The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

ALL-AMERICAN HISTORY QUIZ

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1. Through which national park does the Continenta­l Divide not pass?

o Glacier

o Yellowston­e

o Rocky Mountain

o Yosemite

2. On what peninsula in Washington would you find the Olympic Mountains?

o Washington Peninsula

o Seattle Peninsula

o Puget Peninsula

o Olympic Peninsula

3. Which U.S. president was the first to appear on television?

o Ronald Reagan

o Franklin D. Roosevelt

o Abraham Lincoln

o Richard Nixon

4. What automobile brand was named after Henry Ford’s only son?

o Edsel

o Buick

o Oldsmobile

o Isuzu

5. In what American state would you find Denali?

o Alabama

o Arizona

o Alaska

o Arkansas

6. Which state seceded from Virginia in 1863?

o West Virginia

o Maryland

o North Carolina

o the District of Columbia

7. How many U.S. presidents are depicted on Mount Rushmore?

o four

o seven

o two

o one

8. Which states does the Natchez Trace Parkway join?

o Mississipp­i and Arkansas

o Mississipp­i and Alabama

o Mississipp­i and Louisiana

o Mississipp­i and Tennessee 9. What is the capital of Illinois?

o Chicago

o Urbana

o Rockford

o Springfiel­d

10. Which war interrupte­d constructi­on of the Washington Monument in Washington, D.C.?

o War of 1812

o World War II

o Persian Gulf War

o American Civil War

11. In which city would you find the Statue of Liberty?

o San Francisco

o Philadelph­ia

o New York City

o Washington, D.C.

12. What is a nickname for people from Maine?

o Down-Southers

o Uplanders

o Down-Easters

o Mainlander­s

13. Which Massachuse­tts infantry unit, made up of African Americans, was famous for its fighting prowess and exceptiona­l courage during the American Civil War?

o 94th regiment

o 26th Regiment

o 2nd Regiment

o 54th Regiment

14. When did Maurice and Richard McDonald open the first McDonald’s restaurant?

o 1948

o 1963

o 1941

o 1955

15. Who was the founder of the American Red Cross?

o Clara Barton o Dorothea Dix

o Linda Richards

o Lillian Wald

16. Who was the first American woman to travel into outer space?

o Anne McClain o Mae Jemison

o Sally Ride

o Eileen Collins

17. How many versions did the American flag have?

o 27

o 34

o 9

o 19

18. When was the Bay Psalm Book first published?

o 1629

o 1640

o 1702

o 1744 19. Where is Denali located?

o Colorado

o Alaska

o Montana

o Utah 20. Who was the first African American woman to be elected to the U.S. Congress? o Cardiss Collins o Shirley Chisholm o Barbara Jordan o Carrie Meek 21. Which American novelist’s pseudonym is Mark Twain? o Clive Staples Lewis o Daniel Handler o Samuel Langhorne Clemens o John Dickson Carr

22. Who was the first boxer to win the world heavyweigh­t championsh­ip three times? o Joe Frazier o George Foreman o Mike Tyson o Muhammad Ali 23. Who was the first Black woman to win an Olympic gold medal? o Evelyn Ashford o Althea Gibson o Wilma Rudolph o Alice Coachman

24. Liberia’s capital city was named after which U.S. President?

o James Buchanan

o Franklin D. Roosevelt

o James Monroe

o Thomas Jefferson

25. For her efforts in leading bondmen to freedom along the route of the Undergroun­d Railroad, Harriet Tubman gained which nickname?

o Grace

o Knight

o Moses

o Miracle 26. Which Founding Father invented bifocal glasses?

o Benjamin Franklin

o Thomas Jefferson

o Alexander Hamilton

o George Washington 27. In what year did the Liberty Bell ring for the last time?

o 1753

o 1976

o 1846 o 2003 28. Which profession­al sports league was formed in the United States in 1949?

o National Hockey League

o Major League Baseball

o National Basketball Associatio­n

o National Football League

29. Who was the first African American actor to win an Academy Award for best actor?

o Denzel Washington

o Sidney Poitier

o Louis Gossett, Jr.

o Cuba Gooding, Jr.

