I think you mean 1860. No, there wasn't. At worst, the Confederacy could have reached as far as the Ohio River, but never beyond it.
Built between 1811 and 1837, the National Road (Cumberland Road) connected the Potomac and Ohio valleys. It crossed the Ohio River in Wheeling, then in Virginia. The road began in Cumberland, Maryland, went west through southwestern Pennsylvania, southern Ohio, and Indiana, as far as Vandalia, Illinois.This was only about 50 miles from the present site of St. Louis, Missouri on far (west) side of the Mississippi River.
Well, the Connecticut Western Reserve has the actual words "western reserve" in the name, which is in the far northeastern corner of the state. The first land division in Ohio was the Seven Ranges, though, which starts at the Ohio River in East Liverpool and extends westward. A map of the subdivisions is located here: http://www.ohiodnr.com/Portals/10/pdf/mg2_8x11.pdf
The Ottawa or Odawa (meaning "traders") were close allies of the Chippewa/Ojibwa and Potawatomi. The Ottawa were originally located in the area that is now north-eastern Michigan and islands in Lake Huron; by 1650 they were forced westwards by Iroquois raids, some settling at Green Bay, Manitoulin Island and even as far as Ohio and Beaver Creek Pennsylvania. As enemies of the Iroquois the Ottawa were often allied with the Huron.
The Hopewell Indians were part of a huge trading network that stretched across the central United States. The most sophisticated settlements of the Hopewell are in Ohio and Illinois, but their decorations and jewelry indicate that they've also settled in Michigan, North Carolina, Virginia, and states along the Gulf of Mexico.
Somewhere in northern Ohio, not far from Toledo!
66.7 miles or 1 hour and 32 minutes.
145 miles
195 miles
300 miles
1137 miles
47.7 Miles according to our friends at Google maps
It is 115 miles taking I-90 OHIO TURNPIKE - EAST.
16 hours
945.29 kilometres (587.38 miles)
It is 246 miles according to Google Maps.
ow far is Dave and busters from Erie pa 16507