According to AAMC (the MCAT test maker), there are 10 MCAT test centers in Ohio. Most testing centers are located inside a college or university. You can select a testing location that is nearest to you. Please note that you are able to choose a test center when registering for the MCAT.
Dayton – Beavercreek
2365 Dayton Xenia Road
Beavercreek, OH 45434
Cincinnati – Reed Hartman Highway
11353 REED HARTMAN HWY
SUITE LL50
CINCINNATI, OH 45241
ETS – UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI
100 University Pavilion
2618 McMicken Circle
CINCINNATI, OH 45221
Cleveland – Euclid Avenue
10900 Euclid Ave.
Sears Building, Suite 440
Suite 440
Case Western Reserve University
Cleveland, OH 44106
Toledo – Maumee
1745 INDIAN WOOD CIRCLE
SUITE 110
MAUMEE, OH 43537
Cleveland – Mentor
8880 MENTOR AVE
CO-LOCATED W/ SYLVAN LEARNING CTR
MENTOR, OH 44060
Youngstown – Niles
950 YOUNGSTOWN WARREN RD.
SQUARE ONE CENTER SUITE D
NILES, OH 44446
Akron – Stow
3500 HUDSON DR, STE 4
STOW, OH 44224-2907
Cleveland – Strongsville
15201 Pearl Rd.
Strongsville, OH 44136
ETS – UNIVERSITY OF TOLEDO
UNIV OF TOLDEO
2225 Nebraska Ave.
Room AS 1200, Scott Park Campus
Toledo, OH 43607
Columbus – Worthington
933 HIGH STREET
SUITE 130B
WORTHINGTON, OH 43085
Ohio State Early History
In 1787, the Northwest Territory was created, which included much of what is now the Midwest of the United States. In 1788, the first American settlement in Ohio was founded – the city of Marietta. A stream of settlers rushed to the fertile lands of Ohio from New England and New York.
In 1794, at the Battle of the Fallen Timbers (near the modern city of Toledo), units of the US Army led by General Anthony Wayne defeated an alliance of Indian tribes known as the “Western Confederacy”. The following year, in 1795, an agreement was signed at Fort Greenville (today the city of the same name is located in its place), according to which Indian tribes transferred Ohio lands to the US government in exchange for goods (blankets, dishes, etc.) totaling $ 20,000.
On February 19, 1803, the third President of the United States, Thomas Jefferson, signed the law that approved the Ohio Constitution and its boundaries. So in fact, Ohio became the seventeenth state of the United States, although the US Congress did not pass a law literally defining Ohio as a state. This legal incident was corrected only in 1953 (the year of Ohio’s centenary statehood), when Dwight Eisenhower officially announced March 1, 1803 as the date of the formation of the state of Ohio.
The city of Chillicothe became the first capital of the state, after seven years the state government moved to Zanesville, two years later it returned, and finally, in 1816, the city of Ohio became the city of Columbus.
During the 1812-1815 war between the United States and Great Britain, fierce battles took place in the Ohio Territory. On September 10, 1813, a battle took place on Lake Erie, during which the ships of the US Navy under the leadership of Oliver Perry defeated the British, thereby establishing control over the lake and creating the prerequisites for further victories on land.
In the 19th century, Ohio experienced rapid industrial development, primarily steelmaking. The first steel plant in the state was built in 1804, in the middle of the century there were already 48 blast furnaces in Ohio, and in the nineties of the nineteenth century, Ohio was the second (after Pennsylvania) US state in terms of steel production.
The completion of the Erie Canal in 1825, which passed through the territory of New York State and connected the Great Lakes with the Atlantic Ocean, greatly contributed to the development of the Ohio economy.
Oil was found in Ohio in the 1960s. Production volumes grew rapidly and by 1900 Ohio was the leading oil-producing state in the United States, later losing the leading position to Texas and Oklahoma. It was on Ohio oil that John Rockefeller made his fortune, who founded the Standard Oil Company in the “oil capital of the world”, as Cleveland was then called, and became the world’s first billionaire.