#9148, aired 2024-07-17 | 6-POURRI $800: Less famous than 66, Route 6 was once the USA's longest--3,652 miles from Long Beach, Calif. to Provincetown in this state Massachusetts |
#9147, aired 2024-07-16 | AMERICAN HISTORY $600: 1649's Toleration Act passed by this colony's assembly was designed to ensure Catholics & Protestants could freely worship there Maryland |
#9144, aired 2024-07-11 | STATES THAT END IN HAMPSHIRE $200: In 1765 this future capital got its name to show that a boundary dispute with Massachusetts had ended peacefully Concord |
#9140, aired 2024-07-05 | ORGANIZATIONS $600: Jeremy Belknap founded this state's historical society back in 1791 & got Paul Revere to write him an account of that famous ride Massachusetts |
#9139, aired 2024-07-04 | HISTORY, AMERICAN STYLE $200: He wrote the Massachusetts Constitution, signed the Treaty of Paris, then became vice president, which he did not enjoy John Adams |
#9126, aired 2024-06-17 | STATE SONGS $1,000 (Daily Double): "The shot heard 'round the world" goes off " in the third line of this state's official song Massachusetts |
#9117, aired 2024-06-04 | JUNE 4 EVER MORE $800: 1912:
Massachusetts becomes the first state to pass a law regarding minimum these wages |
#9109, aired 2024-05-23 | LIT TITLES BY THE NUMBERS $1000: Salem, Massachusetts is the setting for this Nathaniel Hawthorne novel inspired by a curse placed on his own family The House of the Seven Gables |
#9106, aired 2024-05-20 | SANDWICH POTPOURRI $1000: Incorporated in 1639, Sandwich is the oldest town on this cape in southeastern Massachusetts (Cape) Cod |
#36, aired 2024-05-20 | PEOPLE IN AMERICAN HISTORY $400: The unusual first name of this preacher born in 1639 to the Mathers of Massachusetts was a Puritan virtue/command Increase |
#35, aired 2024-05-20 | UNREAL ESTATE $2000: In a novella by H.P. Lovecraft, the title "Horror" of this Massachusetts town is a hideous monster evoked by occult magic Dunwich |
#9105, aired 2024-05-17 | FRANKLIN $800: (Michael Douglas presents the clue.) Things were not harmonious when this man from Massachusetts came to join Ben in the new nation's diplomatic corps John Adams |
#9104, aired 2024-05-16 | APPROXIMATE WEIGHTS & MEASURES $1600: Clumps of short grass, perhaps on the lawn of a Massachusetts university tufts |
#9101, aired 2024-05-13 | COLONIAL AMERICA $2000: In 1630 John Winthrop sailed west from England to become the governor of this colony & a key leader of the Puritans the Massachusetts Bay Colony |
#26, aired 2024-05-08 | FIND THE GREEK LETTER IN... $2000: ...the word for a building like the former Tewksbury one in Massachusetts or where excess spending puts you rho (in poorhouse) |
#9093, aired 2024-05-01 | CITY PARKS $1000: The Minnehaha Regional Park in Minneapolis features a replica of this author's home in Cambridge, Massachusetts Longfellow |
#9092, aired 2024-04-30 | COOKIES, MY FAVORITE! $400: Ruth Wakefield invented these iconic cookies at her same-named restaurant in Massachusetts Toll House |
#9092, aired 2024-04-30 | STATE MAMMALS $600: If you think the rare Northern Atlantic species of this cetacean is Massachusetts' state marine mammal, you're "correct" the right whale |
#9091, aired 2024-04-29 | GETTING TERRITORIAL $400: Officially, Puerto Rico is a U.S. this, a term also used by Massachusetts & Virginia a Commonwealth |
#9089, aired 2024-04-25 | ASSAULTS & BATTERIES $600: In 1856, South Carolina's Preston Brooks used a cane to assault Charles Sumner of Massachusetts in the Capitol's soon to be replaced Old this Chamber the Senate Chamber |
#9061, aired 2024-03-18 | STATUES OF THE WORLD $800: Atop Massachusetts' Captain's Hill is a statue of this Pilgrim whose "Courtship" is the subject of a famous poem Miles Standish |
#9053, aired 2024-03-06 | 1924 $800: This future president was born June 12 in Milton, Massachusetts the first President Bush |
#9046, aired 2024-02-26 | THE '70s TOTALLY ROCKED $1600: The '70s totally rocked long hair, as seen on this rock & roll band from Massachusetts whose 1976 debut album included "Rock & Roll Band" Boston |
#9031, aired 2024-02-05 | HISTORICAL AMERICAN CURRENCY $200: It still had "Bay Colony" in its name when it issued America's first paper money in 1690 to help fund military expeditions Massachusetts |
#9013, aired 2024-01-10 | BOOKS & AUTHORS $1200: This scribe who wrote "Mystic River" grew up in Dorchester. Massachusetts Dennis Lehane |
#9000, aired 2023-12-22 | HISTORICAL AMERICAN GOVERNORS $600: Richard Bellingham, a real governor of Massachusetts Bay Colony, turns up in this novel & lets Hester keep her child The Scarlet Letter |
#8996, aired 2023-12-18 | PLAY SETTINGS $400: "The Crucible":
1692 in this Massachusetts city Salem |
#8994, aired 2023-12-14 | STATE OF THE COLLEGE $800: Tufts is a centerpiece of Medford in this state Massachusetts |
#8988, aired 2023-12-06 | HOUSE PARTY $200: This house in Massachusetts is actually on Turner Street, not Pyncheon Street as in the 1851 novel House of the Seven Gables |
#8968, aired 2023-11-08 | ON THE OLD MAP $200: Called New Towne when Harvard College was established, the city soon got this name Cambridge |
#8965, aired 2023-11-03 | HOSPITALS $400: Sylvia Plath worked as a secretary at this hospital, MGH for short Massachusetts General Hospital |
#19, aired 2023-11-01 | PENINSULAS $400: New England's very own gun show is this Massachusetts peninsula, often said to resemble an arm flexing its bicep Cape Cod |
#8958, aired 2023-10-25 | WASN'T THAT AN '80s THING? $1600: He was elected governor of Massachusetts in 1982 & 1986 & then it was on to the presidency--well, not quite Dukakis |
#8953, aired 2023-10-18 | THE 1600s $400: For nearly 40 years, until 1679, New Hampshire was part of this colony Massachusetts |
#16, aired 2023-10-11 | FICTIONAL TV TOWNS $800: Capeside, Massachusetts (a small town with a big teen angst problem) Dawson's Creek |
#8941, aired 2023-10-02 | A BUG'S LIFE $800: This garden pest controller is the state insect of Delaware & Massachusetts a ladybug |
#14, aired 2023-09-27 | RANDOM U.S. STATE FACTS $800: Massachusetts and Virginia are two of four states that have this word in their official names Commonwealth |
#8922, aired 2023-07-25 | STATE THE 19th CENTURY SENATOR $2000: Charles Sumner, a free stater nearly beaten to death on the Senate floor by a southerner Massachusetts |
#8919, aired 2023-07-20 | SENATORS $1200: This senator from Massachusetts has time & time again professed her love for the Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson show "Ballers" Warren |
#8907, aired 2023-07-04 | WHERE'S MY FOOD? $200: The official state dessert of Massachusetts, it's actually a cake, despite its name Boston cream pie |
#8907, aired 2023-07-04 | U.S. FESTIVALS $2000: Olympia Dukakis & Christopher Reeve regularly acted at the Williamstown Theatre Festival in these festival-happy Massachusetts hills the Berkshires |
#8900, aired 2023-06-23 | ANIMAL CHANGE A LETTER $800: Change a letter from the official state fish of Massachusetts & you get a mostly docile ruminant cod & cow |
#8890, aired 2023-06-09 | STATE HOLIDAYS $400: Though this suffragist was born in Massachusetts, only Florida observes her February 15 birthday as a state holiday Susan B. Anthony |
#8890, aired 2023-06-09 | STATE HOLIDAYS $1000: The Boston Marathon has often been held on this, a state holiday in Massachusetts Patriots' Day |
