Geography of Cincinnati
The City of Cincinnati sites in the southwestern corner of Ohio and serves as the center of the 15-county "Tristate" region that encompasses parts of Indiana and Kentucky.
Geologically, the Greater Cincinnati area lies in the Cincinnati Arch province situated between the Illinoian and Appalachian Basins and is composed largely of limestone and shale. These sedimentary rocks were formed during the Ordovician Period and were later exposed during the Illinoian Glaciation period, which was also the event responsible for the formation of the area's Great Miami and Little Miami Rivers.
These same two rivers, along with the Ohio River, later became the boundaries for the Symmes Purchase, a sizeable tract of land purchased by Judge John Cleves Symmes in early 1788. That same year, Mathias Dunman purchased land from Symmes at the confluence of the Licking and Ohio Rivers; by December 1788, Dunman, along with 11 families and 24 additional men, landed at present-day Yeatman's Cove and founded the City of Losantiville, which later became Cincinnati.
Cincinnati's rich history is directly tied to both the physiographic and the cultural aspects of the Ohio River, which gave the early city significant access for settlement, trade and defense, and which later propelled the city to become a highly populated and diversified center from which further explorations of the United States were launched, and as a boomtown of industry and manufacturing. Large-scale German and Irish immigration movements of the mid-1800s further increased the size and diversity of Cincinnati and helped to establish and define its character and culture. Continued westward settlement and exploration of the United States garnered Cincinnati a continuous place in the Top 10 most populous cities in the United States for 70 years, beginning in 1830, with a notable distinction of being the first midwestern city in the Top 10, through to and including 1900. It remained Ohio’s most populous city until it was surpassed by Cleveland in the mid-1890s.
Today Cincinnati is a city of 52 neighborhoods with 300,000+ inhabitants, having reversed a population decline of recent decades, and is governed by a mayor and a nine-member city council. Cincinnati serves as the financial, administrative and cultural center of a metropolitan area of over 2.25 million people. Procter and Gamble has its worldwide headquarters downtown, and other large corporations, including The Kroger Company, General Elecdtric / GE Aerospace, Western & Southern Financial Group, and Cintas, among many other large and medium-sized businesses, have headquarters and regional offices in the area.
The city, however, is more than just business. The Reds (baseball), the Bengals (football), FC Cincinnati (soccer), the Cyclones (hockey), the Flying Pig Marathon (from one of the city's earlier nicknames of "Porkopolis," when Cincinnati was the world's major pork processing center), Oktoberfest-Zinzinnati, Cincinnati-style chili, goetta, LaRosa’s, Italianate architecture, Riverfest / WEBN Fireworks, Festival of Lights, and Graeter's are just a few of the cultural traits, events and institutions that are synonymous with Cincinnati.