling party in both houses as of the 2020 election cycle In order to be enacted into law a bill must be adopted by both houses of the General Assembly and signed by the Governor If the Governor vetoes a bill the General Assembly can override the veto with a three fifths supermajority of both houses A bill will also become a law if the Governor fails to sign or veto it within 10 days of its being presented The session laws are published in the official Law of Ohio 197 These in turn have been codified in the Ohio Revised Code 198 The General Assembly with the approval of the Governor draws the U S congressional district lines for Ohio s 16 seats in the United States House of Representatives The Ohio Apportionment Board draws state legislative district lines in Ohio Judicial branch The Thomas J Moyer Ohio Judicial Center holds the Supreme Court of Ohio There are three levels of the Ohio state judiciary The lowest level is the court of common pleas each county maintains its own constitutionally mandated court of common pleas which maintain jurisdiction over all justiciable matters 199 The intermediate level court system is the district court system 200 Twelve courts of appeals exist each retaining jurisdiction over appeals from common pleas municipal and county courts in a set geographical area 199 A case heard in this system is decided by a three judge panel and each judge is elected 199 The state s highest ranking court is the Ohio Supreme Court 201 A seven justice panel composes the court which by its own discretion hears appeals from the courts of appeals and retains original jurisdiction over limited matters 202 Local government See also List of counties in Ohio List of municipalities in Ohio and List of townships in Ohio There are also several levels of local government in Ohio counties municipalities cities and villages townships special districts and school districts Ohio is divided into 88 counties 203 Ohio law defines a structure for county government although they may adopt charters for home rule 204 205 Summit County 204 and Cuyahoga County 206 have chosen an alternate form of government The other counties have a government with a three member board of county commissioners 207 a sheriff 208 coroner 209 auditor 210 treasurer 211 clerk of the court of common pleas 212 prosecutor 213 engineer 214 and recorder 215 There are two kinds of incorporated municipalities 251 cities and 681 villages 204 216 217 If a municipality has five thousand or more residents as of the last United States Census it is a city otherwise it is a village 204 218 Municipalities have full home rule powers may adopt a charter ordinances and resolutions for self government 219 Each municipality chooses its own form of government but most have elected mayors and city councils or city commissions City governments provide much more extensive services than county governments such as police forces and paid as opposed to volunteer fire departments The entire area of the state is encompassed by townships 204 When the boundaries of a township are coterminous with the boundaries of a city or village the township ceases to exist as a separate government called a paper township 204 Townships are governed by a three member board of township trustees 204 Townships may have limited home rule powers 220 There are more than 600 city local and exempted village school districts providing K 12 education in Ohio as well as about four dozen joint vocation school districts which are separate from the K 12 districts Each city school district local school district or exempted village school district is governed by an elected board of education 204 A school district previously under state supervision municipal school district may be governed by a board whose members either are elected or appointed by the mayor of the municipality containing the greatest portion of the district s area 204 PoliticsMain article Politics of Ohio See also Elections in Ohio and Political party strength in Ohio Party affiliation as of October 1 2021 221 Party Registered voters PercentageUnaffiliated 6 196 547 77 63 Democratic 947 027 11 86 Republican 836 080 10 47 Libertarian 2 847 0 04 Total 7 982 501 100 Mother of presidents Six U S presidents hailed from Ohio at the time of their elections giving rise to its nickname mother of presidents a sobriquet it shares with Virginia It is also termed modern mother of presidents in contrast to Virginia s status as the origin of presidents earlier in American history Seven presidents were born in Ohio making it second to Virginia s eight Virginia born William Henry Harrison lived most of his life in Ohio and is also buried there Harrison conducted his political career while living on the family compound founded by his father in law John Cleves Symmes in North Bend Ohio The seven presidents born in Ohio were Ulysses S Grant elected from Illinois Rutherford B Hayes James A Garfield Benjamin Harrison grandson of William Henry Harrison amp elected from Indiana William McKinley William Howard Taft and Warren G Harding 222 All seven were Republicans Electoral history Presidential