Our great continent; sketches, picturesque and historic: within and beyond the States . (1788.) Ohio is one of the Central States of the Union, lying be-tween latitude 38° 23 and 41° 58 north, and longitude 80°31 and 84° 48 west. Lake Erie and a part of the Stateof Michigan form its northern boundary. On the east isPennsylvania and West Virginia; on the south Kentucky^and on the west Indiana. It is separated from West Vir-ginia and Kentucky by the Ohio River, while a larger portion of its northernshore is washed by the waters of Lake Erie. Ohio embraces 41,060 squaremiles of territory, and in
Our great continent; sketches, picturesque and historic: within and beyond the States . (1788.) Ohio is one of the Central States of the Union, lying be-tween latitude 38° 23 and 41° 58 north, and longitude 80°31 and 84° 48 west. Lake Erie and a part of the Stateof Michigan form its northern boundary. On the east isPennsylvania and West Virginia; on the south Kentucky^and on the west Indiana. It is separated from West Vir-ginia and Kentucky by the Ohio River, while a larger portion of its northernshore is washed by the waters of Lake Erie. Ohio embraces 41,060 squaremiles of territory, and in 1880 it contained a population of 3,198,062, ofwhom 80,142, including Indians and Chinese, were colored. In population itranks third among the States, third in agricultural products, and fifth in thevalue of its manufactures. The central part of Ohio is a table land about 1000 feet above the sealevel. On its water-shed, between Lake Erie and the Ohio River, in thenorthern part of the State, the land rises to an altitude of thirteen and four-teen hundred feet. In the south centra
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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookidourgreatcontinen00loss