#8885, aired 2023-06-02 | STATE OF THE UNION $2000: Jackie & JFK, at St. Mary's Church near Hammersmith Farm Rhode Island |
#8880, aired 2023-05-26 | AMERICA IN THE 1700s $600: A toast to William Horton, James Oglethorpe's right-hand man, who is credited with founding this colony's 1st brewery Georgia |
#19, aired 2023-05-24 | NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARKS $1600: A historical park devoted to the whaling industry in this Massachusetts city features a museum & the schooner Ernestina New Bedford |
#8873, aired 2023-05-17 | THAT'S OUR MOTTO! $1,000 (Daily Double): Of this Massachusetts university, translating from Hebrew:
"Truth, even unto its innermost parts" Brandeis University |
#8857, aired 2023-04-25 | STATESMEN & WOMEN $800: Daniel Webster's statue in Statuary Hall represents this state New Hampshire |
#8856, aired 2023-04-24 | LOCAL BOY $400: This actor who grew up in Massachusetts with Matt Damon called his own Boston accent on film "way better than Matt's" Ben Affleck |
#8855, aired 2023-04-21 | A HARD BARGAIN $600: It took 2 months, 133 ballots & a lot of negotiating for Massachusetts Rep. Nathaniel Banks to land this job in 1856 Speaker of the House |
#8852, aired 2023-04-18 | U.S. + CANADIAN POSTAL ABBREVS. $200: MASK Massachusetts & Saskatchewan |
#8842, aired 2023-04-04 | PAINT ME A PICTURE $2000: Following the Civil War, he turned to scenes of the beach & sea like these three bathers on a beach in his native Massachusetts Winslow Homer |
#8839, aired 2023-03-30 | STATE MOTTO TRANSLATIONS $1000: Massachusetts has ense petit placidam sub libertate quietem, "by" this weapon "we seek peace, but only peace under liberty" the sword |
#8826, aired 2023-03-13 | GOVERNORS $1200: Michael Dukakis was in his third term as governor of this state when he ran for president in 1988 Massachusetts |
#8812, aired 2023-02-21 | FROM "E" TO "Y" $800: This "Row" in Washington, D.C. generally refers to a stretch of Massachusetts Ave. where many foreign diplomats work Embassy Row |
#8807, aired 2023-02-14 | STATE TREES $600: Massachusetts' state tree is the American species of this tree that can grow 100 feet tall the elm |
#8804, aired 2023-02-09 | AMERICAN HISTORY $2000: On November 21, 1620 41 male passengers signed this document while anchored at a Massachusetts harbor the Mayflower Compact |
#8800, aired 2023-02-03 | 19th CENTURY NAMES $800: During the Civil War he recruited for the all-Black Massachusetts 54th Infantry, in which 2 of his sons served Frederick Douglass |
#8798, aired 2023-02-01 | OVERLAPS $2000: The minimum amount of fissionable material to sustain a nuclear chain reaction in the Bay State critical Massachusetts |
#8788, aired 2023-01-18 | LONG-SERVING POLITICIANS $400: Massachusetts kept this "Liberal Lion" in the Senate for nearly 47 years, until his death Ted Kennedy |
#8787, aired 2023-01-17 | "I" ON ART $600: Clinton, Massachusetts is home to the museum of Russian these, holy images in the tradition of the Orthodox Church icons |
#10, aired 2023-01-12 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES $200: Brainiacs know that M.I.T. stands for this Boston-area school the Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
#10, aired 2023-01-12 | THEY CAME TO AMERICA $1200: In September 2022 about 50 migrants from Venezuela were surprised to find themselves on this Massachusetts resort island Martha's Vineyard |
#8779, aired 2023-01-05 | COLLEGES NAMED AFTER PEOPLE $800: "Hairy" last name of Medford, Massachusetts' Charles, benefactor of a university there Tufts |
#8770, aired 2022-12-23 | ORCHESTRAL MANEUVERS IN THE PARK $3,400 (Daily Double): On July 4, 2022 this city's Pops returned to the Hatch Shell on the Esplanade to bring in Independence Day with a bang Boston |
#8766, aired 2022-12-19 | LINE OF FIRE $400: A resident of Amherst, Massachusetts, she wrote, "Ashes denote that fire was; respect the grayest pile" Dickinson |
#8766, aired 2022-12-19 | LINE OF FIRE $4,000 (Daily Double): An ode Emerson wrote for this town where he lived includes, "Oh tenderly the haughty day, fills his blue urn with fire" Concord |
#8761, aired 2022-12-12 | NO GOOD $1200: It's the last name of Massachusetts crime boss Whitey & his brother William, a long-serving president of the state senate Bulger |
#8758, aired 2022-12-07 | STATE STUFF $400: Also the name of a famous boat, it's fitting that this is the state flower of Massachusetts the mayflower |
#8753, aired 2022-11-30 | DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE SIGNERS $800: Massachusetts elected its first governor in 1780--this man John Hancock |
#8753, aired 2022-11-30 | DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE SIGNERS $7,600 (Daily Double): After losing 4 times running for governor of Massachusetts, he finally won, then got seriously into redistricting issues (Elbridge) Gerry |
#8, aired 2022-11-13 | HISTORIC SHIPS $200: This boat that brought over the first Pilgrims reached what is today Massachusetts in November 1620 the Mayflower |
#8732, aired 2022-11-01 | CATCH-2022 $800: Research by an 8th grade civics class in Massachusetts got Elizabeth Johnson a pardon for her 1693 conviction for this crime witchcraft |
#8732, aired 2022-11-01 | I BID $1200: In 2018 Vineyard Wind, based in this state, successfully bid $135 million for a lease on a wind power area off the coast Massachusetts |
#6, aired 2022-10-30 | PRETTY LITTLE LIES $100: Casually let it be known you went to this university in Cambridge, Massachusetts, like John Quincy Adams & T.S. Eliot did Harvard |
#8727, aired 2022-10-25 | WOMEN ON THE MAP $800: Located about 4 miles off the coast of Massachusetts, it's one of the few U.S. place names to have an apostrophe Martha's Vineyard |
#8716, aired 2022-10-10 | CRITICAL "MASS" $600: Home to 7 million Americans, it's from an Algonquian word for "at the large hill" Massachusetts |
#3, aired 2022-10-09 | AMERICANA $400: Yankee magazine says this New England state is known for chowder, old money & being the home of TV's Gilmore girls Connecticut |
#8709, aired 2022-09-29 | U.S. COUNTIES $400: Hampshire County once covered the whole western half of what's now this state, New Hampshire's southern neighbor Massachusetts |
#8705, aired 2022-09-23 | AMERICAN HISTORY $2000: An early champion of free speech & religious liberty, Anne Hutchinson was put on trial in 1637 & banished from this colony the Massachusetts Bay Colony |
#8695, aired 2022-07-29 | GOVERNORS $600: In 2015 he said the health care program he began as governor of Massachusetts was the forerunner of Obamacare Mitt Romney |
#8690, aired 2022-07-22 | AT CROSS PURPOSES $1000: The College of the Holy Cross is in this Massachusetts city about a 50-mile drive from Boston Worcester |
#8686, aired 2022-07-18 | AMERICANA $2,000 (Daily Double): Belonging to a cousin, the historic home seen here in Salem, Massachusetts, inspired Nathaniel Hawthorne to write this novel The House of the Seven Gables (The House of Seven Gables accepted) |
#8677, aired 2022-07-05 | A DIP IN THE BAY $1200: Extending about 35 miles inland, Penobscot Bay is an inlet of the North Atlantic on the coast of this state Maine |
#8663, aired 2022-06-15 | STATE FLORA $3,000 (Daily Double): Also known as the ground laurel, it has been Massachusetts' state flower since 1918, not 1620 the mayflower |
#8642, aired 2022-05-17 | MILITARY HISTORY $800: So many African Americans wanted to fight for this state's 54th Regiment in the Civil War, the 55th was created Massachusetts |
