Book Read Free

The Big Book of American Trivia

Page 1

by J. Stephen Lang




  Visit Tyndale online at www.tyndale.com.

  TYNDALE and Tyndale’s quill logo are registered trademarks of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc.

  The Big Book of American Trivia

  Copyright © 1997, 2011 by J. Stephen Lang. All rights reserved.

  Cover illustration of banner copyright © by U.P.images/iStockphoto. All rights reserved.

  Cover illustration of stars and stripes copyright © by Nic Taylor/iStockphoto. All rights reserved.

  Cover pattern illustration copyright © by toto8888/iStockphoto. All rights reserved.

  Cover illustration of flag copyright © by Michael Powers/iStockphoto. All rights reserved.

  Cover illustration of eagle copyright © by Classix/iStockphoto. All rights reserved.

  Interior photograph of church copyright © Gene Chutka/iStockphoto. All rights reserved.

  Interior rendering of White House copyright © stocksnapper/iStockphoto. All rights reserved.

  Interior rendering of inauguration copyright © andipantz/iStockphoto. All rights reserved.

  Interior rendering of cornucopia copyright © Constance McGuire/iStockphoto. All rights reserved.

  Interior photograph of calendar copyright © thumb/iStockphoto. All rights reserved.

  Interior photograph of signature copyright © Roel Smart/iStockphoto. All rights reserved.

  Interior illustration of marching band copyright © Keith Bishop/iStockphoto. All rights reserved.

  Interior photograph of microphone copyright © Baris Simsek/iStockphoto. All rights reserved.

  Interior illustration of musical scroll copyright © Cloudniners/iStockphoto. All rights reserved.

  Designed by Ron Kaufmann

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Lang, J. Stephen.

  The big book of American trivia / J. Stephen Lang. — [Star-spangled ed.].

  p. cm.

  ISBN 978-1-4143-6454-4 (sc)

  1. United States—Miscellanea. 2. Popular culture—United States—Miscellanea. I. Title.

  E156.L36 2011

  973—dc23 2011033958

  Originally published in 1997 under ISBN 978-0-8423-8313-4.

  Preface

  Introduction

  Part One: For the Record

  Biggest, Widest, Mostest: U.S. Records

  A World Record for . . .

  The Oldest . . .

  The One and Only . . .

  Part Two: Let Us Entertain You

  The Tube: TV in America

  Great Americans on Film

  Leading Men (On Screen, That Is)

  Cartoons, Moving and Nonmoving

  Out Here in Radio Land

  More Great Americans on Film

  America on Stage

  TV Record Holders

  The Fabulous Funnies

  Make Me Laugh

  Still More Great Americans on Film

  Kid Stuff: Theme Parks and Such

  Leading Men (Again)

  Toys and Games and Other Playful Things

  Queens of the Screen

  Part Three: Our Love Affair with Music

  “They’re Playing My Song”

  Singers, Crooners, and So Forth

  Creating the American Song

  Composers and Songwriters and Such

  Part Four: Leisure Time, American Style

  Holidays, Holy Days, and Other Special Days

  Four-Wheeled Friend: The Automobile

  Join the Club

  Christmas, American Style

  I Love a Parade

  For Kids’ Sake

  Festivals of Food

  Part Five: So Many Sights to See

  Capitols: Those State-ly Buildings

  Statues, Stadiums, and Such: City Landmarks

  Ivy and Ivory Towers: Colleges and Universities

  Famous Forts

  Parks, Caverns, and So Forth: State Landmarks

  Colors on the Map

  Funny Names on the Map

  On the Road Again

  Beantown, Barb City, and Other City Nicknames

  Notable Purchases

  Little Egypt, Big Muddy, and Other Place Nicknames

  Scraping the Sky: Tall Buildings

  More Funny Names on the Map

  Replicas: When You Can’t Have the Real Thing . . .