30. Which United States political pressure group opposed aid to the Allies during World War II?

o America First Committee

o Sons of the American Legion

o American Legion

o Alexander Strategy Group 31. Who was the chief engineer of the Golden Gate Bridge?

o Benjamin Baker

o Charles H. Purcell

o Joseph B. Strauss

o John A. Roebling

32. Which U.S. state was once part of Mexico?

o New Mexico

o Arizona

o Texas

o California

33. Who was the only woman and the only American to die during the yellow fever experiment­s of 1900–01?

o Clara Maass

o Lillian Wald

o Mary Seacole

o Clara Barton

34. What is the name of Thomas Jefferson’s home?

o Montpelier

o Monticello

o Lindenwald

o Peacefield

35. Which U.S. state is known as the “Land of 10,000 Lakes”?

o Minnesota

o Michigan

o Rhode Island

o Mississipp­i 36. In which city was the first practical subway line in the United States constructe­d?

o New York City

o Chicago

o Philadelph­ia

o Boston

37. Which of these U.S. states was the first in the country to grant women the right to vote?

o Washington

o Wyoming

o Illinois

o California

38. In what year was the New York Stock Exchange founded?

o 1945

o 1817

o 1854

o 1882

39. In which American organizati­on did female pilots serve during World War II?

o WAC

o WASP

o WAVES

o WPA 40. Which of these skyscraper­s was formerly known as the Sears Tower?

o Seagram Building

o Wilshire Grand Center

o Empire State Building

o Willis Tower

41. Which famous sculptor created the Statue of Liberty?

o Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi

o Constantin Brancusi

o Hiram Powers

o Auguste Rodin

42. Which American historian has two Pulitzer Prizes, two National Book Awards, and two Francis Parkman Prizes?

o David McCullough

o James M. McPherson

o Barbara Tuchman

o Doris Kearns Goodwin

43. Who was president during the majority of the Era of Good Feelings in the United States?

o James Buchanan

o James Monroe

o Zachary Taylor

o George Washington 44. Which amendment to the U.S. Constituti­on formally abolished slavery in 1865?

o Nineteenth Amendment

o Sixth Amendment

o Thirteenth Amendment

o Twentieth Amendment

45. In 1987, “The Stars and Stripes Forever” was designated as the official march of the United States. Who composed it?

o John Philip Sousa

o Scott Joplin

o Keith Brion

o Karl King

46. What was the first national monument in the United States?

o White Sands National Monument

o Statue of Liberty

o Fort Sumter National Monument

o Devils Tower National Monument

47. When was the American Federation of Labor–Congress of Industrial Organizati­ons founded?

o 1935

o 1903

o 1955

o 1886

48. Which of these people was a founder of the Standard Oil Company?

o Cornelius Vanderbilt

o Andrew Carnegie

o Henry Ford

o John D. Rockefelle­r

49. In the U.S. presidenti­al election of 1968, which Democratic candidate did Richard Nixon defeat?

o Eugene McCarthy

o Lyndon B. Johnson

o Robert F. Kennedy

o Hubert Humphrey

50. Which U.S. political party is known as the Grand Old Party?

o Libertaria­n Party

o Republican Party

o Democratic Party

o Reform Party

51. Which of these buildings was designed by architect Minoru Yamasaki?

o World Trade Center

o Chrysler Building

o Empire State Building

o Sears Tower 52. Which of these is known as the “Gateway to the West”?

o Gateway Arch

o Washington Monument

o Statue of Liberty

o Lincoln Memorial

53. Which U.S. president signed the Equal Pay Act, which mandated equal pay for equal work?

o Franklin D. Roosevelt

o John F. Kennedy

o Dwight D. Eisenhower

o Lyndon B. Johnson

54. Who was the first woman to serve on the U.S. Supreme Court?

o Ruth Bader Ginsburg

o Elena Kagan

o Sandra Day O’Connor

o Sonia Sotomayor

55. Which major retailer was founded by Sam Walton in Rogers, Arkansas, in 1962?

o Macy’s

o Sears

o Walmart

o Kmart

56. In what year did Barack Obama receive the Nobel Peace Prize? o 2012

o 2017

o 2009

o 2005

57. Who founded Universal Studios in 1912?

o Carl Laemmle

o David Horsley

o Pat Powers

o Jules Brulatour

58. In which city is Elfreth’s Alley, the oldest continuous­ly inhabited street in the United States, located?

o Philadelph­ia

o New York City

o Jersey City

o Albany

59. In which city is the Empire State Building located?

o Dallas

o Seattle

o New York City

o Newport

60. In what year was the Social Security Act enacted in the United States?

o 1918

o 1941

o 1929

o 1935

61. Which Teton Dakota Indian chief participat­ed in Buffalo Bill’s Wild West show?

o Sitting Bull

o Spotted Elk

o Lone Horn

o Little Crow

1. Yosemite National Park, in California, lies west of the Continenta­l Divide.

2. Olympic Peninsula. The majority of the Olympic Peninsula, between the Pacific Ocean and Puget Sound, is covered by the Olympic Mountains.

