U.S. History trivia quiz

  1. Already answered, but her name was Louisa, I believe.
  2. Mae Jemison
  3. Bugs Moran

Actually, Wilson did marry his second wife Edith while he president in 1915. (I looked it up to be sure). His first wife Ellen died in 1914.

Rats. :wink:

Thanks for clearing that up.

Correct.

Petey, per the OP, no research for either formulating or answering questions. Thanks.

Judges and jurists…

  1. This “Yankee from Olympus” willed his entire estate to the U.S. government.
  2. By statute, the Supreme Court begins its term on this day every year.
  3. Appointed by FDR to the Supreme Court, he also served as a prosecutor at the Nuremburg trials of accused Nazis.
  4. Appointed by JFK, this justice was a star football player in his youth.
  5. Two Chief Justices have presided over presidential impeachment trials. Name them.
  1. This “Yankee from Olympus” willed his entire estate to the U.S. government.

Holmes.

  1. Appointed by FDR to the Supreme Court, he also served as a prosecutor at the Nuremburg trials of accused Nazis.

Jackson.

  1. Appointed by JFK, this justice was a star football player in his youth.

White.

  1. Two Chief Justices have presided over presidential impeachment trials. Name them.

Rehnquist and ?

I wasn’t answering a question, just correcting an error that was stated. I knew it from memory, but thought it would be embarrassing if I turned out to be wrong.

But your point is a good reminder for the thread.

Yes, I believe that’s correct. I think what we say about Mrs. Cleveland is she was the only first Lady to marry in the White House. Wilson and his bride married off-premises.

Yes.

  1. By statute, the Supreme Court begins its term on this day every year.
    The first Monday in October
  2. Two Chief Justices have presided over presidential impeachment trials. Name them.
    Salmon P Chase?

You and Random have them all correct. (Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., Robert Jackson and Byron “Whizzer” White, if you’re looking for first names). Chase and William H. Rehnquist were the only two Chief Justices of the United States to preside at presidential impeachment trials.

Famous American battles…

  1. At this “Gettysburg of the West” in late 1864, Confederate Gen. John Bell Hood threw his men against entrenched Union troops, nearly destroying his own army. The Union Army withdrew from the field that night, but it was a bitter “win” for Hood.
  2. Alexander Hamilton personally led the infantry which captured a British fort during this battle, won by Gen. Washington with French help.
  3. President Lincoln himself came under Confederate fire during Jubal Early’s attack against this fortification guarding Washington, D.C.
  4. British redcoats forced the patriot defenders from this Boston-area heights, usually incorrectly called “Bunker Hill,” but took heavy losses.
  5. The name of this American general appears on no official monument at Saratoga, even though many historians consider it his finest hour. Who was he, and why is he not appropriately honored?
  1. I’m guessing that this is Yorktown, but that’s just a guess. (Mostly because it’s the most famous battle I can think of where Washington won with French help.)

  2. Breed’s Hill.

  3. Benedict Arnold. Do I really have to mention that by the time the honors were being constructed for the monument Benedict Arnold was living as a pensioner in England, and his name was mud here in the US? :wink:
    A new question from me:

  4. Who said this after the Battle of Bunker Hill: “Another three such victories and we will have lost the colonies.”?

  1. At this “Gettysburg of the West” in late 1864, Confederate Gen. John Bell Hood threw his men against entrenched Union troops, nearly destroying his own army. The Union Army withdrew from the field that night, but it was a bitter “win” for Hood.
    Franklin, TN

  2. Who said this after the Battle of Bunker Hill: “Another three such victories and we will have lost the colonies.”?
    George III ?

No, that’s not it.

All correct. Well done, Otaku! Also correct, 5 time, as to Franklin, Tenn.

Hmmm.

  1. Lord Howe?

Some noteworthy Secretaries of War and, later, Defense…

  1. This first SecWar had been Washington’s artillery chief during the Revolution.
  2. This Pennsylvania hack helped Lincoln secure the GOP nomination and was rewarded with the post of SecWar. After revealing himself to be incompetent and crooked, he was packed off far, far away as minister (ambassador) to Russia.
  3. This early SecDef suffered from depression, committed suicide at Bethesda and later had an aircraft carrier named after him.
  4. This SecDef served for all of the Kennedy and most of the Johnson administrations.
  5. Nicknamed “the Knife” in another role during the Nixon years, this SecDef was called “the Ladle” as he spread around billions for Reagan’s massive defense buildup.

No, sorry.

  1. James Forrestal. Namesake of the “Forestfire”
  1. Robert McNamara?
  2. Cap Weinberger?
  1. Seward?

Hmm- coming up with questions is harder than answering them, for me at least:
467: Henry Knox
468: Simon Cameron
The other three were correctly answered.

What do I know about Secretaries of the Interior.