All GED Social Studies Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Other Historic Documents
The Federalist Papers were written to __________
undermine the Articles of Confederation.
argue that states have the right to nullify Federal laws they deem unconstitutional.
demand an inclusion of a Bill of Rights in the United States’ Constitution.
advocate the ratification of the United States’ Constitution.
encourage a declaration of war against Britain prior to the War of 1812.
advocate the ratification of the United States’ Constitution.
The Federalist Papers is the name given to a collection of essays, written in 1787 and 1788, advocating the ratification of the United States’ Constitution. Many of the essays are considered of great historical importance, including Federalist No. 10 and Federalist No. 51.
Example Question #2 : Other Historic Documents
Which of these men did not contribute to the Federalist Papers?
John Jay
All of these men contributed to the Federalist Papers.
Thomas Jefferson
James Madison
Alexander Hamilton
Thomas Jefferson
The Federalist Papers were written by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay. Thomas Jefferson, as a leading anti-federalist, cannot be expected to have contributed to the Federalist Papers.
Example Question #201 : Ged Social Studies
The battles of Lexington and Concord occurred at the beginning of __________.
The Revolutionary War
The War of 1812
World War Two
World War One
The Mexican-American War
The Revolutionary War
The battles of Lexington and Concord occurred in 1775, at the beginning of the Revolutionary War. They were the first two battles of the war.
Example Question #202 : Ged Social Studies
Which of these American Presidents presided over the Louisiana Purchase?
James Madison
Thomas Jefferson
Andrew Jackson
Martin Van Buren
George Washington
Thomas Jefferson
The Louisiana Purchase took place in 1803, during the Presidency of Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson purchased the massive Louisiana territory from Napoleon and the French Empire for the sum of fifteen million dollars. Interestingly, given Jefferson’s stance on limiting the power of the Federal government and the President, it established a precedent that the President and the government had greater power than that which was accorded in the Constitution.
Example Question #203 : Ged Social Studies
The First Barbary War was fought by which American President?
Martin Van Buren
Thomas Jefferson
William Henry Harrison
Andrew Jackson
George Washington
Thomas Jefferson
The First Barbary War was fought by the American navy against the pirate forces of the Barbary States in North Africa. The war was the first major foreign militaristic action taken by the young United States from 1801 to 1805. It was fought during the administration of Thomas Jefferson.
Example Question #121 : Content Areas
Which of these men was not a Constitutional Framer or Founding Father?
John Adams
Thomas Jefferson
John Jay
Benjamin Franklin
Henry Clay
Henry Clay
All of these men are considered Founding Fathers or Constitutional Framers, except Henry Clay, who was a prominent politician for a few decades in the first half of the nineteenth century. Henry Clay was a longtime Speaker of the House and also served as Secretary of State from 1825 until 1829.
Example Question #204 : Ged Social Studies
Poor Richard’s Almanack was published by __________.
Patrick Henry
Adam Smith
John Jay
Edmund Burke
Benjamin Franklin
Benjamin Franklin
Poor Richard’s Almanack was written and published by Benjamin Franklin. The almanac made Franklin rich and famous, and it helped spread Enlightenment ideas to the common people.
Example Question #205 : Ged Social Studies
What was the name given to a grant from the English King to establish a colony in the New World in the years before independence?
reproachment.
embargo.
appellate.
pact.
charter.
charter.
A charter was a legal document granted by the English King, or British government, that granted an individual or corporation the right to establish a colony in the New World in the years before independence. There were different types of charters—proprietary charters gave control of land to one man, who was effectively autonomous but owed allegiance to the British crown; a joint stock charter allowed a corporation, or group of individuals, collectively to own land and establish a colony; royal charters created colonies directly controlled by the crown.
Example Question #206 : Ged Social Studies
American attempts to ensure safe passage for American merchants by engaging the US Navy with the pirate fleets of North Africa were called __________.
The Wars of Impressment
The Barbary Wars
The XYZ Affair
The Spanish-American War
The Gulf Wars
The Barbary Wars
The Barbary Wars, first in 1801, during the administration of Thomas Jefferson, and again in 1815, during the presidency of James Madison, were fought to ensure safe and free passage for American merchant ships in North Africa. At the time American merchant ships were subject to harassment and capture by pirate ships in the Mediterranean, near North Africa. The Barbary Wars were fought by the United States Navy against these pirates and resulted in an American victory.
Example Question #122 : Content Areas
The Proclamation of 1763 declared that __________.
the financial burden for the French-Indian War would be assumed by the British population
American colonists could not settle beyond the Appalachian mountains
American colonists could not purchase goods that were not sold or manufactured in Great Britain
American colonists had to quarter British troops in their houses during wartime and occasionally in peacetime
the American population was in open rebellion against the British government
American colonists could not settle beyond the Appalachian mountains
The Proclamation of 1763 was issued by the British government very shortly after the French-Indian War ended. It stated that the American colonists were now prohibited from settling beyond the Appalachian Mountains. This was done mostly to appease the Native-American allies of the British government, but it greatly angered the colonists. The end of the French-Indian War is considered the turning point that led to the American Revolution. Because the victory of the British over the French removed the threat of French invasion of the American colonies, the colonists no longer had to rely on British protection; furthermore, the British government felt that the colonists ought to be paying the cost of defending their lands, whereas the colonists felt that the British government had no right to tax them without allowing them representation in government. This situation led to a rapid and significant loss of faith between the two peoples, and revolution broke out a little more than a decade later.