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Test your basic knowledge |
SAT Subject Test: U.S. History
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
sat
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history
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. The popular name for the Kansas Territory in 1856 after abolitionist John Brown led a massacre at a pro-slavery camp - setting off waves of violence. Brown's massacre was in protest to the recent establishment of Kansas as a slave state. Pro-slavery
Bleeding Kansas
Cuban Missile Crisis
Bootleggers
Peace Corps
2. The centerpiece of a congressional effort to restrict union activity. The act - passed in 1947 - banned certain union practices and allowed the president to call for an eighty-day cooling off period to delay strikes thought to pose risks to national
Roger Williams
Taft-Hartley Act
Earl Warren
The Rosenbergs
3. A dissenter who clashed with Massachusetts Puritans over the issue of seperation of church and state. After being banished from Massachusetts in 1636 - he traveled south - where he founded a colony in Rhode Island that granted full religious freedom
Corrupt bargain
National Origins Act
Roger Williams
Mercantilism
4. Passed in 1964 - the act outlawed discrimination in education - employment - and all public accommodations.
Tripartite Pact
Civil Rights Act
Tippecanoe
Bacon's Rebellion
5. A political group active in aiding the leftist forces in the Spanish Civil War. Prominent American intellectuals and writers - including Ernest Hemingway and John Dos Passos - joined the group.
Popular Front
Silent Spring
Stokely Carmichael
The Awakening
6. Author of popular young adult novels - such as Ragged Dick - during the Industrial Revolution. His "rags to riches" tales emphasized that anyone could become wealthy and successful through hard work and exceptional luck.
Horatio Alger
Berlin Blockade
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Annapolis Convention
7. Longtime government employee who - in 1948 - was accused by Time editor Whitaker Chambers of spying for the USSR. After a series of highly publicized hearings and trials - he was convicted of perjury in 1950 and sentenced to five years imprisonment -
Alger Hiss
Letters from a Pennsylvania Farmer
Shoot-on-sight order
John C. Calhoun
8. Created in 1962. United college students throughout the country in a network committed to achieving racial equality - alleviating poverty - and ending the Vietnam War.
Students for a Democratic Society
Boston Massacre
Civil Rights Act
American System
9. Religious revivals on the frontier during the Second Great Awakening. Hundreds or even thousands of people- members of various dominations- met to hear speeches on repentance and sign hymns.
Camp meetings
Eugenics
Dynamic conservatism
Annapolis Convention
10. Founded on the premise that the "perfect" human society could be achieved through genetic tinkering. Popularized during the Progressive Era - writers on this subject often used this theory to justify a supremacist white Protestant ideology - which ad
Edgar Allen Poe
Eugenics
House Un-American Activities Committee
John Cabot
11. Nickname given to northerners who moved South during Reconstruction in search of political and economic opportunity. The term was coined by Southern Democrats - who said that these northern opportunists had left home so quickly that they were able to
Letters from a Pennsylvania Farmer
Carpetbaggers
Gettysburg
First Great Awakening
12. A leading member of the women's suffrage movement. She served as president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association from 1892 until 1900.
J. Robert Oppenheimer
Susan B. Anthony
James Fenimore Cooper
Axis powers
13. The first ten amendments of the Constitution - which guarantee the civil rights of American citizens. Drafted by anti-federalists - including James Madison - to protect individuals from the tyranny they felt the Constitution might permit.
Chesapeake-Leopard affair
John Quincy Adams
Bill of Rights
Alien and Sedition Acts
14. Written by Thomas Paine; published in three parts between 1794 and 1807. A critique of organized religion - the book was criticized as a defense of Atheism. Paine's argument is a prime example of the rationalist approach to religion inspired by Enlig
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Henry Hudson
The Age of Reason
Ralph Waldo Emerson
15. A leader of the transcendentalist movemetn and an advocate of American literary nationalism. He published a number of influential essays during the 1830s and 1840s - including "Nature" and "Self Reliance."
