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African Americans in Maryland History

Crafted by Trivia Architect Scoob44

Fun Trivia : Quizzes : Afro-American : African Americans in Maryland History

Introduction:
"African Americans have enriched Maryland life in numerous ways. See how much you know about the Old Line State's black history."


1. Frederick Douglass was born into slavery in Maryland in 1818 before becoming one of the nation's greatest abolitionist speakers, authors, and publishers. When he was an adolescent, he secretly taught himself to read and subsequently taught other slaves under cover of night. In what Baltimore shipbuilding neighborhood did he accomplish this?
    Essex
    Mount Vernon
    Fells Point
    Locust Point


2. Which president met Frederick Douglass with the words, "Here comes my friend Douglass" at a reception in the White House?
    James Buchanan
    Ulysses S. Grant
    Andrew Johnson
    Abraham Lincoln


3. What was the name of the newspaper Frederick Douglass published?
    The Abolitionist
    The North Star
    The Railroad
    The Free Man


4. Harriet Tubman was also an important abolitionist born into slavery in Maryland. After her own escape from slavery, she came back to Maryland to assist the Underground Railroad. Approximately how many slaves is it believed she helped to freedom?
    300
    100
    50
    200


5. What disease did Harriet Tubman reportedly suffer from?
    Narcolepsy
    Bipolar disorder
    Epilepsy
    Schizophrenia


6. Another Maryland-born slave who escaped to freedom was Josiah Henson. His autobiography, "The Life of Josiah Henson", became the basis for which book?
    Uncle Remus
    Beloved
    The Color Purple
    Uncle Tom's Cabin


7. Thurgood Marshall, the grandson of a slave, became the first black Supreme Court Justice. Born in Baltimore in 1908, he attended Lincoln University in Pennsylvania with Cab Calloway and Langston Hughes. Upon completion he was denied entry into which Maryland institution because of his race?
    University of Maryland Law School
    University of Baltimore Law School
    Johns Hopkins University Law School
    William and Mary School of Law


8. Folk singer Bob Dylan is neither black nor from Maryland, however, one of his songs is about a black Maryland woman. This woman, who's name is in the song title, was struck by the cane of William Zantzinger at a Baltimore society function in 1963. Zantzinger, who was drinking, verbally assailed the 51 year old mother of ten and struck her for not fetching his drink quickly enough. When the woman died in a hospital the next day from a brain hemorrhage, he was arrested but only given a six month sentence. What is the name of the Dylan song that immortalized this woman?
    Absolutely Sweet Marie
    Farewell Angelina
    Bessie Smith
    The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll


9. Clarence Mitchell Jr., born in Baltimore, was affectionately called the "101st Senator". Mitchell, a black lawyer and lobbyist, was instrumental in the passing of the 1957 Civil Rights Act, the 1960 Civil Rights Act, the 1964 Civil Rights Act, the 1965 Voting Rights Act, and the 1968 Fair Housing Act. He also lobbied Congress to unite with the Judicial and Executive Branches in using the Constitution to protect African Americans from discrimination. What Baltimore building bears his namesake?
    Baltimore City Hall
    The Maryland Historical Society Building
    The Museum of Maryland African American History and Culture
    Baltimore City Courthouse


10. Born in a poor black neighborhood of Baltimore in 1948, Frizzell "Pee Wee" Gray went on to become a Congressman and head of the NAACP. Under what adopted name is he better known?
    Louis Farrakhan
    Shekwan Sheetswa
    Medgar Evers
    Kweisi Mfume


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