  Happy Trails to You

  Part Six: Call of the Wild

  Big Waters: America’s Rivers

  Beasts and Zoos and Such

  Every Bloomin’ Thing

  Feathered Friends

  More Big Waters: America’s Rivers

  More Beasts and Zoos

  Part Seven: As a Memorial

  Named in Honor of Whom?

  Halls of Fame

  Grave Matters: Final Resting Places of the Famous

  Named in Honor of Whom? (Part 2)

  Famous Cemeteries, Famous Occupants

  More Grave Matters: Final Resting Places of the Famous

  Named in Honor of Whom? (Part 3)

  Part Eight: The Finer Things: Artists, Authors, and Such

  Author! Author!

  Short Reading: Newspapers and Magazines

  Painters, Sculptors, and Other Artsy Types

  Poetic Types

  More Painters, Sculptors, and Artsy Types

  Author! Author! (Part 2)

  Part Nine: Hail to the Chief

  Presidential Trivia

  The First Ladies

  The Quotable Presidents

  More Presidential Trivia

  Part Ten: Doing It by the Decades

  The Babe, Billy Sunday, Etc.: The 1910s

  Art Deco, the Model T, Etc.: The 1920s

  Kingfish, Kodachrome, Knute, Etc.: The 1930s

  CD, Nylons, A-Bombs, Etc.: The 1940s

  Ike, Bonzo, Interstates, Etc.: The 1950s

  Rockfests, Astronauts, Assassinations, Etc.: The 1960s

  Watergate, STOP-ERA, Seagulls, Etc.: The 1970s

  LaserJets, Volcanoes, Glasnost, Etc.: The 1980s

  Megamalls, Oliver North, Perot, Etc.: The 1990s

  Facebook, American Idol, Dubya, Etc.: The 2000s

  Part Eleven: American Potpourri

  The American Name

  You’re a Grand Old Anthem

  Grand Old Flags

  Famous Firsts

  “You Can Quote Me on That”

  Mottoes

  Word and Phrase Origins

  Let’s Have a Contest!

  More Famous Firsts

  Part Twelve: Ten Questions (about Each State)

  The Heart of Dixie, Alabama

  The Last Frontier, Alaska

  The Grand Canyon State, Arizona

  The Land of Opportunity, Arkansas

  The Golden State, California

  The Centennial State, Colorado

  The Constitution State, Connecticut

  The First State, Delaware

  The Sunshine State, Florida

  The Peach State, Georgia

  The Aloha State, Hawaii

  The Gem State, Idaho

  Land of Lincoln, Illinois

  The Hoosier State, Indiana

  The Hawkeye State, Iowa

  The Sunflower State, Kansas

  The Bluegrass State, Kentucky

  The Pelican State, Louisiana

  The Pine Tree State, Maine

  The Old Line State, Maryland

  The Bay State, Massachusetts

  The Wolverine State, Michigan

  The North Star State, Minnesota

  The Magnolia State, Mississippi

  The Show Me State, Missouri

  Big Sky Country, Montana

  The Cornhusker State, Nebraska
<
br />   The Silver State, Nevada

  The Granite State, New Hampshire

  The Garden State, New Jersey

  Land of Enchantment, New Mexico

  The Empire State, New York

  The Tar Heel State, North Carolina

  The Sioux State, North Dakota

  The Buckeye State, Ohio

  The Sooner State, Oklahoma

  The Beaver State, Oregon

  The Keystone State, Pennsylvania

  Little Rhody, Rhode Island

  The Palmetto State, South Carolina

  The Coyote State, South Dakota

  The Volunteer State, Tennessee

  The Lone Star State, Texas

  The Beehive State, Utah

  The Green Mountain State, Vermont

  The Old Dominion, Virginia

  The Evergreen State, Washington

  The Mountain State, West Virginia

  The Badger State, Wisconsin

  The Cowboy State, Wyoming

  A Capital City, D.C.