#8638, aired 2022-05-11 | TIMELY TALK $2,000 (Daily Double): Some of the first units of these were organized in Worcester County, Massachusetts in 1774 Minutemen |
#8632, aired 2022-05-03 | THEY NAMED A CITY FOR HIM $600: Quincy, Massachusetts was named for Colonel John Quincy, grandfather of this first lady Abigail Adams |
#8625, aired 2022-04-22 | DRAFTING THE CONSTITUTION $400: This section originally began, "We the people of the states of New-Hampshire, Massachusetts..." the Preamble |
#8623, aired 2022-04-20 | NOT TOO "SEX"Y FOR YOU $1600: Lots of smart people in this Massachusetts county, home to M.I.T. & Tufts Middlesex County |
#8611, aired 2022-04-04 | CHANGES ON THE U.S. MAP $2,000 (Daily Double): The coastal town of Manchester, Massachusetts had these 3 words added to its name in 1989 by-the-Sea |
#8608, aired 2022-03-30 | MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR $400: In a supernatural series, John Alden returns from war to this title Massachusetts town & finds witchery afoot Salem |
#8595, aired 2022-03-11 | 17th CENTURY HAPPENINGS $400: William Bradford had quite the task set before him after winning the governorship of this fledgling colony in 1621 Plymouth |
#8591, aired 2022-03-07 | THE IDEAS OF MARCH $2000: To him, at his aunt's farm in Massachusetts, March 16, 1926 was the right time to launch the first liquid-fueled rocket Goddard |
#8586, aired 2022-02-28 | AMERICAN HISTORY $1000: At the first Thanksgiving in 1621, the Pilgrims shared a feast with these native people of Massachusetts the Wampanoag |
#8577, aired 2022-02-15 | THE 50 STATES $2000: Rhodonite is its state gem & Roxbury Puddingstone, its state rock Massachusetts |
#5, aired 2022-02-10 | HISTORIC PAIRS $400: Levi Preston gained fame for fighting in both these Massachusetts battles on April 19, 1775, but actually fought in neither Lexington & Concord |
#1, aired 2022-02-08 | FLORAL GEOGRAPHY $400: Lily Bay State Park is on Moosehead Lake, the largest in this largest New England state Maine |
#8566, aired 2022-01-31 | FROM BOOK TO TV $400: This native of Dorchester, Massachusetts starred as the titular Boston cop in Netflix' "Spenser Confidential" (Mark) Wahlberg |
#8562, aired 2022-01-25 | WOMEN IN POLITICS $200: As her 2020 presidential campaign merchandise said, this Massachusetts senator "has a plan for that" Elizabeth Warren |
#8543, aired 2021-12-29 | AMERICAN AUTHORS $800: Some ashes of this "Rabbit at Rest" author are at rest in Pennsylvania; some are in Massachusetts Updike |
#8534, aired 2021-12-16 | LITERARY MUSEUMS $1600: The Amazing World of Dr. Seuss Museum is in this Massachusetts city, Dr. Seuss' hometown Springfield |
#8532, aired 2021-12-14 | U.S. COUNTIES $800: These 2 counties that both end in "-folk" border Massachusetts Bay Suffolk & Norfolk |
#8518, aired 2021-11-24 | THINGS IN LITERARY TITLES $1200: A container used to heat metals gave us the name of this 1953 play set in Massachusetts The Crucible |
#8518, aired 2021-11-24 | NAMED FOR A PLACE $1600: Lyme disease derives its name from the town of Lyme in this state, where cases were first observed in the 1970s Connecticut |
#8510, aired 2021-11-12 | 200 YEARS AGO $800: Noah Webster helped found this Massachusetts liberal arts college in 1821 Amherst |
#8508, aired 2021-11-10 | CELEBRITY ENTREPRENEURS $1000: Brothers Paul, Mark & Donnie founded this food joint now in 20 states including, of course, Massachusetts Wahlburgers |
#8506, aired 2021-11-08 | NATIONAL HISTORIC LANDMARKS $2000: In 2021 the Massachusetts home where she laid the foundations for Christian Science was designated a national landmark Mary Baker Eddy |
#8504, aired 2021-11-04 | THAT'S OUR FACTORY $1600: A "New" factory of the future in Massachusetts for its made-in-the-USA sneakers New Balance |
#8487, aired 2021-10-12 | EDUCATION FIRSTS $1600: The USA's first public teacher training school evolved into Framingham State University in this state Massachusetts |
#8485, aired 2021-10-08 | WE LOOK DOWN ON THAT STATE $400: Vermont is north of the western part of this state Massachusetts |
#8480, aired 2021-10-01 | FOR YOUR REFERENCE $400: John was the first name of this Massachusetts bookseller who published his first volume of quotations in 1855 (John) Bartlett |
#8461, aired 2021-08-09 | THE LETTER AFTER M $200: ...to make an abbreviation for the "Bay State" A |
#8459, aired 2021-08-05 | A POET LAUREATE $4,000 (Daily Double): The poet laureate of this state, like Marie Howe, receives the Walt Whitman Citation; Walt was from that state New York |
#8455, aired 2021-07-30 | AMERICAN HISTORY $1600: John Winthrop led many followers to this colony in 1630 & gave us the image of the "city upon a hill" Massachusetts Bay Colony |
#8450, aired 2021-07-23 | LITERARY GEOGRAPHY $600: Oh, the shame if you don't know "The Scarlet Letter" is set in what is today this U.S. state Massachusetts |
#8450, aired 2021-07-23 | BUTTE OF COURSE $1200: Providing millions of gallons a day, Big Butte Springs is the main water supply for the Medford region in this state Oregon |
#8440, aired 2021-07-09 | N.E. PORT $2000: The monument seen here in this Massachusetts port has long been sacred to fishermen Gloucester |
#8439, aired 2021-07-08 | THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION $800: A British gov. of Massachusetts called him the "chief incendiary" but unlike cousin John, his contributions faded after 1776 Sam Adams |
#8433, aired 2021-06-30 | WE'D LIKE TO THANK THE ACADEMY $1000: An educator of multiple presidents, the prestigious boarding school Phillips Academy is found in this Massachusetts town Andover |
#8420, aired 2021-06-11 | EDUCATION $600: A counterpart of the Rhodes Scholarship, Kennedy Scholarships enable British citizens to study at these 2 Boston-area schools Harvard & MIT (the Massachusetts Institute of Technology) |
#8411, aired 2021-05-31 | POSSESSIVE GEOGRAPHY $2,000 (Daily Double): This Massachusetts island was likely named for the daughter of explorer Bartholomew Gosnold Martha's Vineyard |
#8389, aired 2021-04-29 | HISTORIC GOVERNORS $9,000 (Daily Double): In 1921 Channing Cox succeeded this upwardly mobile governor of Massachusetts who went by the same 2 initials Calvin Coolidge |
#8375, aired 2021-04-09 | HISTORIC PEOPLE $2000: Banished from Massachusetts in 1635 over the issue of separation of church & state, he founded Rhode Island Roger Williams |
#8369, aired 2021-04-01 | U.S. GEOGRAPHY $1000: This hilly region of western Massachusetts is home to the Tanglewood Music & Jacob's Pillow dance festivals the Berkshires |
#8360, aired 2021-03-19 | AN HONORARY KNIGHT TO REMEMBER $1600: In 2009, the year of his death, this senator from Massachusetts was made an honorary knight Ted Kennedy |
#8348, aired 2021-03-03 | TITLES & HONORIFICS $200: A Massachusetts paper discussed using this honorific for women in 1901; the New York Times would embrace it in 1986 Ms. |
#8345, aired 2021-02-26 | ROAD TRIP TO THE SAME-NAMED PLACE $2,000 (Daily Double): You start on Interstate 91 out of the one in Massachusetts & you end up on I-55 to reach the one in Illinois Springfield |
#8341, aired 2021-02-22 | HISTORIC SECONDS $800: William Bradford, who came over on the Mayflower, would become the second governor of this colony Plymouth Colony |
#8333, aired 2021-02-10 | GOVERNMENT & POLITICS $1200: This term arose from a 19th century cartoon of a twisted Massachusetts district gerrymander |
