Sic semper tyrannis–“Thus always to tyrants,” if memory serves.
Sic Semper Tyrannus. Imagine my surprise when I found out that that’s written on the Virginian flag.
David Sarnoff.
I’m going to guess Pulaski, TN.
This I know from 4th grade Alabama history class: Andrew Jackson. (He was a Creek Indian baby orphaned at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend and no woman would take him because they were starving themselves, so Jackson took him home and raised him. He died young and Jackson is said to have been in tears at his funeral. It’s one of those “doesn’t quite fit” things that humanizes the bastard.)
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What were John Wilkes Booth’s last words? (Backstory: he was paralyzed from neck down by the bullet and had asked to see his hands, so two soldiers lifted his hands to in front of his eyes.)
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Easy one: what were the last words of John Adams and why were they ironic and erroneous?
Correct.
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Philadelphia, Miss. (near where the three civil rights workers were kidnapped and murdered in 1964, a la Mississippi Burning).
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South Carolina, I think.
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“Useless, useless!”
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“Thomas Jefferson still lives!” - July 4, 1826, fifty years to the day after the signing of the Declaration of Independence. Jefferson had actually died a few hours earlier.
No sweat. Already correctly answered by OtakuLoki; see posts 101-102.
Be sure to have an egg roll while you’re in D.C… (Such a travesty that nothing’s been done about that house- for those who don’t know what I’m talking about, that pic is one I took last year of Mary Surratt’s boarding house, one of the most significant sites in U.S. history to host a 5.95 Chinese buffet.)
Have you read Sarah Vowel’s ASSASSINATION VACATION? It’s on my list but I haven’t read it, but I know that she (or the character, but Vowell made the trip) goes to Tortugas and follows the assassination trail.
I actually meant that I now know the answer to #44 (Which President pardoned Robert E. Lee?), sorry about getting my question numbers confused!
In other news, now I get to ask a question, since I did correctly guess New York City as the place Washington was first inaugurated (woo hoo, btw, my aging brain hasn’t forgotten everything!):
#66. Who was the first African American to fight for the Colonies in the Revolutionary War?
Crispus Attucks, I believe.
Since I answered #53, I guess I get to ask one:
- Who was (ironically) present at two Presidential assassinations? Who were the Presidents?
I don’t think that’s right. Crispus Attucks was the first one killed during the Boston Massacre.
Robert Lincoln (the only son of Abraham to reach adulthood) was present at the assassinations of Garfield and McKinley.
Correct
Correct
I’m in a bit of a dilemma here - question #66, Who was the first African American to fight for the Colonies during the American Revolution, meant for the answer to be Crispus Attuks, however he was killed in the Boston Massacre in 1770, well before the Rev. War! So a revised #66 here:
#66 Name an African American present at the Battle of Bunker Hill (should be fairly easy …)?
Correct.
It should be pointed out the use of Sic Semper Tyrannus as the state’s motto preceded the Civil War, lest someone get the impression it’s there to needle the Yankees.
The question I answered being already answered, here’s another couple of answers:
Henry Cabot Lodge.
The answer to #44: Gerald Ford, I believe.