Many Plains nations hunted this large animal, which was essential for food, clothing, and tools.
The Bison/Buffalo
This crop, also called maize, was a staple food for many Native peoples.
Corn
Ironworkers from the Mohawk Nation and other native nations in Northern NY helped build this towering skyscraper, completed in 1931
The Empire State Building
H: This blue stone, the Smithsonian Natural History Museum's premier attraction
The Hope Diamond
1558: Elizabeth I, aged 25, ascends this nation's throne upon the death of her half-sister, Queen Mary I
England
This type of portable home, shaped like a cone, was used by many Plains peoples.
Tipi
Along with corn, these two crops were known as the “Three Sisters.”
Beans and squash
This park in the modern-day Bronx is the site of a battlefield where 17 Mohican soldiers lost their lives.
Van Cortland Park
P: A chunk of this piece of American history, chipped off by a descendant of William Bradford
Plymouth Rock
The United States Congress is gaveled into session for the first time in the new, but still unfinished, US Capitol in what year
1800
Native peoples often passed down stories and history in this way, instead of writing.
Oral Tradition
Many Native peoples of the Southwest built homes out of this sun-dried material.
Adobe
The Dutch settlers in New Amsterdam often traded guns and other manufactured goods for the fur of this animal
Bever Pelts
C: Nickname of this building, home to the Smithsonian Information Center

The Castle
1863: Abraham Lincoln began working on this speech.
"That cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion"
Gettysburg Address
Native Americans in the Northeast often lived in long, shared wooden homes called this.
Longhouses
Many coastal nations traveled by these watercraft carved from trees.
Canoe
The ________, the island's original residents, refererred to the island of Manhattan as Manhatta, which means "place for gathering wood to make bows."
The Lenape (Delaware)
Z: 10-letter adjective for the park that exhibits Bao Li and Qing Bao
Zoological
1894: This notorious serial killer is tracked down and arrested in Boston
H. H. Holmes
This ceremony, often held in the Great Plains, involved dancing, singing, and honoring the community or spirits.
Powwow
This nut was commonly gathered by Native peoples in the Northeast for food and oil.
The acorn
Because his army destroyed Haudenosaunee towns in 1779, this future US president was called “Town Destroyer.”
George Washington
A: At the American Art Museum, 34 of his photos, including several of Yosemite
Ansel Adams
1973: This US President proclaimed that he was "not a crook."
Richard Nixon