Camp David Accords
Smith Act
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Helsinki Accords
16. A group of zealous Chinese nationalists terrorized foreigners and Chinese Christians - capturing Beijing (Peking) in June 1900 and threatening European and American interests in Chinese markets. The US committed 2 -500 men to an international force t
Walt Whitman
Boxer Rebellion
New Look
Horatio Alger
17. Eisenhower's Cold War strategy - preferring deterrence to ground force involvement - and emphasizing the massive retaliatory potential of a large nuclear stockpile. Eisenhower worked to increase nuclear spending and decrease spending on ground troops
Axis powers
New Look
Boston Massacre
Bank veto
18. 1795 treaty which provided for the removal of British troops from American land and opened up limited trade with the British West Indies - but said nothing about British seizure of American ships or the impressment of American sailors. While the Amer
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19. Political figure throughout the Era of Good Feelings and the Age of Jackson. He served as James Monroe's secretary of war - as John Quincy Adam's vice president - and then as Andrew Jackson's vice president for one term. A firm believer in states' ri
John C. Calhoun
Ernest Hemingway
Carpetbaggers
Popular Front
20. A series of investigations in 1987 exposed evidence that the US had been selling arms to the anti-American government in Iran and using the profits from these sales to secretly and illegally finance the Contras in Nicaragua. (The Contras were a rebel
Iran-Contra affair
Alien and Sedition Acts
Pendleton Act
Black Panthers
21. A meeting of Federalists near the end of the War of 1812 - in which the New England-based party enumerated its complaints against the ruling Democratic-Republican party. The Federalists - already losing power steadily - hoped that antiwar sentiment w
Hartford Convention
First Great Awakening
Bank veto
Black Panthers
22. Founded in 1920 - this organization seeks to protect the civil liberties of individuals - often by bringing "test cases" to court in order to challange questionable laws. In 1925 - the organization challanged a Christian fundamentalist law in the Sco
Ralph Waldo Emerson
American Civil Liberties Union
Susan B. Anthony
The Awakening
23. The series of French and American naval conflicts occuring between 1798 and 1800.
Civil Works Administration
Quasi-war
Jane Addams
Treaty of Ghent
24. A prominent author during the Roaring Twenties - he wrote stories and novels that both glorified and criticized the wild lives of the carefree and prosperous. His most famous works include This Side of Paradise - published in 1920 - and The Great Gat
Sedition Amendment
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Triangular Trade
Tripartite Pact
25. Leader of a group of senators known as "reservationists" during the 1919 debate over the League of Nations. He and his followers supported US membership in the League only if major revisions were made to the covenant. President Wilson - however - ref
Black Power
Bacon's Rebellion
Henry Cabot Lodge
Camp meetings
26. A French sailor who explored the St. Lawrence River region between 1534 and 1542. He searched for a Northwest Passage - a waterway through which ships could cross the Americas and access Asia. He found no such passage but opened the region up to futu
Jacques Cartier
Ernest Hemingway
Students for a Democratic Society
CIA
27. Husband and wife who - in 1950 - were accused of spying for the Soviets. They countered the accusation on the grounds that their Jewish background and leftist beliefs made them easy targets for persecution. In a trial closely followed by the American
Axis powers
Earl Warren
The Rosenbergs
Walt Whitman
28. One of the best known writers of the 1920s' "lost generation." An expatriate - he produced a number of famous works during the 1920s - including The Sun Also Rises (1926) and A Farewell to Arms (1929). A member of the Popular Front - he fought in the
Triangular Trade
Boston Massacre
Samuel de Champlain
Ernest Hemingway
29. Passed in 1930. This act limited the right to strike in key industries and authorized the president to intervene in any strike - eroding the generally amiable relationship between the government and organized labor during World War II.
Nuremburg Trials
H. L. Mencken
Dynamic conservatism
Smith-Connolly Act
30. Major American author in the 1930s. His novels depict simple - rural lives. His most famous work is The Grapes of Wrath (1939).
To Secure These Rights
John Steinbeck
Boston Tea Party
Henry David Thoreau
31. Passed by Federalists in 1798 in response to the XYZ Affair and growing Democratic-Republican support. On the grounds of "national security -" the acts increased the number of years required to gain citizenship - allowed for the imprisonment and depo
Popular Front
Alien and Sedition Acts
H. L. Mencken
Fidel Castro
32. A series of raids coordinated by Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer. Throughout 1910 - police and federal marshals raided the homes of suspected radicals and the headquarters of radical organizations in thirty-two cities. The raids resulted in more
Chesapeake-Leopard affair
House Un-American Activities Committee
Palmer Raids
Civil Works Administration
33. Theodore Roosevelt's foreign policy summed up his aggressive stance toward international affairs with the phrase - "Speak softly and carry a big stick." Under this doctrine - the US declared its domination over Latin American and built the Panama Can
Samuel de Champlain
Silent Spring
Bleeding Kansas
Big stick diplomacy
34. Once a prominent member of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee - he abandoned his nonviolent leanings and became a leader of the Black Nationalist movement in 1966. He coined the phrase "Black Power."
