Sacagawea
Blackbeard
Susan B Anthony
Frida Kahlo
Marie Curie
100

The name Sacagawea is commonly translated in Hidatsa as meaning "Bird Woman." However, some historians translate her name in Shoshone to mean this water-based job.

Boat Launcher

100

This was the formidable name of Blackbeard's famous flagship.

Queen Anne's Revenge

100

In 1872, Anthony made national headlines and was arrested for casting a ballot in this type of election.

A presidential election

100

A tragic bus crash in 1925 left Frida with severe injuries, which led her to pass the time during her recovery by doing this.

Painting

100

Marie Curie is the only person to win this prestigious science award in two different fields: Physics and Chemistry.

The Nobel Prize

200

Sacagawea famously brought her infant son, Jean-Baptiste, along on the journey. The explorers affectionately nicknamed the baby this two-syllable word.

Pomp

200

To look extra terrifying, Blackbeard would weave slow-burning fuses and hemp cords into this facial feature.

His beard

200

This famous abolitionist, who published the North Star newspaper, was a close friend and collaborator of Anthony in the fight for civil rights.

Frederick Douglass

200

In this famous 1939 double self-portrait, Frida holds hands with a mirror image of herself, showing her exposed and connected hearts.

The Two Fridas

200

To honor her home country, Marie Curie named this newly discovered radioactive element "Polonium."

Poland

300

When the expedition finally reached the Rocky Mountains, they desperately needed horses from the Shoshone people. By a stroke of luck, the Shoshone Chief turned out to be this relative of Sacagawea.

Her brother

300

In 1718, Blackbeard blockaded the harbor of this major South Carolina city, demanding a chest of medical supplies.

Charleston

300

In 1869, Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton launched a weekly women's rights publication that carried this militant-sounding name.

The Revolution

300

Frida famously married, divorced, and then remarried this giant of Mexican muralism.

Diego Rivera

300

During World War I, Marie Curie created mobile radiography units that were affectionately nicknamed this.

Little Curies

400

When a sudden storm caused their boat to tip, Sacagawea remained calm and bravely rescued these essential items floating in the water, which contained the captains' notes and medical supplies.

The journals

400

This British Lieutenant led the Royal Navy forces that finally defeated and killed Blackbeard in a bloody battle at Ocracoke Inlet.

Robert Maynard

400

Anthony grew up in this religious society, which taught that all people, including women and enslaved individuals, were equal before God.

The Quakers

400

Frida's vibrant childhood home in Mexico City, nicknamed the "Blue House," is now a popular tourist attraction known by this Spanish name.

La Casa Azul

400

Because Marie Curie handled radioactive materials for decades, her personal belongings, including these, are still too radioactive to touch today.

Her journals

500

While traveling through her homeland, Sacagawea realized the chief of this tribe was actually her long-lost brother, Cameahwait.

Shoshone

500

After his final battle, Blackbeard's decapitated body was thrown overboard, and his severed head was hung from the bowsprit of this specific type of British Royal Navy warship.

A sloop

500

Spoken by Anthony at her 86th birthday celebration, this famous two-word phrase became a motto for the women's suffrage movement.

"Failure is impossible"

500

To proudly show her heritage, Frida regularly wore traditional, colorful indigenous clothing from Oaxaca, particularly this type of flowing, embroidered dress and blouse.

The Tehuana dress

500

The Curie family holds the record for the most Nobel Prizes, with her daughter and son-in-law also winning one in 1935 for this field.

Chemistry

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