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A GenYes Project

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Title: A GenYes Project


1
A GenYes Project
  • By Alan Bretney
  • In partnership with Mrs. Wolfsburger
  • Marigold school
  • 2006-2007

2
STATE REPORT PRESINTATION
  • OHIO

3
cHAPTER 1
4
1
4
5
1.Cleveland pop573,822 3. Cincinnati
pop385,457 2.Columbus pop565,032 4.Toledo
pop354,635 5.Akron pop273,177
2
3
5
Hills Normal Land
6
US map
7
cHAPTER 2
8
This is my state flag.
9
Heres my state seal.
10
My state flower is the Scarlet Carnation, its
state bird is the Cardinal.
11
This is my state tree, the Ohio Buckeye.
12
TIMELINE
1803 - March 1 - Ohio admitted to the Union as
the 17th state. Chillicothe is named state
capital. 1804 - Ohio University, founded in 1804
in Athens, was the first university in Ohio and
the Northwest Territory. 1810 - Zanesville named
state capitol. 1811 - Tecumseh defeated at the
Battle of Tippecanoe. 1812 - Fort Meigs
constructed to protect Ohio from invasion during
the War of 1812 1813 - British defeat in the
Battle of Lake Erie 1816 - Columbus named state
capitol. 1817 - The first abolitionist
newspaper, The Philanthropist, is published in
Mt. Pleasant. 1825 - The National Road reaches
St. Clairsville. Construction on the Miami and
Erie canals begins. 1832 - Ohio and Erie canals
are completed. 1833 - The nation's first
interracial, coeducational college, Oberlin
College, was founded in Oberlin in 1833. 1834 -
The Ohio Anti-Slavery Society is founded in
Zanesville. 1835 - Boundary disputes between
Michigan and Ohio cause the Toledo War 1840 -
William Henry Harrison, from North Bend, elected
president. 1842 - The Wyandottes, Ohio's last
Indian tribe, leave Ohio 1845 - The State Board
of Agriculture is organized. The Miami and Erie
Canal was completed 1849 - The first Ohio State
Fair opens. 1850 - Ohio leads all states in
corn, horses, sheep and wool production. The
second U.S. Women's Rights Convention is held in
Salem. 1851 - Current Ohio Constitution adopted.
1859 - John Brown, an abolitionist from Akron,
leads raid on Harper's Ferry, VA. 1861-1865 -
Civil War , Ohio fought for the Union but the
state showed mixed feelings toward slavery. 
1861 - Ohio Statehouse completed. 1863 - The
Battle of Buffington Island becomes the only
Civil War battle in Ohio. 1868 - Ulysses S.
Grant, from Point Pleasant, is elected president.
1869 - Cincinnati Redstockings become the first
fully professional baseball team. W. F. Semple
of Mount Vernon patented chewing gum 1870 -
Ohio State University is founded. Benjamin
Goodrich opens a rubber plant in Akron 1873 -
Ohio Agricultural and Mechanical College opens.
1876 - Rutherford B. Hayes, from Delaware, is
elected president. 1878 - James Ritty of Dayton
developed the first cash register. 1879 -
Cleveland became the world's first city to be
lighted electrically in 1879 when Charles Brush
successfully demonstrated arc lights on the
streets. 1880 - James Garfield, from Orange, is
elected president. 1888 - Benjamin Harrison,
from North Bend, is elected president. 1892 -
Cedar Point opens its first roller coaster. 1896
- In Marietta, John Gilman first used x-rays in
surgery. 1898 - Henry Timken of Canton developed
the roller bearing. 1891 - John Lambert of Ohio
City made America's first automobile. 1902 -
Ohio flag adopted by Ohio Legislature. 1903 -
The Wright Brothers, a pair of bicycle shop
owners from Dayton, became the first in flight
1903 - Ohio celebrates centennial. 1908 -
William Howard Taft, from Cincinnati, is elected
president. 1911 - Charles Kettering of
Loudonville invented the first automobile
self-starter in 1911. 1913 - Spring floods kill
428 people. 1914 - The Ohio Conservancy Act
permits formation of watershed districts. 1917 -
U.S. enters World War I. About 6,800 Ohio
soldiers will be killed. 1920 - Warren G.
Harding, from Corsica, is elected president.
1921 - The Bing Act passes, requiring students
to remain in school until graduation or age 18.
1923 - Garrett Morgan of Cleveland invented the
first traffic light. 1925 - The dirigible
Shenandoah crashes near Alva, killing 14 people.
1929 - Steel becomes Ohio's number one
industry. Great Depression hit the nation 1934
- The first state sales tax is imposed at 3
percent. 1937 - The Ohio River floods, leaving
750,000 people homeless. 1938 - Roy J. Plunkett
of New Carlisle invented Teflon. 1941 - U.S.
enters World War II about 20,000 Ohio servicemen
will be killed. 1946 - The U.S. Air Force
chooses Chuck Yeager, a pilot instructor at
Wright Field, to test its first rocket aircraft,
breaking the sound barrier in 1947. 1949 - The
Ohio Department of Natural Resources is created
by the Legislature. 1953 - Congress discovers it
neglected to officially recognize Ohio's
statehood and passes a formal resolution
declaring Ohio's entry into the Union as March 1,
1803. 1955 - The Ohio Turnpike is completed.
1958 - "With God all Things are Possible"
becomes the state motto. 1959 - The Ohio Civil
Rights Commission is created to eliminate
employment discrimination. St. Lawrence Seaway
opened Terms of some state officials are
increased from two to four years 1962 - John
Glenn from New Concord was the first American to
orbit the Earth in 1962. 1963 - Professional
Football Hall of Fame opens in Canton. 1967 -
Great Seal of Ohio is standardized. 1969 - July
20, Neil Armstrong of Wapakoneta became the first
man to walk on the moon. 1970 - Four Kent State
University students killed by National Guard
gunfire during Vietnam War protests. 1971 -
State income tax is adopted. 1973 - Ohio State
Lottery approved by Ohio voters. 1974 - Xenia
tornado kills 34 people. 1976 - Ohio's last
commuter train is shut down 1977 - natural gas
shortage occurred in severe weather conditions
1983 - Marysville Honda plant dedicated. 1986 -
Astronaut Judith Resnick, of Akron, dies in the
Challenger space shuttle explosion. 1990 -
Ohioans struggle through the economic downturn of
the 1980s the 1990 Census reports a slow 0.5
population increase 1995 - Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame opens in Cleveland. 1995 - The Bosnian
Peace Agreement is signed at Wright-Patterson Air
Force Base. 1998 - John Glenn at age 77, he
became the oldest American to travel into space.
2001 - Ohio ranked in the top ten in the country
for growing corn, oats, winter wheat, soybeans,
sweet corn, tomatoes, cucumbers, grapes,
strawberries raising chickens, hogs and pigs
and producing maple syrup and many dairy
products.
1810 - Zanesville named state capitol.
1810 - Zanesville named state capitol.
  • 1803 - March 1 - Ohio admitted to the Union as
    the 17th state. Chillicothe is
  • 1810 - Zanesville named state capitol. named
    state capital.
  • 1816 - Columbus named state capitol.
  • 1879 - Cleveland became the world's first city to
    be lighted electrically in 1879 when Charles
    Brush successfully demonstrated arc lights on the
    streets.
  • 1891 - John Lambert of Ohio City made America's
    first automobile.
  • 1937 - The Ohio River floods, leaving 750,000
    people homeless.
  • 1969 - July 20, Neil Armstrong of Wapakoneta
    became the first man to walk on the moon.
  • 1995 - Rock and Roll Hall of Fame opens in
    Cleveland.
  • 2001 - Ohio ranked in the top ten in the country
    for growing corn, oats, winter wheat, soybeans,
    sweet corn, tomatoes, cucumbers, grapes,
    strawberries raising chickens, hogs and pigs
    and producing maple syrup and many dairy
    products.