election results by county for 2020 Democratic RepublicanOhio has been considered a swing state being won by either the Democratic or Republican candidates reasonably each election As such Ohio is usually targeted by both major party campaigns especially in competitive elections 223 Pivotal in the election of 1888 Ohio has been a regular swing state since 1980 and has been considered a bellwether 224 225 This status however was called into question after incumbent Republican Donald Trump won the state by a comfortable eight point margin in the 2020 presidential election despite losing nationally to Democratic challenger Joe Biden 226 Historian R Douglas Hurt asserts that not since Virginia had a state made such a mark on national political affairs 227 The Economist notes that 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 228 Since 1896 Ohio has had only three misses in the general election Thomas E Dewey in 1944 Richard Nixon in 1960 and Donald Trump in 2020 and had the longest perfect streak of any state voting for the winning presidential candidate in each election from 1964 to 2016 and in 33 of the 38 held since the Civil War No Republican has ever won the presidency without winning Ohio As of 2019 there are more than 7 8 million registered Ohioan voters with 1 3 million Democrats and 1 9 million Republicans They are disproportionate in age with a million more over 65 than there are 18 to 24 year olds 229 Since the 2010 midterm elections Ohio s voter demographic has leaned towards the Republican Party 230 The governor Mike DeWine is Republican as are all other non judicial statewide elected officials including Lieutenant Governor Jon A Husted Attorney General Dave Yost State Auditor Keith Faber Secretary of State Frank LaRose and State Treasurer Robert Sprague In the Ohio State Senate the Republicans are the majority 25 8 and in the Ohio House of Representatives the Republicans control the delegation 64 35 Losing one seat in the U S House of Representatives following the 2020 census Ohio has 15 seats for the two presidential elections of the decade in 2024 and 2028 231 As of the 2022 cycle ten federal representatives are Republicans while five are Democrats Marcy Kaptur D 09 is the most senior member of the Ohio delegation to the U S House of Representatives 232 The senior U S senator Sherrod Brown is a Democrat while the junior J D Vance is a Republican 233 234 Allegations of voter suppression Since 1994 the state has had a policy of purging infrequent voters from its rolls In April 2016 a lawsuit was filed challenging this policy on the grounds that it violated the National Voter Registration Act NVRA of 1993 235 and the Help America Vote Act of 2002 236 In June the federal district court ruled for the plaintiffs and entered a preliminary injunction applicable only to the November 2016 election The preliminary injunction was upheld in September by the Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit Had it not been upheld thousands of voters would have been purged from the rolls just a few weeks before the election 235 237 It was estimated in 2017 that the state has removed up to two million voters since 2011 238 better source needed In a 2020 study Ohio was ranked as the 17th hardest state for citizens to vote in 239 EducationOhio s system of public education is outlined in Article VI of the state constitution and in Title XXXIII of the Ohio Revised Code Ohio University the first university in the Northwest Territory was also the first public institution in Ohio Substantively Ohio s system is similar to those found in other states At the State level the Ohio Department of Education which is overseen by the Ohio State Board of Education governs primary and secondary educational institutions At the municipal level there are approximately 700 school districts statewide The Ohio Board of Regents coordinates and assists with Ohio s institutions of higher education which have recently been reorganized into the University System of Ohio under Governor Strickland The system averages an annual enrollment of more than 400 000 students making it one of the five largest state university systems in the U S Colleges and universities Main article List of colleges and universities in Ohio University Hall at the Ohio State University in Columbus Ohio s largest university by enrollment 240 Ohio schools consistently ranking in the top 50 nationally of the U S News amp World Report of liberal arts colleges are Ohio Big Three Denison University Oberlin College and Kenyon College Ranking in the top 100 of national research universities typically includes Case Western Reserve University Ohio State University and Miami University 241 13 state universities Bowling Green State University Bowling Green Central State University Wilberforce Cleveland State University Cleveland Kent State University Kent Miami University Oxford Ohio State University Columbus Ohio University Athens Shawnee State University Portsmouth University of Akron Akron University of Cincinnati Cincinnati University of Toledo Toledo Wright State University Dayton Youngstown