#8332, aired 2021-02-09 | HISTORICAL PAIRS $800: Ten days after these paired 1775 battles in Massachusetts, Amos Doolittle visited the towns & created vivid engravings Lexington & Concord |
#8328, aired 2021-02-03 | ATLAS ALLITERATION $800: This Massachusetts peninsula has the also alliterative Buzzards Bay to its west Cape Cod |
#8325, aired 2021-01-29 | 1980s TIME CAPSULE $2000: This Democrat was governor of Massachusetts for most of the decade Dukakis |
#8306, aired 2021-01-04 | DECEMBER 21 $200: In 1891 the first game of this sport was played in Springfield, Massachusetts basketball |
#8299, aired 2020-12-10 | VERY PURITANICAL $1200: Trot trot to Boston, trot trot to Lynn; those were 2 cities in this colony founded in 1630 by Puritans the Massachusetts Bay Colony |
#8286, aired 2020-11-23 | CLARK $600: Robert Goddard taught physics & did rocket experiments at his alma mater Clark University in this New England state Massachusetts |
#8278, aired 2020-11-11 | AUTHORS' HOMES $1600: In 1842, he & his new bride moved into the old manse in Concord, Massachusetts, hence his "Mosses from an Old Manse" Nathaniel Hawthorne |
#8277, aired 2020-11-10 | SPORTS HALLS OF FAME $600: The Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Massachusetts bears the name of this inventor of the game (James) Naismith |
#8254, aired 2020-10-08 | BEER/ME! $200: He served as governor of Massachusetts from 1793 to 1797 Samuel Adams |
#8249, aired 2020-10-01 | THAT'S MY JAM! $200: My personal fave: this type of grape jam bearing the name of a Massachusetts town Concord |
#8231, aired 2020-06-08 | NAME, RANK, NO SERIAL NUMBER $1000: Robert Gould Shaw, who found "Glory" leading the 54th infantry of this state, was a colonel when he died in battle in 1863 Massachusetts |
#8230, aired 2020-06-05 | SOME QUARTER GIVEN $400: Massachusetts has had this type of soldier at the ready on its 2 bits since its release on January 3, 2000 a Minuteman |
#8215, aired 2020-05-01 | STATES BY BORDERS $1,800 (Daily Double): Connecticut, Massachusetts Rhode Island |
#8211, aired 2020-04-27 | AROUND THE USA $400: This granite boulder is in Pilgrim Memorial State Park in Massachusetts Plymouth Rock |
#8208, aired 2020-04-22 | "DEE" DEE, DEE-DEE-DEE $1200: Ah, my little black-capped one of these is the state bird of Massachusetts chickadee |
#8206, aired 2020-04-20 | THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE $400: (MSNBC's Steve Kornacki presents by a display monitor.) 1972 was one of the biggest landslides in Electoral College history as Republican incumbent Richard Nixon piled up 49 states, and this antiwar Democratic senator captured only Massachusetts and the District of Columbia, failing to carry even his home state of South Dakota McGovern |
#8195, aired 2020-04-03 | WEAPONS OF THE WAR $1000: The USS Massachusetts & the Cristóbal Colón, which exchanged fire outside Santiago de Cuba the Spanish-American War |
#8182, aired 2020-03-17 | CHARACTERS IN MOBY-DICK $1200: There once was a man from this Massachusetts port who signs up Ishmael & the others to the whaling voyage Nantucket |
#8180, aired 2020-03-13 | STATE THE PROBLEM $600: The Great Revere train wreck of 1871 Massachusetts |
#8178, aired 2020-03-11 | PEOPLE $1200: (Alex Trebek presents from the Harvard Lampoon Building in Cambridge, Massachusetts.) As editor of the "Harvard Lampoon" in the 1970s he had the last word; today he hosts "The Last Word" on MSNBC Lawrence O'Donnell |
#8175, aired 2020-03-06 | POSTAL ABBREVIATION WORDS $400: A Rocky Mountain state pahks its cah in front of an East Coast state & falls into this long state of unconsciousness a coma (Colorado & Massachusetts) |
#8160, aired 2020-02-14 | TREES GROW ON MONEY $1200: One of the earliest American coins, the 17th century Massachusetts pine tree shilling was minted from this precious metal silver |
#8158, aired 2020-02-12 | SNAKES! $800: This official reptile of Massachusetts, one of the most common snakes in North America, is nonvenomous and found on lawn grass a garden snake (garter snake) |
#8156, aired 2020-02-10 | PRESIDENTIAL HOMES $400: (Sarah of the Clue Crew is in Massachusetts.) A national park in Massachusetts preserves the adjacent birthplaces of these two presidents--the first born in 1735, in that cottage, and second, born in 1767 in the other John Adams & John Quincy Adams |
#8152, aired 2020-02-04 | MONUMENTAL TELEVISION $400: A statue in Salem, Massachusetts honoring this 1960s sitcom has the main character riding a broomstick Bewitched |
#8151, aired 2020-02-03 | STATE OF THE ESTATE $400: The Turner-Ingersoll Mansion, AKA The House of the Seven Gables Massachusetts |
#8147, aired 2020-01-28 | 2020 ANNIVERSARIES $1600: Once part of Massachusetts, this state is celebrating its bicentennial Maine |
#5, aired 2020-01-09 | COMEDIANS $200: (Conan O'Brien delivers the clue.) Strange but true: this comedian from Worcester, Massachusetts is my cousin, & when he came on my show he told me he's often mistaken for other celebrities, like Willem Dafoe & Jane Lynch Denis Leary |
#3, aired 2020-01-08 | THE "GOLD", "BERG"s $200: This man from Medford, Massachusetts was the 108th mayor of New York City Bloomberg |
#2, aired 2020-01-07 | ARCHITECTURE & DESIGN $2000: This Boston-born architect designed the Massachusetts State House & from 1818 to 1829 served as architect of the U.S. Capitol Bulfinch |
#8127, aired 2019-12-31 | WHERE AM I? $600: (Sarah of the Clue Crew is at the Basketball Hall of Fame.) I'm at the Basketball Hall of Fame in this city in Massachusetts, where James Naismith invented the game while teaching phys ed at a YMCA training school in 1891 Springfield |
#8116, aired 2019-12-16 | AMERICAN HOMES $1200: The Mount, not the House of Mirth, is the name of her estate in Lenox, Massachusetts (Edith) Wharton |
#8083, aired 2019-10-30 | CUBA LIBRO $1000: Joe falls for a Cuban revolutionary in "Live by Night" by this "Shutter Island" author, who normally does Massachusetts Dennis Lehane |
#8075, aired 2019-10-18 | ENABLING COOKIES $400 (Daily Double): This Nestle cookie named for a Massachusetts inn dates to the 1930s a Toll House |
#8059, aired 2019-09-26 | STATE OF THE STATE FOREST $600: Lowell-Dracut-Tyngsboro State Forest Massachusetts |
#8055, aired 2019-09-20 | STATE OF CHIEFS $1600: Wampanoag chief Metacom AKA King Philip Massachusetts |
#8053, aired 2019-09-18 | CAREER HIGHLIGHTS $800: U.S. congressman & senator from Massachusetts, president;
played by Cliff Robertson in a biopic John F. Kennedy |
#8024, aired 2019-06-27 | THE 1600s $800: It was founded in Massachusetts in 1636 & if you didn't get in, your college options were very limited Harvard |
#8001, aired 2019-05-27 | POETIC GEOGRAPHY $1200: Emerson wrote a "Hymn" to this Massachusetts town that got in on Revolutionary War action on day one Concord |
#7997, aired 2019-05-21 | ADAMS NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK $200: (Sarah of the Clue Crew presents from Adams National Historical Park.) The birthplace & former home of 2 U.S. presidents, Adams National Historical Park is in this Massachusetts town that shares a name with the younger of the two men Quincy |
#7997, aired 2019-05-21 | ADAMS NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK $600: (Sarah of the Clue Crew presents from Adams National Historical Park.) At his desk in 1779, John Adams drafted the Massachusetts constitution--it pioneered the use of three branches of government & this type of legislature, from the Latin for "twin chambers" bicameral |