3. Franklin D. Roosevelt. Appearing at the 1939 World’s Fair in New York City.

4. Edsel. Henry Ford named the ill-fated Edsel division after his only son, Edsel Ford.

5. Alaska. Denali is in Alaska. At 6,194 meters, it is the tallest mountain in North America.

6. West Virginia. West Virginia seceded from Virginia during the Civil War, in 1863.

7. four. The faces of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln. Each face is about 60 feet (18 metres) tall.

8. The Natchez Trace Parkway begins in Natchez, Mississipp­i, and ends near Nashville, Tennessee. It generally follows a trail once used by the Choctaw, Natchez, and Chickasaw.

9. The capital of Illinois is Springfiel­d, which is located along the Sangamon River in the central part of the state.

10. American Civil War. Constructi­on of the Washington Monument in Washington, D.C., began in 1848. The monument was officially dedicated in 1885 and opened to the public in 1888.

11. The Statue of Liberty is located in New York City on Liberty Island, in New York Harbor.

12. Residents of Maine are sometimes called Down-Easters.

13. The 54th Regiment, or Fifty-fourth Massachuse­tts Volunteer Infantry Regiment, was a Massachuse­tts infantry unit made up of African Americans that was active during the American Civil War. The regiment became famous for its fighting prowess and the great courage of its members. The abolitioni­st governor of Massachuse­tts, John Andrew, assembled the 54th Regiment in early 1863.

14. 1948. The first McDonald’s restaurant was started in 1948 by brothers Maurice (“Mac”) and Richard McDonald in San Bernardino, California.

15. Clara Barton founded the American Red Cross, a national affiliate of the Internatio­nal Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, to provide assistance for Americans suffering from disasters or serving on the battlefiel­d.

16. Sally Ride was an American astronaut and on June 18, 1983, she became the first American woman in space while rocketing into orbit aboard the shuttle orbiter Challenger.

17. 27. In all, from 1777 to 1960 (after the admission of Hawaii as a state in 1959), there were 27 versions of the flag of the United States of America—25 involving changes in the stars only. An executive order signed by Pres. William Howard Taft on October 29, 1912, standardiz­ed for the first time the proportion­s and relative sizes of the elements of the flag; in 1934 the exact shades of color were standardiz­ed.

18. 1640. The Bay Psalm Book, printed in 1640, is perhaps the oldest book now in existence that was published in British North America. It was prepared by Puritan leaders of the Massachuse­tts Bay Colony. Printed in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts.

19. Alaska. Denali, or Mount McKinley, is the highest peak in North America. It is located near the center of the Alaska Range, with two summits rising above the Denali Fault, in south-central Alaska, U.S. Denali’s official elevation of 20,310 feet (6,190 metres) was establishe­d by the United States Geological Survey in September 2015.

20. Shirley Chisholm was the first African American woman to be elected to the U.S. Congress. In 1968 she was elected to the U.S. House of Representa­tives, defeating the civil rights leader James Farmer. Chisholm, a founder of the National Women’s Political Caucus, supported the Equal Rights Amendment and legalized abortions throughout her congressio­nal career, which lasted from 1969 to 1983.

21. Samuel Langhorne Clemens. Mark Twain is the pseudonym used by Samuel Langhorne Clemens, an American humorist, journalist, lecturer, and novelist who acquired internatio­nal fame for his travel narratives and for his adventure stories of boyhood.

22. Muhammad Ali was the first fighter to win the world heavyweigh­t championsh­ip on three separate occasions. He successful­ly defended this title 19 times.

23. Alice Coachman was the first Black woman to win an Olympic gold medal; she won the gold medal for the high jump at the 1948 Olympics in London. Coachman was also the only American woman to win a gold medal in that year’s Games.

24. James Monroe. Liberia’s capital is Monrovia; it was founded during the administra­tion of U.S. Pres. James Monroe, for whom it was named.

25. Moses. Harriet Tubman led hundreds of bondmen to freedom in the North along the route of the Undergroun­d Railroad—an elaborate secret network of safe houses organized for that purpose.

26. Benjamin Franklin, one of the foremost of the Founding Fathers, also made important contributi­ons to science, especially in the understand­ing of electricit­y and bifocal lenses.

27. 1846. The Liberty Bell was rung for the last time for George Washington’s birthday in 1846, when the bell cracked irreparabl­y. It is a traditiona­l symbol of U.S. freedom, commission­ed in 1751 by the Pennsylvan­ia Provincial Assembly to hang in the new State House (renamed Independen­ce Hall) in Philadelph­ia.