13
Chapter 3
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17
1 2 3 4 5
18
Five products description
  • Motor Vehicles and Parts The leading producer in
    this category is Goodyear. They produce cars,
    tire, suspension, and other vehicle parts.
  • Machinery The leading producer in machinery is
    Eaton. Eaton specializes in basically
    everything! They build cars, tractors, hospital
    machinery, and anything you can think of!

19
Five products description
  • Chemicals Sherwin-Williams is the leading
    producer in chemicals for the state of Ohio.
    They specialize in making and selling paint.
    They sell paint for all kinds of buildings!
    Houses, offices, you name it, they got it.
  • Metals The leading Ohio producer in Ohio is AK
    Steel Holding. They do stainless steel, flat
    rolled carbon, and electrical steel.

20
Five products description
  • Food products The leading producer of food
    products in Ohio is Chiquita Brands. Only their
    product isnt grown in Ohio. Where is it grown?
    Ill give you a hint, they sell bananas. Yup,
    all their products are grown in the Caribbean.
    Their headquarters (or HQ) is in Ohio.

21
Chapter 4
22
Places to visit
  • THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF THE UNITED STATES AIR
    FORCE
  • THE ROBELING BRIDGE
  • THE ROCK N ROLL HALL OF FAME
  • BATTLE OF FALLEN TIMBERS
  • PRO FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME

23
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28
Chapter 5
29
Ohio Trivia
  • What is Ohios state motto?
  • Who was Ohios governor during 1822?
  • What was the name of the first steamboat to
    travel down the Ohio River?
  • What was Ohios population in the year 1840?

"This is a very difficult decision, but the truth
is, we kept it open for sentimental reasons much
longer than we should have," Lynch said. Thomas,
who died in 2002 of liver cancer, opened his
first Wendy's Old Fashioned Hamburgers on Nov.
15, 1969. He named the restaurant after his
8-year-old daughter Melinda Lou, nicknamed Wendy.
He later became a nationally known figure as a
Wendy's pitchman in television commercials. The
original restaurant, a few blocks from the Ohio
State house, is unable to generate sales at night
or on weekends, when government buildings are
closed, Lynch said. The restaurant has no
drive-through window, has limited parking and
soon would have required substantial building
improvements, Lynch said. No sales figures were
released. Thomas knew before he died that his
first restaurant was struggling, Lynch said. "I
guarantee he would support this decision," Lynch
said. "He recognized that a company needs to be
profitable." Employees will be offered jobs at
other locations, Lynch said. The company hasn't
decided whether it will hold a closing
ceremony. Memorabilia will be moved to the
company's corporate offices in Dublin,
Ohio. Wendy's operates about 6,600 restaurants in
the U.S. and abroad.
30
Answers
  • With god, all things are possible.
  • Ethan Brown, Allen Trimble, and Jeremiah Morrow.
  • The New Orleans.
  • 1,519,467
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