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Test your basic knowledge |
SAT Subject Test: U.S. History
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Subjects
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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. 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
John Cabot
Walt Whitman
Central Powers
New Look
2. 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
Berlin Blockade
John C. Calhoun
Gag rule
3. On June 3 and 4 - 1989 - China's communist army brutally crushed a pro-democracy protest here in Beijing. Diplomatic relations between the US and China significantly soured as a result of the attack.
Kansas-Nebraska Act
Tiananmen Sqaure
New Look
Jimmy Carter
4. Written by Betty Friedan in 1963. This book was a rallying cry for the women's liberation movement. It denounced the belief that women should be tied to the home and encouraged women to get involved in activities outside their home and family.
Berlin Wall
Carpetbaggers
The Feminine Mystique
Lost generation
5. 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.
Bleeding Kansas
Reaganomics
Nuremburg Trials
Stokely Carmichael
6. Passed by Congress in 1882 amid a wave of anti-immigrant sentiment among American workers. The act banned Chinese immigration for ten years.
Sacco-Vanzetti case
Civil Works Administration
Chinese Exclusion Act
AAA
7. 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
Bank of the United States
Detente
The Feminine Mystique
8. Explored the northeast coast of North American in 1497 and 1498 - claiming Nova Scotia - Newfoundland - and the Grand Banks for England.
Allies
Helsinki Accords
John Cabot
Economic Opportunity Act
9. Passed in 1854. The act divided the Nebraska territory into two parts - Kansas and Nebraska - and left the issue of slavery in the territories to be decided by popular sovereignty. It nullified the prohibition of slavery above the 36 30' latitude est
AAA
H. L. Mencken
Kansas-Nebraska Act
Antietam
10. Primarily concerned with international espionage and information gathering. In the 1950s - this organization became heavily involved in many civil struggles in the Third World - supporting groups likely to cooperate with the US rather than the USSR.
Albany Plan
Quasi-war
CIA
Saddam Hussein
11. Signed by 12 Native American tribes after their defeat at the Battle of Fallen Timbers in 1794. The treaty cleared the Ohio territory of tribes and opened it up to US settlement.
Bay of Pigs
Tiananmen Sqaure
J. Edgar Hoover
Treaty of Greenville
12. A prominant publisher who bought the New York Journal in the late 1890s. His paper - along with Joseph Pulitzer's New York World - engaged in yellow journalism - printing sensational reports of Spanish activities in Cuba in order to win a circulation
John C. Calhoun
Hartford Convention
William Randolph Hearst
AAA
13. 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
Roger Williams
Andrew Carnegie
Horatio Alger
John C. Calhoun
14. A leader of the Sons of Liberty. He suggested the formation of the Committees of Correspondence and fought for colonial rights throughout New England. He is credited with provoking the Boston Tea Party.
Economic Opportunity Act
Smith Act
Trust
Samuel Adams
15. A prominent transcendentalist writer. Two of his most famous writings are Civil Disobediance (1849) and Walden (1854). He advocatd living life according to one's conscience - removed from materialism and repressive social codes.
Missouri Compromise
Brown v Board of Ed
Henry David Thoreau
Jay's Treaty
16. Defined the process by which new states could be admitted into the Union from the Northwest Territory. The ordinace forbade slavery in the territory but allowed citizens to vote on the legality of slavery once statehood had been established.
A Century of Dishonor
Gag rule
Allies
Northwest Ordinance
17. An important political figure during the Era of Good Feelings and the Age of Jackson. He engineered and championed the American System - a program aimed at economic self-sufficiency for the nation. As speaker of the house during Monroe's term in offi
Anti-Imperialist League
House Un-American Activities Committee
Henry Clay
Bank veto
18. Nonconformist writers such as Allan Ginsberg - the author of Howl (1956) - and Jack Kerouac - who penned On the Road (1957). They rejected uniform middle-class culture and sought to overturn the sexual and social conservatism of the period.
Deists
Treaty of San Lorenzo
The Beats
Black codes
19. Influenced by the spirit of rationalism - these people believed that God - like a celestial clockmaker - had created a perfect universe and then stepped back to let it operate according to natural laws.
Assembly line
Gag rule
Deists
John C. Calhoun
20. 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.
Sedition Amendment
House Un-American Activities Committee
Shoot-on-sight order
Nathaniel Hawthorne
21. 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."
Mercantilism
Civil Works Administration
Stokely Carmichael
Annapolis Convention
22. Trials of Nazi war criminals that began in November 1945. More than 200 defendants were indicted in the thirteen trials. All but thirty-eight of them were convicted of conspiring to wage aggressive war and of mistreating prisoners of war and inhabita
William Jennings Bryan
Inflation
Nuremburg Trials
Treaty of Ghent
23. Formed in the absence of support form the British crown - these companies accrued funding for colonization through the sale of public stock. They dominated English colonization throughout the seventeenth century.
Joint-stock companies
Edgar Allen Poe
Allies
Lend-Lease Act
24. Andrew Jackon's 1832 veto of the proposed charter renewal for the Second Bank of the United States. The veto marked the beginning of Jackon's five-year battle against the national bank.
Gulf War
Bank veto
Black Power
Bleeding Kansas
25. Led by future president William Henry Harrison - US forces defeated Shawnee forces in this battle in 1811. The US victory lessed the Native American threat in Ohio and Indiana.
