The state that I have called home for most of my life celebrates its 223rd birthday today. Happy Birthday to the Buckeye State! Ohio joined the Union and became the 17th state on March 1, 1803.
A few tidbits about my state:
Why is Ohio called the Buckeye State? In the 18th century when Ohio was settled, Buckeye trees were prevalent in the area. Hence, the nickname the Buckeye state.
Ohio is sometimes referred to as "The Mother of Presidents." Seven of of our presidents were born here.
The state bird of Ohio is the cardinal and the state flower is the red carnation.
The Ohio state flag is not rectangular in design and is the only pennant designed flag of our 50 states.
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| Photo: Jeff Kubina |
More than 300,000 Ohioans served in the Union Army during the Civil War. Ohio is said to have had the most active network of the Underground Railroad of any state with 3000 miles of routes. Today, the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center is located in Cincinnati.
Thanks to Wilbur and Orville Wright, Ohio is also known as "The Birthplace of Aviation." The Wright Brothers pioneered their gravity-defying machine in their Dayton bicycle. Ohio is also home to prominent astronauts John Glenn, the first man in space and the oldest nam in space and Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon. Ohio has been a source of aviation innovation over the years. The National Museum of the United States Air Force is located near Dayton, Ohio, at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and is the largest and oldest military aviation museum in the world.
Ohio has two professional football teams: the Cincinnati Bengals and the Cleveland Browns. Interstate 71 connects the two cities for the Battle of Ohio. Canton, Ohio is home to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, where the National Football League was founded in 1920.
Ohio also is home to two professional baseball teams, the Cincinnati Reds and the Cleveland Guardians (formerly the Indians). The Cincinnati Reds, originally known at the Cincinnati Red Stockings, were the first professional baseball team in the United States, founded in 1869.
Originally called the “mechanical money drawer,” the cash register was invented by Ohio native James Jacob Ritty in Dayton.
In 1839, Charles Goodyear from Akron, Ohio invented the process of vulcanizing rubber.
General Mills, of Akron, Ohio, trademarked Quaker Oats as the first breakfast cereal in 1877.
Thomas Edison, famous for inventing the incandescent light bulb, the phonograph, and the motion picture camera, was born in Ohio.
The inventor of the traffic light and gas mask, Garrett Morgan, is from Cleveland, Ohio and in 1914, the first traffic light in the United States was installed by American Traffic Signal Company in Cleveland.
“Duct Tape Capital of the World“ is in Avon, Ohio, where the DUCK duct tape brand was created.
Ohio was the first state to enact laws that protected working women in 1852.
Oberlin College was the first college in the United States to admit women and to admit black students.
In 1923, Cleveland High School students, Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, created Superman.
What state is round on the ends and high in the middle? You guessed it...
O-HI-O!