Anti-Saloon League
Trust
Stokely Carmichael
Alien and Sedition Acts
35. A fiction writer who gained popularity in the 1840s for his horrific tales. He published many famous stories - including "The Raven" (1844) and "The Cask of Amontillado" (1846).
John Steinbeck
Edgar Allen Poe
Berlin Wall
Pendleton Act
36. Issued in 1941 in response to German submarine attacks on American ships in the Atlantic ocean. The order authorized naval patrols to fire on any Axis ships found between the US and Iceland.
Boston Tea Party
Inflation
Shoot-on-sight order
Susan B. Anthony
37. Issued on August 14 - 1941 during a meeting between President Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. The charter outlined the ideal postwar world - condemned military aggression - asserted the right to national self-determination - a
Anti-federalists
Black Thursday
Jane Addams
Atlantic Charter
38. The increase of available paper money and bank credit - leading to higher prices and less valuable currency.
Treaty of San Lorenzo
Eugenics
National Origins Act
Inflation
39. Ronald Reagan's economic philosophy which held that a capitalist system free from taxation and government involvement would be most productive. Reagan believed that the prosperity of the rich upper class would "trickle down" to the poor.
Reaganomics
Puritans
Antietam
Anti-federalists
40. A series of twelve letters published by John Dickinson. The letters denounced the Townsend Duties by demonstrating that many ot the arguments employed against the Stamp Act were valid against the Townsend Duties as well. The letters inspired anti-Bri
Letters from a Pennsylvania Farmer
To Secure These Rights
Berlin Blockade
Bootleggers
41. Created by JFK in 1961. The organization sends volunteer teachers - health workers - and engineers on two-year aid programs to Third World countries.
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Antietam
Peace Corps
Jane Addams
42. In 1962 - a year after the failed Bay of Pigs Invasion - the US government learned that Soviet missile bases were being constructed in Cuba. President JFK demanded that the USSR stop shipping military equipment to Cuba and remove the bases. US forces
Cuban Missile Crisis
Jimmy Carter
Puritans
Cash-and-carry
43. Organized in 1966 in Oakland - California by Huey Newton and Bobby Seale. The group stressed black pride - economic self-sufficiency - and armed resistance to white oppression.
Jacques Cartier
Bootleggers
CCC
Black Panthers
44. Coined by Stokely Carmichael - and adopted by Malcolm X - the Black Panthers - and other civil rights groups. The term embodied the fight against oppression and the value of ethnic heritage.
Mutual Assured Destruction
Black Power
Chinese Exclusion Act
Fidel Castro
45. The nickname of the Progressive Republican Party - led by Theodore Roosevelt in the 1912 election. This party had the best showing of any third party in the history of the US. Its emergence dramatically weakened the Republican Party and allowed the D
Edgar Allen Poe
Bank veto
New Look
Bull Moose Party
46. Signed in September 1940 by Germany - Italy - and Japan. These nations comprised the Axis powers of World War II.
Central Powers
Fidel Castro
Tripartite Pact
Jacques Cartier
47. Early American fiction writer. His most famous work - The Scarlet Letter (1850) - explored the moral dilemmas of adultery in a Puritan community.
Anti-federalists
Brown v Board of Ed
Northwest Ordinance
Nathaniel Hawthorne
48. During ratification - these people opposed the Constitution on the grounds that it gave the federal government too much political - economic - and military control. They instead advocated a decentralized governmental structure that granted the most p
Berlin Wall
Jimmy Carter
Anti-federalists
William Randolph Hearst
49. Created by FDR to cope with the added economic difficulties brought on by the cold winter months of 1933. The organization spent approximately $1 billion on short-term projects for the unemployed but was abolished in the spring of that year.
Great Society
Civil Works Administration
Mercantilism
Henry Hudson
50. A component of Lyndon B. Johnson's Great Society. This act established an Office of Economic Opportunity to provide young Americans with job training. It also created a volunteer network devoted to social work and education in impovershed areas.
First Great Awakening
Economic Opportunity Act
Cuban Missile Crisis
John Brown