#7994, aired 2019-05-16 | TEXT $400: In 2019 Massachusetts introduced a new service allowing those in need of help to text, not call, this number 911 |
#7993, aired 2019-05-15 | RECENT POLITICS $1000: In Feb. 2019 this GOP ex-Massachusetts gov. announced for pres. & urged "people of good will to take a stand & plant a flag" William Weld |
#7983, aired 2019-05-01 | I COULD LIVE IN THAT FOOD $800: Nestle suggests using brown & white sugar to make these cookies named for a Massachusetts inn Toll House |
#7979, aired 2019-04-25 | LAKE NAME-IS-MEMORABLE $400: In this "Bay State" some call it Webster Lake; others, Chargoggagogg-manchauggagogg-chaubunagunga-maugg Massachusetts |
#7968, aired 2019-04-10 | WUTZ MISPELED $200: He exited the Massachusetts turnpike & headed toward Wooster, but was stopped by the state trooper for his taillight Worcester |
#7968, aired 2019-04-10 | ACROSS STATE LINES $800: Heading north:
Rhode Island,
Massachusetts,
this New Hampshire |
#7957, aired 2019-03-26 | BIRTHPLACE OF A BRAND $1000: Pillsbury Minnesota |
#7956, aired 2019-03-25 | BABY BOOMER SOONER $1200: Though she's repped Massachusetts in the Senate since 2013, she was born in Oklahoma City in 1949 Elizabeth Warren |
#7953, aired 2019-03-20 | BEFORE HE WAS VICE PRESIDENT... $400: He represented Massachusetts in the First Continental Congress (John) Adams |
#7942, aired 2019-03-05 | COLONIAL AMERICA $1200: The New England Company changed its name to this & founded a colony in 1630 the Massachusetts Bay Company |
#7934, aired 2019-02-21 | OPEN YOUR PIE HOLE $400: It was a capital idea when this "pie" became the official state dessert of Massachusetts Boston cream pie |
#7934, aired 2019-02-21 | POLITICIANS $2000: After the financial crisis of 2008, Christopher Dodd teamed up with this Massachusetts man for a regulatory bill Barney Frank |
#7915, aired 2019-01-25 | LYING IN STATES $1000: Ralph Waldo Emerson Massachusetts |
#7904, aired 2019-01-10 | 10 LINES ABOUT 5 WOMEN $400: Emily was a poet, Massachusetts born & bred / wrote "I'm Nobody! Who are you?", lived in this town 'til she was dead Amherst |
#7893, aired 2018-12-26 | STATE STUFF $600: John Kerry summers there, sometimes on Naushon Island Massachusetts |
#7890, aired 2018-12-21 | SENATORS WITH STAMINA $400: From 1962 to 2009 this Democrat with a good name for politics served Massachusetts Ted Kennedy |
#7890, aired 2018-12-21 | SENATORS WITH STAMINA $600: On Jan. 3, 1975 "Angie Baby" was No. 1 on the charts & Patrick Leahy began serving as senator from this state Vermont |
#7889, aired 2018-12-20 | CLUES ACROSS AMERICA $600: (Hi, I'm Paula Ebben from WBZ.) The home here in Fall River, Massachusetts once belonged to Lizzie Borden's family & it was here that, according to a rhyme, Lizzie "took an ax & gave her mother 40 whacks; when she saw what she had done, she gave her father" this many 41 |
#7889, aired 2018-12-20 | CLUES ACROSS AMERICA $800: (Hi, I'm Ashley Afonso from 22 News.) I'm in Amherst, Massachusetts at the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art with this famous character who as of 2019 has enchanted generations of children for 50 years the Very Hungry Caterpillar |
#7858, aired 2018-11-07 | WE WALKED TO SCHOOL $200: Though I took the Harvard Bridge across the Charles River, it took me to this tech-savvy university MIT (or the Massachusetts Institute of Technology) |
#7856, aired 2018-11-05 | SISTER CITIES $1000: In 2014 Cambridge, Massachusetts became family with Les Cayes in this nation, 4 years after a terrible natural disaster Haiti |
#7851, aired 2018-10-29 | THE STATE-LY COLLEGE $400: Northeastern University Massachusetts |
#7819, aired 2018-09-13 | AT 35 $200: At 35 he was elected to the Senate from Massachusetts; later he became the 35th president JFK |
#7808, aired 2018-07-18 | "NEW" GEOGRAPHY $1000: In the 1800s this Massachusetts city was the world's leading whaling port New Bedford |
#7791, aired 2018-06-25 | THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION $2,000 (Daily Double): General Thomas Gage, military governor of this colony, gave the orders that started the war in 1775 Massachusetts |
#7790, aired 2018-06-22 | POETS & POETRY $800: The epitaph on this poet's grave marker in Amherst, Massachusetts simply says, "Called Back" (Emily) Dickinson |
#7783, aired 2018-06-13 | U.S. LIBRARIES $800: The Forbes Library in Northampton, Massachusetts house his presidential library--shh, no talking! Calvin Coolidge |
#7777, aired 2018-06-05 | GEOGRAPHY "B" $2000: The misidentification of ospreys may have given this Massachusetts bay its name Buzzards Bay |
#7769, aired 2018-05-24 | SENATORS WHO SOUGHT HIGHER OFFICE $800: 8 years after beating Birch Bayh to win a Senate seat repping this state, Dan Quayle got elected veep Indiana |
#7758, aired 2018-05-09 | IN THE STATE MUSEUM $400: The 1629 Winthrop Charter Massachusetts |
#7754, aired 2018-05-03 | THESE ARE DAYS $600: A state holiday in Massachusetts & Maine, Patriots' Day is the third Monday in April, in honor of these 2 battles Lexington and Concord |
#7747, aired 2018-04-24 | STATE CONSUMABLES $200: Making this juice the state beverage didn't get bogged down in the Massachusetts legislature cranberry juice |
#7747, aired 2018-04-24 | DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE SIGNERS $900 (Daily Double): He's better remembered for signing an infamous redistricting bill while governor of Massachusetts Elbridge Gerry |
#7727, aired 2018-03-27 | THE HISTORY BOOKSHELF $800: This university's "Civil War" is about the 20th Massachusetts volunteer infantry & its many officers from that school Harvard |
#7722, aired 2018-03-20 | ELECTORAL COLLEGE SILVER MEDALISTS $800: In 1972 this Democrat won only D.C. & Massachusetts, losing his home state of South Dakota by 9 points McGovern |
#7720, aired 2018-03-16 | MOUNTAINS $1600: Williamstown & Pittsfield are communities in these mountains of western Massachusetts the Berkshires |
#7719, aired 2018-03-15 | STATE HOLIDAYS $200: June 17:
Bunker Hill Day Massachusetts |
#7708, aired 2018-02-28 | RACKET BUSTERS $1,000 (Daily Double): As a U.S. attorney in this state, Patrick Fitzgerald helped convict ex-governor George Ryan of racketeering Illinois |
#7700, aired 2018-02-16 | AMERICAN HISTORY $2000: To protest taxes, Shays' Rebellion included a 1787 attack on the federal arsenal in this city in western Massachusetts Springfield |
#7692, aired 2018-02-06 | MEMORIALS $800: Danvers, Massachusetts has a memorial for those who died after being accused of this in the late 17th c. witchcraft |
#7685, aired 2018-01-26 | THE FABRICS OF OUR LIVES $600: (Sarah of the Clue Crew gives the clue from Old Sturbridge Village in Massachusetts.) For the ladies, 19th century New England stores, like in Old Sturbridge Village, had to stock the latest in this fabric named for a large Indian city; the fabric would vary between darker & lighter colors & busier & plainer prints calico |
#7679, aired 2018-01-18 | JANE $600: In 2001 Jane Swift of Massachusetts became the first U.S. governor to do this while in office give birth |
#7676, aired 2018-01-15 | JEOPARDY! WRITERS' ONLINE GO-TOs $1600: The Tech, a newspaper at this eastern college, maintains the first online edition of Shakespeare's works & we love it MIT (or Massachusetts Institute of Technology) |