  Part Thirteen: Things of the Spirit

  The Bible in America

  Churches, Cathedrals, Chapels, Shrines

  Religious Notables

  Part Fourteen: America Month by Month

  January

  February

  March

  April

  May

  June

  July

  August

  September

  October

  November

  December

  Preface to the Star-Spangled Edition

  In honor of the two-hundredth anniversary of our national anthem, we present this updated edition of the original book, first published in 1997. The years between then and now have been exciting and eventful—perhaps, in cases such as September 11, 2001, too eventful. However, one positive result of the 9/11 attacks and their aftermath has been a deepening of Americans’ patriotism. We may find much to complain about and we may find the news making us increasingly cynical, but when all is said and done, we are a deeply patriotic nation. And most people who stand to sing “The Star-Spangled Banner” put their hearts into it. Francis Scott Key would be pleased to know that the words he penned in 1814 on the back of an envelope are still being sung with gusto two centuries later.

  The first edition of this book included a set of questions on flags (“Grand Old Flags”) in part eleven. That set appears in this edition as well, but we’ve also added a new set of questions, “You’re a Grand Old Anthem,” about the song’s history. Plus we’ve added more questions dealing with events of the still-in-progress twenty-first century.

  Introduction

  Is it possible that, with so many people fascinated with trivia and with such a great subject (America), no one has yet published a book of American trivia? It seems so. The book you are now holding is designed to fill that gap.

  The problem is this: What to include? The possibilities seem endless.

  Entertainment is a huge category and includes so much—music (pop, country, classical, and so on), television, movies, radio. Related is the whole category of the arts, with drama, museums, painting, sculpture. Also related is literature, including not only the classics but also newspapers and magazines. Likewise related is leisure time—clubs, holidays, parades, toys (and that Great American Toy, the automobile).

  What about places? Geography need not be dull, not if you’re curious about American place names, the great tourist attractions in states and cities, even things such as theme parks. (If your family is on a road trip, these questions are a great place to start.)

  Knowing how most people love their home turf, I felt a section that included state questions was essential—ten questions about each state (and D.C., too), to be exact.

  Then there is history. Of course, we all know more about our own century than any other, right? So there is a section on the decades of the twentieth century—a few questions on each decade, hitting the high points and bringing up a few oddities too.

  Above all, there are people—from Pocahontas to Edgar Allan Poe to Abraham Lincoln to Mark Twain to Babe Ruth to Neil Armstrong to Oliver North. Our American family portrait includes millions of faces—not all pretty but always intriguing.

  Under these broad categories are more than 150 topical sections. Included are “TV Record Holders,” “Funny Names on the Map,” “Beasts and Zoos and Such,” “Grand Old Flags,” “Great Americans on Film,” “The Bible in America,” “Halls of Fame,” “Creating the American Song,” and so on. I could not include every subject, but the range is wide—inventions; comic strips; famous women; rivers; advertising; quotations; word origins; and many, many others.

  The topics are organized in fourteen parts. But despite the attempt at organization, the book is for browsing. It was made to fill up your family’s time on a car trip, your daily commute on the train, the hour you spend waiting at the dentist’s office, the times when you and the other people in your car pool are in the mood for a game of “quiz me.” In other words, the book is designed to be read randomly, anywhere, and with no preparation of any kind. It is designed to entertain the person who unashamedly likes to be entertained—and challenged.

  As the writing of this book progressed, it truly became a labor of love. After traveling abroad numerous times, I find that my home country is still the most fascinating, the one that lends itself most readily to the kind of book you are now holding.

  If you find yourself able to answer every question in this book correctly, give yourself an A-plus in American studies. If not, then after reading this, you may consider yourself a little more knowledgeable, maybe even a little more appreciative, of this vast, enchanting land.