Trust
Southern Christian Leadership Conference
Tippecanoe
Inflation
26. Conducted during the summer and fall of 1940. In preparation for an amphibious assault - Germans launched airstrikes on London. Hitlers hoped the continuous bombing would destroy British industry and hurt morale - but the British successfully avoided
Articles of Confederation
Samuel Adams
Letters from a Pennsylvania Farmer
Battle of Britain
27. A writer and a disciple of transcendentalist Ralph Waldo Emerson. His major work - Leaves of Grass (1855) - celebrated America's diversity and democracy.
Boxer Rebellion
Hartford Convention
Andrew Carnegie
Walt Whitman
28. Major American author in the 1930s. His novels depict simple - rural lives. His most famous work is The Grapes of Wrath (1939).
John Steinbeck
Allies
J. Robert Oppenheimer
Antietam
29. 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
The Rosenbergs
Civil Rights Act
First Great Awakening
J. Edgar Hoover
30. After World War II - this organization workerd on developing more effective ways of usting nuclear material - such as uranium - in order to mass-produce nuclear weapons.
William Randolph Hearst
Atomic Energy Commission
Albany Plan
Assembly line
31. 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.
James Fenimore Cooper
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Sedition Amendment
Economic Opportunity Act
32. Submitted by Benjamin Franklin to the 1754 gathering of colonial delegates in Albany - New York. The plan called for the colonies to unify in the face of French and Native American threats. Although the delegates in Albany approved the plan - the col
Battle of Britain
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Palmer Raids
Albany Plan
33. In September 1939 - FDR persuaded Congress to pass a new - amended Neutrality Act - which allowed warring nations to purchase arms from the US as long as they paid in cash and carried the arms away on their own ships. This program allowed the US to a
Bull Moose Party
Cash-and-carry
Inflation
Detente
34. The last Soviet political leader. He became general secretary of the Communist Party in 1985 and president of the USSR in 1988. He helped ease tension between the US and the USSR- work that earned him the Nobel Peace Prize in 1990. He oversaw the fal
Committee to Defend America First
Mikhail Gorbachev
A Century of Dishonor
Bleeding Kansas
35. 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
Black codes
John Quincy Adams
Southern Christian Leadership Conference
Taft-Hartley Act
36. Created by JFK in 1961. The organization sends volunteer teachers - health workers - and engineers on two-year aid programs to Third World countries.
Susan B. Anthony
Peace Corps
Cash-and-carry
Black Thursday
37. Passed in March 1941. Allowed the president to lend or lease supplies to any nation deemed "vital to the defense of the US -" such as Britain - and was a key move in support ot the Allied cause before the US formally entered World War II. Was extende
The Rosenbergs
Lend-Lease Act
Popular Front
Committee to Defend America First
38. A conglomerate of businesses that tends to reduce market competition. During the Industrial Age - many entrepreneurs consolidated their businesses into these in order to gain control of the market and amass great profit - often at the expense of poor
Trust
Bank veto
Inflation
Popular Front
39. 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
Henry David Thoreau
Gag rule
The Awakening
Cuban Missile Crisis
40. Theory of trade which stresses that a nation's economic strenght depends on exporting more than it imports. Britain's use of this policy manifested itself in the triangular trade and in a series of laws - such as the Navigation Acts (1651-1673) - aim
Mercantilism
Dynamic conservatism
Joint-stock companies
Central Powers
41. 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 -
Chinese Exclusion Act
Committee to Defend America First
Alger Hiss
The Rosenbergs
42. During McCarthyism - provided the congressional forum in which many hearings about suspected communists in the government took place.
Boris Yeltsin
House Un-American Activities Committee
Committee to Defend America First
Treaty of Ghent
43. 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
Triangular Trade
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Pendleton Act
44. In 1676 - Nathaniel Bacon - a Virginia planter - accused the royal governer of failing to provide poorer farmers protection from raiding tribes. In response - Bacon led 300 settlers against local Native Americans - and then burned and looted Jamestow
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45. Founded in 1895 - the league spearheaded the prohibition movement during the Progressive Era.
Popular Front
Samuel Adams
Winston Churchill
Anti-Saloon League
46. A 1836 executive order issued by President Jackson in an attempt to stabilize the economy - which had been dramatically expanding since the early 1830s due to state banks' excessive lending practices and over-speculation. It required that all land pa
Black codes
George Bush
Specie Circular
National Origins Act
47. Son of John Adams and president from 1825 to 1829. As James Monroe's secretary of state - he workerd to expand the nation's borders and authorized the Monroe Doctrine. His presidency was largely ineffectie due to lack of popular support; Congress blo
John Quincy Adams
Gettysburg
Bleeding Kansas
Tippecanoe
48. The alleged leader of a group of Vikings who sailed to the eastern coast of Canada and attempted - unsuccessfully - to colonize the area around the year 1000- nearly 500 years before Columbus arrived in the Americas.
The Age of Reason
Ross Perot
Leif Ericson
The Awakening
49. 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
Stokely Carmichael
Smith-Connolly Act
John C. Calhoun
J. Robert Oppenheimer
50. A moderate Democrat with support from both the North and South who served as president of the US from 1857 to 1861. He could not stem the tide of sectional conflict that eventually erupted into Civil War.
James Buchanan
Alien and Sedition Acts
Alger Hiss
House Un-American Activities Committee