Ohio Formation, State Government and Constitution, and Miscellaneous Facts.

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Presentation transcript:

Ohio Formation, State Government and Constitution, and Miscellaneous Facts

Formation of Ohio

Ohio was once a part of the Northwest Territory

The Land Ordinance of 1785  The ordinance discussed how the government would measure, divide, and distribute the land it had acquired from Great Britain at the end of the American Revolution.  The land was divided and put up for sale to settlers, because the government was having money problems due to the war.  Division of Land: divided into townships or city is 36 square miles, which were then divided into one- square mile.  Each section received a number, and Section 16 was reserved only for public schools.  This was right in the middle of the town, so that all children could go to school and make it required.

How It Looks!

The Northwest Ordinance of 1787

 This was a means of states joining the union through the admission process.  The government wanted to admit new states, instead of expanding the existing states.  It includes the land in Michigan, Indiana, Wisconsin, Ohio, and Illinois.  Requirements  to have a population of at least 60,000  to have a governor, secretary, and three judges  To include a bill of rights  a drafted states constitution

Ohio’s Journey to Statehood

Becoming a State  On February 19, 1803 Congress passed an act stating that the citizens of Ohio had adopted a constitution in accordance with the 1802 enabling act and the said state had become one of the United States of America.  The Ohio General Assembly met for the first time in Chillicothe on March 1, 1803, the date Ohioans now celebrate as Statehood Day.

State Capitals  Chillicothe:  Zanesville:  Chillicothe:  Columbus: present

State Government State has 3 branches of government

The Executive Branch  Headed by Governor of Ohio  John Kasich  Lieutenant Governor (like the VP)  Mary Taylor  Secretary of State (elections, business in Ohio, all records)  Treasurer (in charge of the money)  Auditor (watchdog for the state)  Attorney General (state lawyer)  State Board of Education (torturers)

U.S. Presidents from Ohio  William Henry Harrison  Ulysses S. Grant  Rutherford B. Hayes  James A. Garfield  Benjamin Harrison  William McKinley  William H. Taft  Warren G. Harding

The Judicial Branch  Three Levels in Ohio  Court of Common Pleas  District Court System  Ohio Supreme Court  Supreme Court Justices  Must retire by age 70  Elected to 6-year terms on a non- partisan ballot

The Legislative Branch  Two House Congress— called the General Assembly (it’s the 130 th )  Senators: 33  Representatives: 99  Meet at the State House (Executive Branch offices are on the first floor)

Miscellaneous Facts about Ohio

The Beginnings  Name came from the Iroquois word ohi-yo  Means “great river” or “large creek”  Admitted in 1803  Considered a Midwestern State  Known as the Buckeye State

Breakdown of Ohio  88 counties in Ohio  Ashtabula is Ohio’s largest county with 711 square miles  Lake is Ohio’s smallest county with 232 square miles  Cities:  #1. Columbus – 787,033  #2. Cleveland – 396,815  #3. Cincinnati – 296,943  #4. Toledo – 287,208  #10. Lorain – 64,097  #14. Elyria – 54,533

Compared to Other States…  34th largest state in the United States  17th state admitted into the Union  Ranked 7 th among the 50 state in population

Our Flag  Accepted in 1902  The triangles formed on the flag represent the hills and valleys  Stripes represent the roads and waterways  13 stars represent original 13 states in the Union  Circles represents the Northwest Territory

State Emblems  State Bird  Cardinal  State Flower  Carnation  State Insect  Ladybug  State Animal  White-tailed Deer  State Tree  Buckeye  State Seal  illustrates Ohio’s diverse geography  In the background stands Mount Logan and the Scioto River  In the freshly harvested wheat field stands a wheat bushel and 17 arrows since we’re the 17th state in the Union  The sun has 13 rays protruding outward, representing the original 13 colonies.

Why Visit Ohio?  Cedar Point  Serpent Mound  Lake Erie  Ohio Stadium – the “Horseshoe”  Rock and Roll Hall of Fame  Kings Island