Rhode Island is called the "Ocean State" because it is surrounded by water and there is a very high sea level around it.
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"Rhode Island" was either named for the Isle of Rhodes (in the Mediterranean Sea) or for its red clay (the Dutch explorer Adriaen Block may have named it "Roodt Eylandt" meaning Red Island in Dutch).
Rhode Island was the original name (ile de rods, Rhod-Island) and still the official name of Aquidneck Island, the largest of the three large islands in Narragansett Bay. The island and the mainland Providence Plantations combined to form the US state. Roger Williams and others negotiated the purchase of the island from the natives in 1638, and settlements were established at Pocasset (Portsmouth), and at Newport in 1639.
The official name of the state of Rhode Island is actually "The State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations." While the whole state is not an island, the official Rhode Island is the island commonly referred to today as Aquidneck Island. So Rhode Island refers to Aquidneck Island, while Providence Plantations refers to the mainland portion of the state.
The state known as Rhode Island official name is The State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations. It was named Rhode Island after the Native American's who had lived there. The name Providence Plantation comes in from when parts of the state of Massachusetts.
it was first named "rhodes" after the island next to turkey and when the settlers there officially named it they called it rhode island. the states real name now is "rhode island and province plantations".
Rhode Island was the previous name of a former colony which was an island itself (today it is known as Aquidneck Island). In what is now mainland Rhode Island was called Providence. The two colonies combined and kept the name Rhode Island, naming the capital Providence.
Rhode Island is called the "Ocean State" because it is surrounded by water and there is a very high sea level around it.