#7662, aired 2017-12-26 | STATES BY COUNTIES $200: Franklin,
Berkshire,
Plymouth Massachusetts |
#7660, aired 2017-12-22 | AIRPORT CODES $400: When Bill the Cat says, "ACK!" , he may mean the airport on this Massachusetts island Nantucket |
#7645, aired 2017-12-01 | U.S. LANDMARKS $600: A granite canopy in Massachusetts now protects this item of national heritage that entered history in 1620 Plymouth Rock |
#7644, aired 2017-11-30 | HISTORICAL FICTION $800: "Flight of the Sparrow" recounts the real tale of a Puritan woman from this colony captured by Indians in 1676 the Massachusetts Bay Colony |
#7633, aired 2017-11-15 | STATE SYMBOLS $1,000 (Daily Double): Created at its Toll House Restaurant, the chocolate chip cookie is this state's official state cookie Massachusetts |
#7632, aired 2017-11-14 | SENATOR JOHN $3,000 (Daily Double): This Vietnam vet was senator from Massachusetts from 1985 to 2013 John Kerry |
#7617, aired 2017-10-24 | PROFESSORS $400: Before becoming a Massachusetts senator, she was the Leo Gottlieb Professor of Law at Harvard Elizabeth Warren |
#7603, aired 2017-10-04 | AUTHORS: BORN & DIED $200: He was born in Lowell, Massachusetts in 1922 & spent some time "On the Road" before his death in 1969 (Jack) Kerouac |
#7599, aired 2017-09-28 | COUNTY SEATS $1200: 19th century toilets are part of the collection of Watertown's Plumbing Museum in this state's Middlesex County Massachusetts |
#7592, aired 2017-09-19 | RIGHT ON Q $800: Quincy, Massachusetts was once part of this smart-sounding town Braintree |
#7589, aired 2017-09-14 | CLAM UP $1000: The tide exposes clam-digging areas called these, a 5-letter plural; Essex, Massachusetts has a hotline devoted to them flats |
#7586, aired 2017-09-11 | NICKNAMES $400: This type of body of water is in a nickname for Massachusetts bay |
#7583, aired 2017-07-26 | A TALE OF "NEW" CITIES $1600: An annual "Moby Dick" marathon takes place at this Massachusetts city's whaling museum New Bedford |
#7579, aired 2017-07-20 | THE 21st CENTURY $1600: Colloquial name for the Massachusetts health system signed into law in 2006 Romneycare |
#7573, aired 2017-07-12 | THOREAU-ING A 200th BIRTHDAY! $600: In a travel book about this peninsula, Thoreau called it "the bared and bended arm of Massachusetts" Cape Cod |
#7551, aired 2017-06-12 | ROCKS & MINERALS $1,000 (Daily Double): A native sandstone, Roxbury puddingstone is the official rock of this state Massachusetts |
#7548, aired 2017-06-07 | BUSINESS NAMES $1000: The name of this Warren Buffett conglomerate goes back to 2 Massachusetts textile companies that merged in 1955 Berkshire Hathaway |
#7536, aired 2017-05-22 | BEERS BY STATE $200: Samuel Adams Massachusetts |
#7536, aired 2017-05-22 | 19th CENTURY CONGRESSMEN $2,000 (Daily Double): This man said that Massachusetts electing him to the House pleased him more than winning the presidency John Quincy Adams |
#7534, aired 2017-05-18 | SOME OF YOUR BUSINESS $400: In 2014 the Massachusetts Supreme Court gave the green light to showroom sales of this luxury electric car a Tesla |
#7525, aired 2017-05-05 | SECRETARIES OF STATE $200: Lieutenant governor of Massachusetts is among his prior jobs John Kerry |
#7519, aired 2017-04-27 | OLD JOBS $800: (Sarah of the Clue Crew gives the clue from Old Sturbridge Village in Massachusetts.) Blacksmiths might make machinery or repair tools, but perhaps their best-known job was this one, that required special nails and was essential to early 19th century transportation horseshoeing |
#7517, aired 2017-04-25 | SIMILARLY NAMED SCHOOLS $600: It's about a 2-hour drive northeast from Wesleyan in Connecticut to this Seven Sisters college in Massachusetts Wellesley |
#7512, aired 2017-04-18 | STATE THE CITY $400: Massachusetts:
A "saucy" place on the Blackstone Canal Worcester |
#7510, aired 2017-04-14 | IN THE NEWS $800: Curt Schilling made a pitch to voters-- before talking with his wife-- for a 2018 Senate run from this state Massachusetts |
#7504, aired 2017-04-06 | A LIBERAL LIBRARY $400: "A Fighting Chance" is the story of Elizabeth Warren's journey from small town mom to U.S. senator from this state Massachusetts |
#7500, aired 2017-03-31 | SKIMMING THE MAGAZINES $1200: Founded 1888; first issue had compelling article "The Survey & Map of Massachusetts" National Geographic |
#7497, aired 2017-03-28 | PIE-POURRI $400: Confusingly, this official state dessert of Massachusetts is called pie but made with sponge cake Boston cream pie |
#7487, aired 2017-03-14 | STATE HOLIDAYS $400: Massachusetts celebrates Patriots' Day, the third Monday in April, with the running of this race the Boston Marathon |
#7477, aired 2017-02-28 | OLD STURBRIDGE VILLAGE $200: (Sarah of the Clue Crew reports from Old Sturbridge Village, Massachusetts.) A bustling place in the 18th century, used as everything from a parade ground to a town dump, by the early 1800s, the center of the typical New England village was becoming we think of as the peaceful manicured green, or as they call it in Boston, this the common |
#7477, aired 2017-02-28 | OLD STURBRIDGE VILLAGE $400: (Sarah of the Clue Crew reports from Old Sturbridge Village, Massachusetts.) The miller made his living by keeping 1/16th of what he milled, as village residents would bring grain to be turned into flour; this word "to the mill", you might say grist |
#7477, aired 2017-02-28 | OLD STURBRIDGE VILLAGE $600: (Jimmy of the Clue Crew reports from Old Sturbridge Village, Massachusetts.) 1830s villagers wanting personal protection had the same main option as in Revolutionary War times--this type of gun named for the type of stone that sparks its firing mechanism flintlock |
#7477, aired 2017-02-28 | OLD STURBRIDGE VILLAGE $800: (Sarah of the Clue Crew reports from Old Sturbridge Village, Massachusetts.) During the same era recreated at Old Sturbridge Village, this poet honored the honest sweat of the village blacksmith & wrote that children loved to see the flaming forge Henry Wadsworth Longfellow |
#7477, aired 2017-02-28 | OLD STURBRIDGE VILLAGE $1000: (Sarah of the Clue Crew reports from Old Sturbridge Village, Massachusetts.) At Old Sturbridge Village, the meeting house is thought of as belonging to this denomination, a mouthful of a name the descendants of the Puritans adopted because it represented the local group of worshippers Congregationalist |
#7476, aired 2017-02-27 | POETRY & BRIDGES $1600: There's a John Greenleaf Whittier Bridge over the Merrimack River in this, the poet's home state in New England Massachusetts |
#7473, aired 2017-02-22 | HOLIDAYS & OBSERVANCES $5,000 (Daily Double): Technically, June 17 in Massachusetts should be called Breed's Hill Day instead of this Bunker Hill Day |
#7463, aired 2017-02-08 | AN "F" IN GEOGRAPHY $400: The New England Patriots are based in this Massachusetts town Foxborough |
#7459, aired 2017-02-02 | HISTORIC NAMES $1200: After he was banished from the Massachusetts Bay colony, he founded the colony of Rhode Island Roger Williams |
#7448, aired 2017-01-18 | THIS LAND IS MY LAND $800: In 1602 an explorer named this Massachusetts island for both its local flora & one of his female family members Martha's Vineyard |
#7439, aired 2017-01-05 | KNOWN BY THEIR MIDDLE NAMES $400: Willard is the first name of this former governor of Massachusetts & presidential candidate Mitt Romney |
