American Religion
The Civil War
Presidential Trivia
The Gilded Age
The Wild West
100

These English religious dissenters founded the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1630, envisioned as a utopian "city upon a hill"

The Puritans 

100

This document issued on January 1st 1863 declared enslaved people in rebelling states to be free

The Emancipation Proclamation 

100

This president who beat his attempted assassin with a cane was our first Democrat in office 

Andrew Jackson

100

This small homestead in coal country was the birthplace of Henry Clay Frick

West Overton Village 
100

This French ruler sold the Louisiana Territory to the United States in 1803, partly because he needed money for war in Europe and had lost interest in rebuilding a French empire in North America

Napoleon Bonaparte 

200

This American branch of Anglicanism emerged after the Revolution after breaking ties with the Church of England

Episcopalianism

200

This friend of U.S. Grant led the "March to the Sea", often cited as the start of "total war"

William Tecumseh Sherman 

200

This protege of Teddy Roosevelt was the only president who also served on the Supreme Court

William Howard Taft

200

Founded by John D. Rockefeller, this oil company became the most famous monopoly of the Gilded Age before being broken up by the Supreme Court in 1911

Standard Oil

200

This 19th-century belief held that the United States was  divinely ordained to expand westward across the continent

Manifest Destiny

300

This Southern California city, home to a large Seventh-day Adventist community is America's only "Blue Zone"

Loma Linda

300

This Confederate fortress city was captured by the Union on July 4th, 1863, one day after the end of the Battle of Gettysburg

Vicksburg 

300

This annexer of Texas was the only former U.S. President to serve in the Confederate government

John Tyler

300

The positive AND negative terms used for powerful industrialists who became incredibly wealthy during the Gilded Age

Captains of Industry / Robber Barons

300

This folk hero was killed in Deadwood, South Dakota, by Jack McCall while allegedly holding the “dead man’s hand” of aces and eights 

Wild Bill Hickok 

400

This Illinois settlement, the second most populated city in the state at the time, became the center of Mormonism in the 1840s before the Saints moved west

Nauvoo

400

This play, specifically its line about a "sockdologizing mantrap", was the last thing Lincoln heard before being shot in Ford's Theater

My American Cousin

400

This eccentric was the first U.S. Presidential Candidate to be assassinated

Joseph Smith

400

In this 1889 essay, Andrew Carnegie argued that the rich had a moral duty to use their fortunes for the public good

The Gospel of Wealth

400

This Lakota war leader was key in defeating Custer at Little Bighorn, and is now the subject of a massive unfinished monument in South Dakota

Crazy Horse

500

This 1850s nativist political movement, formally called the American Party, opposed Catholic immigration and nominated former president Millard Fillmore for president in 1856

The Know-Nothings

500

This 1862 incident in Pittsburgh killed 78 workers, mostly women and girls, and is called the worst civilian accident of the Civil War

Allegheny Arsenal explosion 

500

This president had a cat named "Satan"

John Adams

500

This New York City political machine, led by Boss Tweed, became notorious for corruption and mobilizing immigrant voters

Tammany Hall

500

This Newfoundland dog accompanied Lewis and Clark on their expedition to the Pacific

Seaman