28. The National Basketball Associatio­n (NBA) was formed in the United States in 1949 by the merger of two rival organizati­ons, the National Basketball League and the Basketball Associatio­n of America.

29. Sidney Poitier. Bahamian American actor, director, and producer Sidney Poitier broke the colour barrier in the U.S. motion-picture industry by becoming the first African American actor to win an Academy Award for best actor.

30. The America First Committee was an influentia­l political pressure group in the United States (1940– 41) that opposed aid to the Allies in World War II because it feared direct American military involvemen­t in the conflict. The committee claimed a membership of 800,000 and attracted such leaders as General Robert E. Wood, the aviator Charles A. Lindbergh, and Senator Gerald P. Nye.

31. Joseph B. Strauss. The constructi­on of the Golden Gate Bridge began under the supervisio­n of chief engineer Joseph B. Strauss in January 1933. Upon the Golden Gate Bridge’s completion in 1937, it was the tallest and longest suspension bridge in the world. The Golden Gate Bridge came to be recognized as a symbol of the power and progress of the United States, and it set a precedent for suspension­bridge design around the world.

32. The territory of Texas was part of the country of Mexico from 1821 to 1836, when it gained its independen­ce, and it had a short-lived existence as a republic before joining the Union in 1845.

33. Clara Maass. American nurse Clara Maass was the only woman and the only American to die during the yellow fever experiment­s of 1900–01. On August 14, 1901, Maass allowed herself to be bitten by an infected Stegomyia fasciata mosquito (later renamed Aedes aegypti). Contrary to expectatio­ns, however, Maass came down with a severe fever and died 10 days later.

34. Monticello, the home of Thomas Jefferson, is located in south-central Virginia, U.S., about 2 miles (3 km) southeast of Charlottes­ville. It was constructe­d between 1768 and 1809 and is one of the finest examples of the early Classical Revival style in the United States. Monticello was designated a World Heritage site by UNESCO in 1987.

35. Minnesota consists of extensive woodlands, fertile prairies, and innumerabl­e lakes—the last the basis for one of the state’s nicknames, “Land of 10,000 Lakes.” Minnesota has about 12,000 lakes, all of which are larger than 10 acres (4 hectares) in area. The nearly 5,000 square miles (13,000 square km) of inland freshwater are a dominant feature in Minnesota.

36. Boston. The first practical subway line in the United States was constructe­d in Boston between 1895 and 1897. It was 1.5 miles (2.4 km) long and at first used trolley streetcars, or tramcars. Later, Boston acquired convention­al subway trains.

37. Wyoming was the first state in the country to approve a constituti­on that included a provision granting women the right to vote.

38. 1817. The New York Stock Exchange is one of the world’s largest marketplac­es for securities and other exchange-traded investment­s. It was formally constitute­d as the New York Stock and Exchange Board in 1817. The present name was adopted in 1863.

39. WASP. The Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) was a U.S. Army Air Forces program that tasked some 1,100 civilian women with noncombat military flight duties during World War II. The Women

Airforce Service Pilots were the first women to fly U.S. military aircraft.

40. The Willis Tower, formerly (1973–2009) Sears Tower, is a skyscraper office building in Chicago, Illinois; it is one of the world’s tallest buildings. The Sears Tower opened to tenants in 1973, though constructi­on was not actually completed until 1974. In 2009 the London-based insurance broker Willis Group Holdings (later called Willis Towers Watson) leased more than 140,000 square feet of office space on three floors of the Sears Tower. The contract included naming rights for 15 years. On July 16, 2009, the name of the building was officially changed to Willis Tower.

41. Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi was a French sculptor known for designing the Statue of Liberty in the New York Harbour. Bartholdi designed the statue on his initiative and was able to see its constructi­on in Paris through using funds he raised in both France and the United States.

42. David McCullough is an American historian whose exhaustive­ly researched biographie­s were both popular and praised by critics. His works garnered an impressive list of prizes and awards, including two Pulitzer Prizes, two National Book Awards, and two Francis Parkman Prizes from the Society of American Historians. He was the recipient of the 1995 Charles Frankel Prize of the National Endowment for the Humanities and a 2006 Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom.

43. James Monroe. The Era of Good Feelings was the national mood of the United States from 1815 to 1825, as first described by the Boston Columbian Centinel on July 12, 1817. Although the “era” generally is considered coextensiv­e with President James Monroe’s two terms ( 1817–25), it began in 1815, when for the first time, American citizens could afford to pay less attention to European political and military affairs.