State University Youngstown 24 state university branch and regional campuses Bosworth Hall at Oberlin College in northeast Ohio the first college in the U S to admit women 242 46 private colleges and universities 6 free standing state assisted medical schools Boonshoft School of Medicine Wright State University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine Ohio University Northeast Ohio Medical University The Ohio State University College of Medicine and Public Health University of Cincinnati College of Medicine University of Toledo College of Medicine formerly Medical University of Ohio 15 community colleges 8 technical colleges 24 independent non profit collegesLibraries Ohio is home to some of the nation s highest ranked public libraries 243 The 2008 study by Thomas J Hennen Jr ranked Ohio as number one in a state by state comparison 244 For 2008 31 of Ohio s library systems were all ranked in the top ten for American cities of their population category 243 500 000 books or more Columbus Metropolitan Library First Cuyahoga County Public Library Second Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County Tenth The Ohio Public Library Information Network OPLIN is an organization that provides Ohio residents with internet access to their 251 public libraries OPLIN also provides Ohioans with free home access to high quality subscription research databases Ohio also offers the OhioLINK program allowing Ohio s libraries particularly those from colleges and universities access to materials for the other libraries The program is largely successful in allowing researchers for access to books and other media that might not be otherwise available CultureArts Music Main article Music of Ohio The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Rhythm and Blues Music Hall of Fame are both located in Cleveland Cleveland disc jockey Alan Freed is credited with coining the term and promoting rock and roll in the early 1950s Cincinnati is home to the American Classical Music Hall of Fame and Museum Popular musicians from Ohio include Mamie Smith Dean Martin Dave Grohl Tyler Joseph and Josh Dun of Twenty One Pilots Frankie Yankovic Doris Day the McGuire Sisters the Isley Brothers Bobby Womack Howard Hewett Shirley Murdock Boz Scaggs John Legend Marilyn Manson Nine Inch Nails Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney of the Black Keys Griffin Layne Joe Dolce Kid Cudi Benjamin Orr of the Cars Chrissie Hynde of the Pretenders William Bootsy Collins Stephanie Eulinberg of Kid Rock s Twisted Brown Trucker Band and Devo Five Ohio musicians who are Rock and Roll Hall of Fame members Performing arts The Cleveland Orchestra pictured performing at the Teatro Regio is one of the historic Big Five orchestras in the U S Playhouse Square in downtown Cleveland is the second largest performing arts center in the United States home to ten theaters 245 The Cleveland Orchestra is one of the historic Big Five orchestras in the U S and is considered among the best worldwide 246 Many other Ohio cities are home to their own orchestras including Akron Blue Ash Canton Cincinnati Columbus Dayton Toledo and Youngstown Cincinnati is home to its own ballet symphony orchestra pops orchestra and opera all housed at the Cincinnati Music Hall Dayton is also home to a ballet orchestra and opera collectively known as the Dayton Performing Arts Alliance The Columbus Association for the Performing Arts manages seven historic Columbus area theaters 247 Within the marching arts Winter Guard International has hosted national championships in performing arts at the University of Dayton 18 times between 1983 and 2003 and has permanently since 2005 The Bluecoats Drum and Bugle Corps are Ohio s highest fielding drum corps competing in the Drum Corps International World Class circuit out of Canton Visual arts With about 770 000 annual visitors the Cleveland Museum of Art is among the most visited art museums in the United States 248 Ohio is home to 30 art institutions including the Columbus Museum of Art Cincinnati Art Museum Cleveland Museum of Art and other entities The full list includes Akron Art Museum Akron Allen Memorial Art Museum Oberlin College Billy Ireland Cartoon Library amp Museum Ohio State University Burchfield Homestead Salem Butler Institute of American Art Youngstown Canton Museum of Art Canton Cincinnati Art Museum Cincinnati Cleveland Museum of Art Cleveland Columbus Museum of Art Columbus Contemporary Arts Center Cincinnati Dayton Art Institute Dayton Frank Museum of Art Otterbein University National Imperial Glass Museum Bellaire Kennedy Museum of Art Ohio University Temple Museum of Religious Art Case Western Reserve University Mansfield Art Center Mansfield McDonough Museum of Art Youngstown State University Miami University Art Museum Miami University Museum of Ceramics East Liverpool Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland Cleveland Ohio Glass Museum Lancaster Richard Ross Museum of Art Ohio Wesleyan University Springfield Center for the Arts at Wittenberg University Wittenberg University Taft Museum of Art Cincinnati