All SAT II US History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #14 : U.S. Social History From 1790 To 1898
In 1859, this abolitionist captured the federal arsenal at Harper's Ferry, Virginia along with 21 followers in an unsuccessful attempt to start a slave revolt.
Frederick Douglass
William Lloyd Garrison
Nat Turner
John Brown
Thomas Clarkson
John Brown
The abolitionist was John Brown captured Harper's Ferry and was tried and hanged for his unsuccessful raid.
Example Question #15 : U.S. Social History From 1790 To 1898
From the early-to-mid-nineteenth century, this wagon route from the Missouri River to Oregon permitted hundreds of thousands of immigrants to settle the West. What was its name?
The Oregon Valley
The Appalachian Trail
The Oregon Trail
The Northwest Passage
The Western Route
The Oregon Trail
Before the Transcontinental Railroad, the Oregon Trail from the Missouri River to Oregon permitted hundreds of thousands of immigrants to settle the West.
Example Question #11 : Facts And Details In U.S. Social History From 1790 To 1898
In 1871, which American city suffered a fire that left at least 90,000 people homeless?
Cleveland
Chicago
New York City
Boston
Atlanta
Chicago
In 1871, from October 8th to the 9th, Chicago suffered a fire that left at least 90,000 people homeless and killed 300.
Example Question #11 : U.S. Social History From 1790 To 1898
What Native American woman helped Lewis and Clark with their expedition in the Louisiana territory?
Walking Spirit
Lozen
Queen Anne
Pocahontas
Sacagawea
Sacagawea
The Lewis and Clark Expedition was the first attempt by an American government to map and cross the entirety of the unknown West. It was commissioned by President Jefferson shortly after the purchase of the Louisiana territory. Lewis and Clark, along with many others under their command, set out from St. Louis in 1804, crossing thousands of miles of terrain before arriving at the Pacific Ocean, two years later; however, without the aid of a young Native-American woman, named Sacagawea, it likely would not have been possible. She worked as a translator for the expedition and helped broker safe passage through potentially hostile lands; her knowledge of the area they were travelling through—in Wyoming and Idaho in particular—ensured that the expedition did not get lost, and her understanding of the native plants prevented the expedition from starving during the more arduous stretches of the journey. She is now, quite rightly, commemorated on the U.S. Dollar Coin and is the symbol of the National American Women’s Suffrage Movement.
Example Question #12 : U.S. Social History From 1790 To 1898
The gathering at Promontory Summit, Utah, on May 10, 1869, celebrate the completion of __________.
the Mormon settlement of Utah
the Panama Canal
the Pony Express
hostilities in the Civil War
the first transcontinental railroad
the first transcontinental railroad
On May 10, 1869, railroad tycoon Leland Stanford drove in a special "Golden Spike" to cermonially complete the first transcontinental railroad in North America. A collaboration of three different companies, the railroad system linked Sacramento, California with the Eastern U.S.'s rail system in Council Bluffs, Iowa. Although it was not a complete coast to coast trip, the railroad finally offered Americans a manageable overland rail trip from the East Coast to the West Coast. Throughout the later ninteenth Century, many new railroads came and provided other transcontinental routes.
Example Question #13 : U.S. Social History From 1790 To 1898
Immigration patterns of the 1890s were characterized by immigrants from all of the following EXCEPT __________.
Russia
Italy
Great Britain
Eastern European Jews
Poland
Great Britain
In the aftermath of the Civil War, the makeup of American immigrants changed significantly. Dominated by Germans, Irish, and other Western Europeans in the early-nineteenth century, immigrants in the late-nineteenth century saw a large number of southern and eastern Europeans arrive in America. In particular, a large influx came from Italy, Russia, and Poland. Additionally, large numbers of Jews from Eastern Europe arrived fleeing widespread persecution.
Example Question #14 : U.S. Social History From 1790 To 1898
The largest influx of German immigrants to America came during the time period of __________.
1900–1950
1950–2000
1850–1900
1700–1750
1750–1800
1850–1900
Immigration to the United States in total was at its highest peak in the late-nineteenth century. While German immigration was always high from the colonial period, it too peaked in the latter part of the nineteenth century. Whereas most earlier German immigrants were Protestants from Northern Germany, Southern German Catholics added to the immigration numbers in the late-nineteenth century.
Example Question #771 : Sat Subject Test In United States History
Lynchings were most prominent in the era __________.
1830–1860
1950–1980
1890–1920
1860–1890
1920–1950
1890–1920
Lynching, or the extrajudicial assasination of an accused criminal, became a widespread practice in the post-Reconstruction era as a way to combat newly freed slaves emerging political power. As Jim Crow laws began to take hold, lynchings actually increased. Thousands of Americans, mostly blacks, were killed by lynching at its height from 1890–1920.
Example Question #772 : Sat Subject Test In United States History
Which society was founded by William Lloyd Garrison in 1833?
The Quaker Anti-Slavery Organization
The Underground Railroad
The Liberator
The Harmony Society
American Anti-Slavery Society
American Anti-Slavery Society
The American Anti-Slavery Society was founded by William Lloyd Garrison in 1833. The society was established in Philadelphia. Within five years, Garrison’s society had grown to hundreds of thousands of members, all of whom were campaigning for the illegality of slavery under all natural laws, and that the Constitution represents “a covenant with hell.” The Liberator is the name of an anti-slavery newspaper, also founded by William Lloyd Garrison.
Example Question #773 : Sat Subject Test In United States History
Unitarianism is characterized by __________.
the rejection of the divinity of Christ
the rejection of the Trinity
the belief in predestination
the belief in the universal salvation of man
atheism
the rejection of the Trinity
Unitarianism is a religious belief, a branch of Christianity that is known for its understanding of God as one person. As such, it is a direct rejection of the Holy Trinity. Unitarianism first took hold in America in the 1780s in New England. The American Unitarian Association was founded in Boston in 1825.
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