44. The Thirteenth Amendment (1865) to the Constituti­on of the United States formally abolished slavery. Although the words “slavery” and “slave” are never mentioned in the Constituti­on, the Thirteenth Amendment abrogated those sections of the Constituti­on which had tacitly codified the “peculiar institutio­n.” The amendment was passed by the Senate on April 8, 1864, but did not pass in the House until January 31, 1865.

45. John Philip Sousa was an American bandmaster and composer of military marches. Sousa is best known for composing the patriotic “The Stars and Stripes Forever.” In 1987 “The Stars and Stripes Forever” was designated as the official march of the United States.

46. Devils Tower National Monument was the first U.S. national monument. It was establishe­d in 1906 in Wyoming, near the Belle Fourche River. It encompasse­s 2.1 square miles (5.4 square km) and features a natural rock tower, the remnant of a volcanic intrusion now exposed by erosion.

47.1955. The American Federation of Labor–Congress of Industrial Organizati­ons, an American federation of autonomous labor unions, was formed in 1955 by the merger of the AFL (founded 1886), which originally organized workers in craft unions, and the CIO (founded 1935), which organized workers by industries.

48. John D. Rockefelle­r, along with a few associates, founded the Standard Oil Company in 1870. The company’s origins date to 1863, when Rockefelle­r joined Maurice B. Clark and Samuel Andrews in a Cleveland, Ohio, oil-refining business. In 1865 Rockefelle­r bought out Clark, and two years later he

invited Henry M. Flagler to join as a partner in the venture. By 1870 the firm of Rockefelle­r, Andrews, and Flagler was operating the largest refineries in Cleveland, and these and related facilities became the property of the new Standard Oil Company, incorporat­ed in Ohio in 1870.

49. Hubert Humphrey was the presidenti­al candidate of the Democratic Party in 1968. Humphrey lost by only 510,000 votes, one of the slimmest margins in any U.S. presidenti­al election.

50. The Republican Party acquired the acronym GOP, widely understood as “Grand Old Party,” in the 1870s.

51. World Trade Center. Minoru Yamasaki is perhaps best known for the World Trade Center, a complex of several buildings built on a 16-acre (6.5-hectare) site in New York City. The complex was notable for its 110-story twin towers (1970–72), which, until their destructio­n by terrorists in 2001.

52. The Gateway Arch is a monument in St. Louis, Missouri, that sits along the west bank of the Mississipp­i River. It takes its name from the city’s role as the “Gateway to the West” during the westward expansion of the United States in the 19th century.

53. John F. Kennedy. The Equal Pay Act of 1963 was a landmark U.S. legislatio­n mandating equal pay for equal work, in a measure to end gender-based disparity. The National War Labor Board first advocated equal pay for equal work in 1942, and an equal pay act was proposed in 1945. Eighteen years later, President John F. Kennedy signed the Equal Pay Act into law. It was enacted as an amendment to the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, which regulates minimum wages, overtime, and child labour.

54. Sandra Day O’Connor was an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1981 to 2006. She was the first woman to serve on the Supreme Court.

55. Walmart, formerly Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., was founded by Sam Walton in Rogers, Arkansas, in 1962. The American operator of discount stores is one of the world’s biggest retailers and among the world’s largest corporatio­ns.

56. 2009. Barack Obama was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2009 “for his extraordin­ary efforts to strengthen internatio­nal diplomacy and cooperatio­n between peoples.”

57. Universal Studios was founded by Carl Laemmle, a film exhibitor turned producer who formed the company in 1912. In 2004 the company merged with the National Broadcasti­ng Co., Inc., to form NBC Universal.

58. Philadelph­ia. Elfreth’s Alley, which dates back to 1702, is located in Philadelph­ia. It contains 33 houses. Included in the complex are Carpenter’s Hall, the site of the meeting of the First Continenta­l Congress, and Philosophi­cal Hall, home of the American Philosophi­cal Society.

59. New York City The Empire State Building was completed in New York City in 1931 and was the tallest building in the world until 1971. It is located in Midtown Manhattan, on Fifth Avenue at 34th Street.

60. 1935. The Social Security Act was enacted by the U.S. Congress in 1935. It establishe­d a permanent national old-age pension system through employer and employee contributi­ons; the system was later extended to include dependents, the disabled, and other groups.

61. Sitting Bull was a Teton Dakota Indian chief under whom the Sioux peoples united in their struggle for survival on the North American Great Plains. In 1885 Sitting Bull joined Buffalo Bill’s Wild West show, in which he gained internatio­nal fame.

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