#7437, aired 2017-01-03 | LEGO $1000: (Sarah of the Clue Crew reports from Lego Systems in Enfield, CT.) The Mindstorms construction kit, which allows children to build & program their own robotic devices, grew out of the company's longstanding partnership with the famous Media Lab of this Cambridge, Massachusetts school MIT |
#7431, aired 2016-12-26 | TIME: THE 1980s $1,200 (Daily Double): "The Odd Couple" on the July 25, 1988 cover was Texan Lloyd Bentsen & this man from Massachusetts Dukakis |
#7425, aired 2016-12-16 | DECEMBER HOLIDAYS $1000: In Massachusetts, especially Plymouth, Dec. 22 is Forefathers' Day, celebrated by consuming this corn-&-beans dish succotash |
#7412, aired 2016-11-29 | CORNERSTONES $4,400 (Daily Double): In 1770 statesman & merchant John Brown laid the cornerstone for this state's oldest university Rhode Island |
#7411, aired 2016-11-28 | 1812: THE WAR & MORE $5,000 (Daily Double): This 11-letter political word entered our vocabulary after Massachusetts' governor signed a redistricting bill gerrymander |
#7409, aired 2016-11-24 | HIGHWAYS & BYWAYS $400: The logo of this state's turnpike, a stretch of I-90, once featured Paul Revere; now pilgrim hats are depicted Massachusetts |
#7407, aired 2016-11-22 | PLAY BALL! $1000: It was invented in the winter of 1891 in Springfield, Massachusetts basketball |
#7406, aired 2016-11-21 | COLONIAL AMERICA $1200: In 1691 Massachusetts was granted a new charter & this grape-laden island was annexed to it Martha's Vineyard |
#7402, aired 2016-11-15 | QUARTER BACKS $1200: One of these always-at-the-ready soldiers is on the Massachusetts quarter a Minuteman |
#7399, aired 2016-11-10 | GEOGRAPHIC CENTERS $800: In Rutland in Worcester County Massachusetts |
#7383, aired 2016-10-19 | FINAL RESTING PLACES $800: Emerson & Thoreau are both buried at the Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in this Massachusetts town Concord |
#7383, aired 2016-10-19 | AMERICAN REVOLUTIONARIES $2000: This brewer represented Massachusetts in the Continental Congress & later served as the state's governor Samuel Adams |
#7375, aired 2016-10-07 | NO DISCRIMINATION $600: In 1649 under Cecilius Calvert this colony passed an act saying no believer in Jesus was to be troubled or molested Maryland |
#7370, aired 2016-09-30 | HISTORY AS THEATER $400: In 2016, Saoirse Ronan betook herself to this Massachusetts city in Broadway's "The Crucible" Salem |
#7351, aired 2016-07-25 | VICE PRESIDENTS $800: He was Massachusetts' favorite son candidate for president in 1920 but settled for vice president Coolidge |
#7350, aired 2016-07-22 | HAPPY TRAILS TO YOU $400: Official sites on this trail include the Massachusetts State House & the Paul Revere House the Freedom Trail |
#7348, aired 2016-07-20 | MEN OF NOTE $800: Delaware's name is derived from the 12th Baron de la Warr, who was governor of this colony from 1609 to 1618 Virginia |
#7337, aired 2016-07-05 | IT'S ALL "APPLE" SAUCE $400: Born in Massachusetts, he spread religion as well as fruit trees throughout the U.S. Midwest in the 19th century Johnny Appleseed |
#7324, aired 2016-06-16 | WHOSE WHAT? $1600: Led by a former Rev. War officer, this 1786 rebellion was against heavy taxes on debt-ridden farmers in Massachusetts Shays' Rebellion |
#7288, aired 2016-04-27 | DOUBLE DOUBLE LETTERS $600: It's the only state with exactly 2 pairs of double letters Massachusetts |
#7287, aired 2016-04-26 | RHYME HERE $1000: North Chelsea, Massachusetts was renamed this Revere |
#7287, aired 2016-04-26 | GOVERNMENTAL LAST NAME'S THE SAME $6,400 (Daily Double): A current Massachusetts senator & the 14th Chief Justice (Elizabeth and Earl) Warren |
#7284, aired 2016-04-21 | WOMEN, IMMORTALIZED $800: A statue of this ex-slave & abolitionist stands in Florence, Massachusetts, where she lived from 1843 to 1856 Sojourner Truth |
#7251, aired 2016-03-07 | AMERICAN HISTORY $200: In 1700 Massachusetts passed a law requiring all priests of this faith to hit the road Catholicism |
#7220, aired 2016-01-22 | STATE FISH $400: A sculpture of this fish, a symbol of Massachusetts for more than 200 years, hangs in the state house in Boston a cod |
#7212, aired 2016-01-12 | WISCONSIN $800: Wisconsin's state fruit, it's also the state berry of Massachusetts the cranberry |
#7207, aired 2016-01-05 | LODGE PODGE $200: He was elected U.S. senator from Massachusetts in 1952, ousting incumbent Henry Cabot Lodge (John F.) Kennedy |
#7199, aired 2015-12-24 | WINE, WOMEN & SONG $200: Elected Senator from Massachusetts in 2012, she championed the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Elizabeth Warren |
#7187, aired 2015-12-08 | CELEBRITY ALMA MATERS $2000: (I'm Debra Messing.) I graduated summa cum laude from this Massachusetts university that's named for the first Jewish Supreme Court justice Brandeis |
#7183, aired 2015-12-02 | THE 1600s $800: In 1691 Massachusetts Bay Colony merged with this historic one to the south Plymouth |
#7183, aired 2015-12-02 | STATE ANIMAL FIGHT! $1200: It's sea vs. land as Hawaii's state mammal, a monk seal, takes on this state dog named for the capital of Massachusetts a Boston terrier |
#7181, aired 2015-11-30 | THE NATIONAL STATUARY HALL COLLECTION $400: Samuel Adams is seen here representing this state Massachusetts |
#7180, aired 2015-11-27 | THE ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION $2000: Signers of the articles from this state included Elbridge Gerry Massachusetts |
#7166, aired 2015-11-09 | MR. SMITH GOES TO... $400: The National Armory in Springfield, Massachusetts; in 1852 he partners with this man (Daniel) Wesson |
#7164, aired 2015-11-05 | TIME CAPSULES $400: A time capsule is buried under an 18-ton magnet in a cyclotron at this Cambridge, Massachusetts school MIT |
#7164, aired 2015-11-05 | THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION $2000: Touting the "Massachusetts Miracle" didn't help this Democratic nominee Dukakis |
#7163, aired 2015-11-04 | BATTLES $200: The American Revolution began in April 1775 with the battles of these 2 Massachusetts towns Lexington & Concord |
#7152, aired 2015-10-20 | NEW HAMPSHIRE $400: In 1641 New Hampshire became part of this colony but King Charles II separated them in 1679 Massachusetts |
#7148, aired 2015-10-14 | BUILDING THE COMPOUND WORD $2000: Ordinary +
abundance of money =
what Massachusetts officially is commonwealth |
#7147, aired 2015-10-13 | NEW ENGLAND $400: (I'm Kevin O'Leary of Shark Tank.) In the '90s I made millions from selling software in my headquarters in this university city, part of the East Coast version of Silicon Valley Cambridge, Massachusetts |
#7145, aired 2015-10-09 | 17th CENTURY AMERICA $400: In 1652 Massachusetts defied English law & established this facility to produce the pine tree shilling the mint |
#7127, aired 2015-09-15 | CITY BY THE BAY $400: Cambridge, Maryland Chesapeake |
#7117, aired 2015-07-21 | LIGHTHOUSES $400: When her husband died in 1776, Hannah Thomas became the first U.S. woman keeper, taking his job at this state's Plymouth Light Massachusetts |
#7117, aired 2015-07-21 | PENINSULAS $800: Hyannis is one of the towns on this Massachusetts peninsula Cape Cod |
#7090, aired 2015-06-12 | THE STATE OF THINGS $400: The National Constitution Center,
Betsy Ross House Pennsylvania |
#7080, aired 2015-05-29 | MR. SMITH $1600: William Smith, a Weymouth, Massachusetts minister, was this First Lady's father Abigail Adams |
#7076, aired 2015-05-25 | STATE OF THE UNION HEADQUARTERS $1000: UNITE here (UNITE=Union of Needletrades, Industrial & Textile Employees) New York |
