Friday, May 23, 2008

Some Ohio Facts, the ODOT Maps and the Making of U.S. Presidents!

Ohio became the 17th state in March 1803. Only a month later, President Thomas Jefferson arranged the Louisiana Purchase with France, which connected the Midwest to the West. The ODOT produced a bicentennial highway map earlier this year to commemorate the Bicentennial Celebration. The map portrays stories related to transportation in Ohio, such as the Birthplace of Aviation Pioneers, the National Road, Railroads, the Ohio River, Lake Erie and the Underground Railroad. The map also features Ohio's eight United States Presidents:

William H. Harrison-9th President, born in Virginia and lived in Ohio

Ulysses S. Grant-18th President, from Point Pleasant, Ohio

Rutherford B. Hayes-19th President, from Delaware, Ohio

James A. Garfield-20th President, from Orange, Ohio

Benjamin Harrison-23rd President, from North Bend, Ohio

William McKinley-25th President, from Niles, Ohio

William Howard Taft-27th President, from Cincinnati, Ohio

Warren G. Harding-29th President, from Blooming Grove, Ohio

Attractions such as the Rock n' Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland and the U.S. Air Force Museum in Dayton are also featured on the map. The map is available at ODOT and Ohio rest area visitors' centers.

In further commemoration of Ohio's bicentennial, ODOT started the Legacy Tree planting program, which is a project of planting trees and seedlings along Ohio highways to honor Ohio's statehood and the children of Ohio. ODOT teamed up with the Ohio Department of Natural Resources and the Ohio Bicentennial Commission to plant the trees and seedlings. The program is a group effort of several public and private organizations to recognize children as the future of Ohio. Since November 1, 1999, more than 459,000 trees and seedlings have been planted.

The Ohio Bicentennial Commission's barn painting program started as a unique means of getting free, highly visible advertising. It grew into a cultural phenomenon, with nearly 2,000 Ohio barn owners volunteering their barns for painting, and scores of people traveling across the state to visit as many of the barns as possible. By September 2002, artist Scott Hagan completed his five-year mission of painting the Bicentennial logo on at least one barn in each of the 88 counties.

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