Toledo Museum of Art Toledo Toy and Plastic Brick Museum Bellaire University of Findlay s Mazza Museum University of Findlay Wexner Center for the Arts Ohio State University Whitby Mansion Sidney The Cincinnati Art Museum holds over 100 000 works spanning 6 000 years of human history being among the most comprehensive collections in the Midwest Among its notable collections are works by Master of San Baudelio Jorge Ingles Sandro Botticelli Judith with Head of Holofernes Matteo di Giovanni Domenico Tintoretto Portrait of Venetian dux Marino Grimani Mattia Preti Bernardo Strozzi Frans Hals Bartolome Esteban Murillo St Thomas of Villanueva Peter Paul Rubens Samson and Delilah and Aert van der Neer The collection also includes works by Jean Baptiste Camille Corot Pierre Auguste Renoir Camille Pissarro Claude Monet Rocks At Belle Isle and Pablo Picasso The museum also has a large collection of paintings by American painter Frank Duveneck Elizabeth B Duveneck The Cleveland Museum of Art is internationally renowned for its substantial holdings of Asian and Egyptian art and has a permanent collection of more than 61 000 works from around the world 249 It is the fourth wealthiest art museum in the United States 250 The Columbus Museum of Art holds nineteenth and early twentieth century American and European art including early Cubist paintings by Pablo Picasso and Juan Gris works by Francois Boucher Paul Cezanne Mary Cassatt Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres Edgar Degas Henri Matisse Claude Monet Edward Hopper and Norman Rockwell and installations by Mel Chin Josiah McElheny Susan Philipsz and Allan Sekula Also in Columbus the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library amp Museum collection includes 450 000 original cartoons 36 000 books 51 000 serial titles and 3 000 feet 910 m of manuscript materials plus 2 5 million comic strip clippings and tear sheets making it the largest research library for cartoon art Youngstown s Butler Institute of American Art was the first museum to be dedicated exclusively to American art 251 Sports Main article Sports in Ohio Professional sports teams Great American Ball Park home to the Cincinnati Reds baseball team Ohio is home to eight professional sports teams across the five different major leagues in the United States Current teams include the Cincinnati Reds and Cleveland Guardians of Major League Baseball 252 253 the Columbus Crew SC and FC Cincinnati of Major League Soccer 254 the Cleveland Cavaliers of the National Basketball Association 255 the Cincinnati Bengals and Cleveland Browns of the National Football League 256 and the Columbus Blue Jackets of the National Hockey League 257 Ohio has brought home seven World Series titles Reds 1919 1940 1975 1976 1990 Indians 1920 1948 two MLS Cups Crew 2008 2020 one NBA Championship Cavaliers 2016 and nine NFL Championships Pros 1920 Bulldogs 1922 1923 1924 Rams 1945 Browns 1950 1954 1955 1964 Despite this success in the NFL in the first half of the 20th century no Ohio team has won the Super Bowl since its inception in 1967 No Ohio team has made an appearance in the Stanley Cup Finals The Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton Ohio played a central role in the development of both Major League Baseball and the National Football League Baseball s first fully professional team the Cincinnati Red Stockings of 1869 were organized in Ohio 258 An informal early 20th century American football association the Ohio League was the direct predecessor of the modern NFL although neither of Ohio s modern NFL franchises trace their roots to an Ohio League club The NFL itself was founded in Canton Ohio in 1920 as the American Professional Football Conference 71 The first official game occurred on October 3 1920 when the Dayton Triangles beat the Columbus Panhandles 14 0 in Dayton 72 Canton would later be enshrined as the home of the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1963 73 On a smaller scale Ohio hosts minor league baseball arena football indoor football mid level hockey and lower division soccer Individual sports The Mid Ohio Sports Car Course has hosted several auto racing championships including CART World Series IndyCar Series NASCAR Nationwide Series Can Am Formula 5000 IMSA GT Championship American Le Mans Series and Rolex Sports Car Series The Grand Prix of Cleveland also hosted CART races from 1982 to 2007 The Eldora Speedway is a major dirt oval that hosts NASCAR Camping World Truck Series World of Outlaws Sprint Cars and USAC Silver Crown Series races Ohio hosts two PGA Tour events the WGC Bridgestone Invitational and Memorial Tournament The Cincinnati Masters is an ATP World Tour Masters 1000 and WTA Premier 5 tennis tournament College sports Main article List of college athletic programs in Ohio Ohio Stadium in Columbus home to the Ohio State Buckeyes football team is the fifth largest stadium in the world Ohio has eight NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision college football teams divided among three different conferences It has also experienced considerable success