It looks like a black walnut (Juglans nigra.
This is one of the easiest of all trees to identify. The leaves are compound which means many leaflets coming off one leaf stem.
The buds on the end of twigs are quite large and fuzzy.
Wood bark is dark, thick, and deeply contoured.
The best of all i.d. points is to cut a twig laterally (length-wise down the middle. The "pith" will be chambered instead of solid.
If this was an 80' tree with a clear bole of at least 8 feet long and 16" in diameter, it could be worth a lot.
The sapwood by the way, just under the bark, is light on the Black Walnut just like it is on many woods that are known (heartwood) to be much darker.
When in the Ohio squirrel woods in the fall you'll sometimes here a faint, rapid scraping. That's the sound of a squirrel gnawing through the nut hull. It takes 11 Black Walnuts to get a squirrel through a hard winter day. Lot of meat inside but a lot of energy is burned getting too it. (Burr oak by contrast only takes 3 acorns/day to feed a squirrel.)
Sorry about the length of this but it has been a long time (38 years) since I studied this tree.