Post Quiz: March of History

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It's time to test your knowledge.

The Post Quiz: March of History

Jeanne Mockford as the soothsayer Senna in the comedy Up Pompeii

No, we won't ask you any dates. But March was a history-making month. Try your hand at this fairly random sampling of noteworthy happenings.

Multiple guess, as my teachers used to say.

  1. March was a good month for government. What amazingly important document was ratified by the Continental Congress in Philadelphia on 1 March 1781?
    • The Pure Food and Drug Act
    • The Articles of Confederation
    • Magna Carta
    • The Guano Islands Act
  2. March was also a bad month for government. Who was indicted for conspiring to obstruct justice on 1 March 1974?
    • Tony Blair
    • Henry Kissinger
    • Margaret Thatcher
    • The Watergate conspirators
  3. Texas phenom Sam Houston was born on 2 March 1793. Why was he removed as governor of Texas in 1861?
    • He had joined the Cherokee tribe.
    • He fought with Mexico.
    • He refused to swear allegiance to the Confederacy.
    • He had a town named after him.
  4. Why did the US Secretary of War have to call out troops to quell a riot on 3 March 1913?
    • One word: suffragettes
    • Two words: angry peaceniks
    • Three words: The Ku Klux Klan
    • Two people: Eugene V Debs and Emma Goldman
  5. Telephone inventor Alexander Graham Bell was born in March. Where did he hail from?
    • Philadelphia
    • Edinburgh
    • Berlin
    • Trenton, New Jersey
  6. How did Charles II pay off a huge debt on 4 March 1681?
    • He auctioned off his spaniels.
    • He sent all his creditors to Carolina Colony.
    • He gave William Penn huge tracts of land.
    • He sold his snuffboxes to France.
  7. 5 March 1770 was the date of the infamous Boston Massacre. What started this ill-advised police action?
    • A snowball
    • A bomb
    • Name calling
    • Paul Revere's horse
  8. On 4 March 1946, Winston Churchill complained about something that had gone up in Europe. What was it?
    • The Berlin Wall
    • An 'Iron Curtain'
    • The Eiffel Tower
    • Euro Disney
  9. Yuri Gagarin was born 9 March 1934 in Gzhatsk, Russia. How long did his historic orbital flight in 1961 last?
    • 108 minutes
    • 3 hours
    • 3 days
    • 5 days
  10. Harold Wilson was born on 11 March 1916. Where?
    • London
    • Capetown, South Africa
    • Huddersfield
    • Brightling

You knew all this, right? Just in case, click the picture for the answers and more snark.

Mo Mowlam revisits Churchill's famous 'victory' gesture for the 'Great Britons' BBC TV series.
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Dmitri Gheorgheni

07.03.16 Front Page

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