  Biggest, Widest, Mostest: U.S. Records

  1. With a thirty-five-foot-thick waist, she is probably the largest woman in America. Who is she? (Hint: statue) [Answer]

  2. The largest football stadium, seating 109,901, is found in what state? [Answer]

  3. What southern state (according to one study) has the highest percentage of obese adults? [Answer]

  4. In terms of revenue, what package delivery firm is the nation’s largest transport company? [Answer]

  5. What Native American tribe, the largest in the U.S., also has the largest reservation? [Answer]

  6. The nation’s tallest sand dunes are in what western state? [Answer]

  7. What is the distinction of the golf course at Cloudcroft, New Mexico? (Hint: clouds) [Answer]

  8. The world’s largest aquarium opened in 2005 in what city? [Answer]

  9. The nation’s largest maritime museum is Mystic Seaport in what New England state? [Answer]

  10. FedEx Field, the largest pro football stadium, is in what state? [Answer]

  11. What is the largest Protestant denomination in the U.S.? (Hint: south) [Answer]

  12. Quantico, Virginia, has the largest base for which military branch? [Answer]

  13. What landlocked state contains the largest saltwater body in the U.S.? [Answer]

  14. What is distinctive about the thirteen-thousand-acre South Mountain Preserve in Phoenix, Arizona? [Answer]

  15. What state capital is closest to the equator? [Answer]

  16. The smallest county in the U.S. has a huge population. What county is it? [Answer]

  17. What is the “anchorman” in each year’s graduating class from the U.S. Naval Academy? [Answer]

  18. What southwestern state has the largest Native American population in the United States? [Answer]

  19. What state is home of the country’s largest ranch? [Answer]

  20. The largest moose population in the forty-eight contiguous states is in which New England state? [Answer]

  21. Ribbon Falls, the U.S.’s highest waterfall, is in what western state? [Answer]

  22. The country’s largest theology school, Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, is where? [Answer]

  23. What New England state has the lowest population east of the Mississippi? [Answ
er]

  24. According to Time, “He’s preached in person to more people than any human being who ever lived.” Who? [Answer]

  25. Whose record as the youngest international grand master in chess stood from 1958 to 1991? [Answer]

  26. The ten highest mountains in the U.S. are in what western state? [Answer]

  27. In what month have the most U.S. presidents’ inaugurations occurred? [Answer]

  28. Pop Warner called whom “the greatest football player of all time”? [Answer]

  29. Which southern state is the largest state east of the Mississippi River? [Answer]

  30. The highest mountain east of the Mississippi is Mount Mitchell. What state is it in? [Answer]

  31. What western state has the highest percentage of Asians in the United States? [Answer]

  32. What painkiller is the most prescribed drug in America? [Answer]

  A World Record for . . .

  America holds a lot of world records—ranging from tall buildings to enchiladas.

  1. What San Francisco–based company is the world’s largest apparel manufacturer? (Hint: denim) [Answer]

  2. The largest one-day sporting event in the world is held in Indiana. What is it? [Answer]

  3. America’s tallest building, with 110 stories, is in Chicago. What department store chain was it originally named for? [Answer]

  4. What D.C. monument is the world’s tallest obelisk? [Answer]

  5. The world’s largest post office building is in what Illinois city? [Answer]

  6. The U.S. and Canada share the largest body of fresh water in the world. What lake is it? [Answer]

  7. What Seattle-based company is the largest airplane manufacturer in the world? [Answer]

  8. What Florida port handles more cruise ship passengers than any port in the world? [Answer]

  9. Provo, Utah, has the world’s largest Mormon university. What is it? [Answer]

  10. The world’s largest stalagmite is found in Cathedral Caverns in what southern state? [Answer]

  11. What New York City museum calls itself the “World’s Great” exhibition? [Answer]

  12. Louisville, Kentucky, contains the largest publishing house in the world for a particular group of people. Who? [Answer]

  13. Batavia, Illinois, is the home to the world’s largest atom smasher, named for an Italian scientist. What is the name of the facility? [Answer]

 

‹ Prev