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Click Chain #22 - American History+

Upon answering the first question, all subsequent questions will refer to the previous answer. Better not miss any! Enjoy this extra long American History Chain!
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Quiz by Dimby
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Last updated: October 24, 2023
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First submittedOctober 24, 2023
Times taken955
Average score73.8%
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An annual Mardi Gras parade has taken place since 1857 in:
…where, in the late 1910s and early 1920s, African American musicians developed a genre of music called:
…which provided the music for the most popular dance of the 1920s, which was called the:
…whose port saw the first full battle of the:
…which started in the year:
…when the Chief Justice swore in President:
…who was assassinated in the year:
…when Confederate leaders were forced to flee from the Confederate capital of:
…where American revolutionaries convened in St. John’s Church to discuss raising an army in the year:
…when the famous line “Give me liberty, or give me death!” was exclaimed by:
…who is generally considered a:
…of which, the most important one is probably:
…who made a perilous crossing of the:
…which separated the Revolutionary Army from the town of:
…where there was stationed over 1000 Hessians, who were mercenaries from:
…who President Wilson did not declare war on until:
…when the Americans acquired a secret diplomatic communication called the:
…where, in exchange for a military alliance, Germany offered American territory to:
…who the United States invaded in the year:
…when the United States officially took over The:
…which was annexed under the signature of President:
…who had to decide whether to expand in the Northwest instead of the South during the:
…where some Americans, with slogans like “Fifty-Four Forty or Fight!”, pushed for war with:
…who join the Americans and Canadians in launching an attack on the:
…which occurred in the year:
…when the Supreme Commander of Allied Forces was:
…who became President of the United States in the year:
…when, on January 19, a record-setting 71% of American TVs tuned in to watch:
…which ended in:
…when the Little Rock Nine attended Little Rock Central High School, becoming a major step in the bid to end:
…which was enforced by state and local governments via the:
…which makes reference to a character that was popular in travelling:
…for which, the most notable songwriter was:
…whose most famous work might be:
…where the banjo-kneed narrator comes from:
…whose capital city is:
…which was the destination of a march for civil rights led by:
…who wrote a Letter from a Birmingham Jail, which urged nonviolent protest, in the year:
…when an assassin killed President:
…who was born in a suburb on the outskirts of:
…which suffered the first major outbreak of the second wave of:
…which spread rapidly in Philadelphia because, during the pandemic, it held the massive Philadelphia Liberty Loans:
1775
1846
1861
1865
1917
1944
1953
1957
1963
Abraham Lincoln
Alabama
American Civil War
Beaches of Normandy
Boston
Britain
Charleston
Delaware River
Dwight Eisenhower
Founding Father
George Washington
Germany
I Love Lucy
James Polk
Jazz
Jim Crow Laws
John F. Kennedy
Martin Luther King Jr.
Mexico
Minstrel Shows
Montgomery
New Orleans
Oh! Susanna
Oregon Territory Dispute
Parade
Patrick Henry
Republic of Texas
Richmond
Segregation
Spanish Flu
Stephen Foster
Trenton
Zimmerman Telegram
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