in the secondary and tertiary tiers of college football divisions There are two programs in the Power Five conferences the Ohio State Buckeyes of the Big Ten Conference and the Cincinnati Bearcats of the Big 12 Conference The Ohio State Buckeyes football team is second in all time winning percentage with a 931 327 53 overall record and a 25 26 bowl record as of 2020 The program has produced seven Heisman Trophy winners forty conference titles and eight undisputed national championships The men s basketball program has appeared in the NCAA Division I men s basketball tournament 27 times The Cincinnati Bearcats men s basketball team has over 1 800 wins and 33 March Madness appearances whilst the Bearcats football team became the first so called Group of Five team to qualify to the College Football Playoff in 2022 259 In the Group of Five conferences six teams are represented in the Mid American Conference the Akron Zips Bowling Green Falcons Kent State Golden Flashes Miami RedHawks Ohio Bobcats and the Toledo Rockets The MAC headquarters are in Cleveland The Cincinnati Miami rivalry game has been played in southwest Ohio every year since 1888 and is the oldest current non conference NCAA football rivalry Other Division I schools either part of the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision or not fielding in football include the Cleveland State Vikings Xavier Musketeers Wright State Raiders and Youngstown State Penguins Xavier s men s basketball has performed particularly well with 27 March Madness appearances Youngstown State s football has the third most NCAA Division I Football Championship wins with 3 There are 12 NCAA Division II universities and 22 NCAA Division III universities in Ohio See also Ohio portal United States portalIndex of Ohio related articles Outline of OhioNotes According to the U S Census July 2017 Annual Estimate Archived December 27 1996 at the Wayback Machine Greater Columbus is the largest Metropolitan statistical area MSA that is entirely within Ohio with a population of 2 078 725 and Greater Cincinnati is the largest MSA that is at least partially within Ohio with a population of 2 179 082 approximately 25 of which is in Indiana or Kentucky Which MSA is the largest in Ohio depends on the context a b Elevation adjusted to North American Vertical Datum of 1988 Petun Erie Chonnonton Wyandot the Mingo Seneca and the Iroquois Confederacy Miami Mascouten Lenape Shawnee and Odawa Mosopelea The last French Fort in Ohio Country Fort Sandusky was destroyed in 1763 during Pontiac s Rebellion Persons of Hispanic or Latino origin are not distinguished between total and partial ancestry References Ohio s State Motto Ohio Historical Society July 1 2005 Archived from the original on October 6 2007 Retrieved March 27 2009 a b c d e f g h i j k Ohio s State Symbols Ohio Governor s Residence and State Garden Archived from the original on April 23 2009 Retrieved March 26 2009 a b Mary Stockwell 2006 Ohio Adventure Gibbs Smith p 88 ISBN 978 1 4236 2382 3 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2002 p 3 Religion and the Congress of the Confederation 1774 89 Library of Congress June 4 1998 Archived from the original on May 2 2012 Retrieved April 11 2012 Hubbard Robert Ernest General Rufus Putnam George Washington s Chief Military Engineer and the Father of Ohio pp 1 4 McFarland amp Company Inc Jefferson North Carolina ISBN 978 1 4766 7862 7 Hubbard Robert Ernest General Rufus Putnam George Washington s Chief Military Engineer and the Father of Ohio pp 2 4 45 8 105 18 McFarland amp Company Inc Jefferson North Carolina ISBN 978 1 4766 7862 7 Hildreth Samuel Prescott Biographical and Historical Memoirs of the Early Pioneer Settlers of Ohio pp 34 7 63 74 Badgley Publishing Company 2011 ISBN 978 0 615 50189 5 McCullough David The Pioneers The Heroic Story of the Settlers Who Brought the American Ideal West pp 46 7 Simon amp Schuster Inc New York New York 2019 ISBN 978 1 5011 6870 3 Hubbard Robert Ernest General Rufus Putnam George Washington s Chief Military Engineer and the Father of Ohio pp 127 50 McFarland amp Company Inc Jefferson North Carolina ISBN 978 1 4766 7862 7 Hildreth Samuel Prescott Biographical and Historical Memoirs of the Early Pioneer Settlers of Ohio pp 69 71 81 82 Badgley Publishing Company 2011 ISBN 978 0 615 50189 5 McCullough David The Pioneers The Heroic Story of the Settlers Who Brought the American Ideal West pp 143 7 Simon amp Schuster Inc New York New York 2019 ISBN 978 1 5011 6870 3 An act to provide for the due execution of the laws of the United States within the state of Ohio ch 7 2 Stat 201 February 19 1803 a b Blue Frederick J Autumn 2002 The Date of Ohio Statehood Ohio Academy of History Newsletter Archived from the original on September 11 2010 Joint Resolution for admitting the State of Ohio into the Union Pub L 83 204 67 Stat 407 enacted August 7 1953 Clearing up the Confusion surrounding OHIO s Admission to Statehood Archived from the original on October 17 2009 Retrieved October 30 2009 The Shawnee Tribe amp War of 1812 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