Ohio Revised Code Search
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Section 5.02 | State flower.
...The scarlet carnation is hereby adopted as the state flower as a token of love and reverence for the memory of William McKinley. |
Section 5.021 | State wild flower.
...The plant Trillium grandiflorum, commonly known as the large white trillium, found in every Ohio county, is hereby adopted as the state wild flower. |
Section 5.022
...The 1905 Wright Flyer III, first flown on June 23, 1905, near Dayton, Ohio, is hereby adopted as the state airplane. |
Section 5.03 | State bird.
...The bird, cardinalis cardinalis, commonly known as the "cardinal," is the official bird of the state. |
Section 5.031 | State reptile.
...The snake, Coluber constrictor constrictor, known as the black racer, is the official reptile of the state. |
Section 5.032 | State animal.
...The animal, Odocoileus virginianus, commonly known as the white-tailed deer, is the official animal of the state. Naming the white-tailed deer as the official animal of the state does not relieve the division of wildlife of its duty to manage the deer population and its distribution. |
Section 5.033 | State amphibian.
...The salamander, Ambystoma maculatum, commonly known as the spotted salamander, is the official amphibian of the state. |
Section 5.034 | State frog.
...The frog, Rana catesbeiana, commonly known as the bullfrog, is the official frog of the state. |
Section 5.036 | Official pet.
...A shelter pet is hereby designated as the official pet of the state to raise public awareness of shelter animals. |
Section 5.04 | State coat of arms.
...The coat of arms of the state shall consist of the following device: a circular shield; in the right foreground of the shield a full sheaf of wheat bound and standing erect; in the left foreground, a cluster of seventeen arrows bound in the center and resembling in form the sheaf of wheat; in the background, a representation of Mount Logan, Ross county, as viewed from Adena state memorial; over the mount, a rising su... |
Section 5.05 | State tree.
...The tree, Aesculus globra, commonly known as the "Buckeye" is hereby adopted as the official tree of the state. |
Section 5.06 | State motto.
..."With God, All Things Are Possible" shall be adopted as the official motto of the state. |
Section 5.07 | State gem stone.
...The gem stone "Ohio Flint," a crypto-crystalline variety of quartz, is hereby adopted as the official gem stone of the state. |
Section 5.071 | State invertebrate fossil.
...Isotelus, a genus of extinct marine arthropod of the class Trilobita, that lived in the seas that covered Ohio during the Ordovician period, about four hundred forty million years ago, and represented by the largest known complete trilobite, collected at Huffman dam in Montgomery county, is hereby adopted as the official invertebrate fossil of the state. |
Section 5.072 | State bicentennial bridge.
...The Blaine Hill bridge in Belmont county, which was constructed in 1828 as part of the national road and is the oldest bridge in the state, is hereby designated the bicentennial bridge of the state. |
Section 5.073 | State prehistoric monument.
...The Newark earthworks in Licking county, which are geometric earthen enclosures constructed during the prehistoric time period, are hereby designated the official prehistoric monument of the state. |
Section 5.074 | Official historical architectural structure.
...The barn, an agricultural building located on farms and used for many purposes, is hereby designated the official historical architectural structure of the state. |
Section 5.075 | State artifact.
...The artifact known as the Adena pipe, which is a prehistoric effigy pipe that was discovered in 1901 by William C. Mills within a burial mound near Chillicothe and that was created by the ancient Adena culture from native Ohio pipestone, is adopted as the official state artifact. |
Section 5.076 | All-American soap box derby.
...The All-American Soap Box Derby, a youth racing program established in 1934 and located in Akron, is hereby adopted as the official gravity racing program of the state. |
Section 5.077 | Official state penal museum.
...The museum located on the grounds of the Ohio state reformatory, operated by the Mansfield reformatory preservation society, is the official state penal museum. |
Section 5.078 | State fossil fish.
...Dunkleosteus terrelli, a species of extinct arthrodire placoderm fish that lived in the seas that covered parts of Ohio during the Late Devonian period, about three hundred fifty-nine to three hundred eighty-two million years ago, is hereby adopted as the official fossil fish of the state. |
Section 5.08 | State beverage.
...The canned, processed juice and pulp of the fruit of the herb Lycopersicon esculentum, commonly known as tomato juice, is hereby adopted as the official beverage of the state. |
Section 5.081 | State fruit.
...The fruit, Lycopersicon esculentus, commonly known as the tomato, is hereby adopted as the state fruit. |
Section 5.082 | State native fruit.
...The fruit, Asimina triloba, commonly known as the pawpaw, is hereby adopted as the state native fruit. |
Section 5.09 | State song.
...The song, "Beautiful Ohio," is hereby adopted as the official song of the state, the lyric being written by Ballard MacDonald, with special lyrics by Wilbert B. McBride, and the music being composed by Mary Earl. The special lyrics are as follows: I sailed away; Wandered afar; Crossed the mighty restless sea; Looked for where I ought to be. Cities so grand, mountains above, Led to this land I love. Chorus Bea... |