#7064, aired 2015-05-07 | MED SCHOOLS $200: U.S. News said the University of this at Worcester was wicked excellent in 2015, ranking it No. 5 in primary care Massachusetts |
#7049, aired 2015-04-16 | POLITICIANS $1000: In 2006 Deval Patrick was elected to succeed this man as governor of Massachusetts Mitt Romney |
#7048, aired 2015-04-15 | CHAPTER TITLES IN MOBY-DICK $800: Chapter 14:
This Massachusetts island Nantucket |
#7047, aired 2015-04-14 | WHAT'S FOR DESSERT? $200: How about a fresh-baked batch of these chocolate chip cookies named for Ruth Wakefield's Massachusetts inn Toll House |
#7036, aired 2015-03-30 | ENDS WITH DOUBLE "E" $2000: John Hancock & John Adams were both born in what was then this smart-sounding Massachusetts town Braintree |
#7018, aired 2015-03-04 | JOLLY OLD CITIES IN ENGLAND $800: This city on the River Cam is home to a univ. founded in the 1200s; the same-named one in Massachusetts has good schools too Cambridge |
#7013, aired 2015-02-25 | WORDS FROM POSTAL ABBREVIATIONS $200: Massachusetts plus Illinois delivers this mail |
#7012, aired 2015-02-24 | WHAT'S ON CABLE? $1000: (Hi, I'm Moon Bloodgood from TNT's Falling Skies.) I play Anne Glass, a doctor for the 2nd Massachusetts Militia Regiment, which takes its name from an actual regiment in this early army the Continental Army |
#7009, aired 2015-02-19 | REVOLUTIONARY WAR FIGURES $400: On April 18, 1775, Massachusetts Governor Gage ordered British troops to destroy military stores in this town near Lexington Concord |
#7008, aired 2015-02-18 | COMMISSIONED ARTWORKS $800: (Sarah of the Clue Crew reports from the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, Massachusetts.) In 1946, Rockwell got an actual lineman to pose at his studio on a pole fitted with cables & anchored to nearby trees for a commission for this phone company AT&T |
#7008, aired 2015-02-18 | OCEANOGRAPHY $1200: Research ships used by Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in this state included Atlantis & Knorr Massachusetts |
#7002, aired 2015-02-10 | FEMALE AUTHORS $400: In Concord, Massachusetts, you can tour the home where she wrote & set "Little Women" (Louisa May) Alcott |
#6991, aired 2015-01-26 | HOSPITALS $1600: McLean Psychiatric in Massachusetts is the setting of Susanna Kaysen's memoir "Girl," this Interrupted |
#6960, aired 2014-12-12 | STATE MOTTOES $4,000 (Daily Double): Its motto, "Equal Rights", reflects the fact that its women were given the right to vote in 1869 Wyoming |
#6956, aired 2014-12-08 | STATES BY COUNTIES $200: Calvert,
Somerset,
Anne Arundel Maryland |
#6953, aired 2014-12-03 | AMERICAN HISTORY $1200: This colony, established by Pilgrims in 1620, celebrated the first Thanksgiving in 1621 Plymouth |
#6946, aired 2014-11-24 | BOSTON ACCENTS $1600: In 1985 the first restaurant in this chain opened in Newton, Massachusetts & focused on rotisserie chicken Boston Market |
#6945, aired 2014-11-21 | COLONIAL AMERICA $400: In November 1621 the Fortune, the second ship to reach this Massachusetts colony, brought 35 more people Plymouth |
#6925, aired 2014-10-24 | LIBRARIES $3,000 (Daily Double): The library of this type of institution in Norfolk, Massachusetts made Malcolm X the thinker & orator we know a state prison |
#6921, aired 2014-10-20 | A "B" IN AMERICAN HISTORY $400: 2 British soldiers were found guilty in this 1770 Massachusetts riot; their thumbs were branded "M" for murder the Boston Massacre |
#6910, aired 2014-10-03 | MASSACHUSETTS $200: Appropriate in light of its early Colonial history, this is Massachusetts' state flower the Mayflower |
#6910, aired 2014-10-03 | MASSACHUSETTS $400: It's the river seen here, complete with the familiar rowers the Charles |
#6910, aired 2014-10-03 | MASSACHUSETTS $600: It's the present-day name of the Mass. city where John Hancock & other famous Johns were born Quincy |
#6910, aired 2014-10-03 | MASSACHUSETTS $800: The first African-American governor of Massachusetts, he took office in 2007 Deval Patrick |
#6910, aired 2014-10-03 | MASSACHUSETTS $1000: "Time and the Town" is a classic chronicle of life in this Massachusetts beach getaway known as PTown Provincetown |
#6909, aired 2014-10-02 | AMERICAN REVOLUTIONARIES $400: Dr. Joseph Warren, a Massachusetts statesman, was one of the first to die in the war, in this June 17, 1775 battle The Battle of Bunker Hill |
#6909, aired 2014-10-02 | AMERICAN REVOLUTIONARIES $800: A Massachusetts governor called this son of a Boston brewer the "chief incendiary" of the revolution Samuel Adams |
#6907, aired 2014-09-30 | MRS. WARREN'S PROFESION $400: In 2012 Elizabeth Warren was elected a senator from this state Massachusetts |
#6906, aired 2014-09-29 | CANDLES $2000: In 1974 this Massachusetts firm introduced its Country Kitchen & Bath Brite apothecary candle jar lines Yankee Candle |
#6902, aired 2014-09-23 | CELEBRITY ORIGINS $1000: (I'm George Stephanopoulos.) Like many Greek-Americans before them, my parents settled in Massachusetts & I was born in this city, site of an infamous double murder in 1892 Fall River |
#6891, aired 2014-07-28 | THE GEOGRAPHIC CENTER $400: Of this U.S. state: central Worcester County Massachusetts |
#6883, aired 2014-07-16 | SMART STREETS $1,400 (Daily Double): The Emerson Playground is on Thoreau Street in this city Concord, Massachusetts |
#6871, aired 2014-06-30 | U.S. COLONY NAMES $4,000 (Daily Double): Massachusetts means "at the big" one of these; colony Gov. John Winthrop said, "we shall be as a city upon" one of these a hill |
#6870, aired 2014-06-27 | ALTERED STATES $1600: In the Northeast:
Casts same tush Massachusetts |
#6864, aired 2014-06-19 | THE BOOK OF MORMONS $400: This man who succeeded Jane Swift as governor of Massachusetts in 2003 Mitt Romney |
#6862, aired 2014-06-17 | NATIONAL HISTORIC SITES $2000: Celebrating over 200 years of firearms making, the Springfield Armory National Historic Site is found in this state Massachusetts |
#6861, aired 2014-06-16 | NOOSE MEN $400: Accused by his in-laws of this, John Willard was found guilty & hanged in 1692 in Salem, Massachusetts witchcraft |
#6837, aired 2014-05-13 | STATE FACTS $2000: The highest point in Massachusetts is in these western hills the Berkshires |
#6830, aired 2014-05-02 | WRIT IN WATER $400: The Battle of the Coral Sea saw the sinking of this carrier that shares a name with Massachusetts & Kentucky cities Lexington |
#6822, aired 2014-04-22 | COLLEGES, NOT UNIVERSITIES $1600: Founded not by Roger but Ephraim, this Massachusetts school boasts alums like George Steinbrenner Williams College |
#6818, aired 2014-04-16 | WE HAVE LAWS $200: Massachusetts law largely bans the sale of booze on Sundays, legal holidays & this day of democracy in action voting day (or Election Day) |
#6814, aired 2014-04-10 | SUPREME COURT JUSTICES $2000: In 1948, a Massachusetts university was named for this man, who wrote the essay "Other People's Money and How the Bankers Use It" Louis Brandeis |
#6809, aired 2014-04-03 | EARLY AMERICAN HISTORY $400: On Feb. 29, 1704 in this queen's war, the French & Indians burned Deerfield, Massachusetts Queen Anne |
#6788, aired 2014-03-05 | LOGOS $600: The game is afoot at this company, begun in Springfield, Massachusetts, in 1860 Milton Bradley |
#6777, aired 2014-02-18 | OTHER LONE STAR FLAGS $600: The one 5-pointed star on the flag of this "Bay State" indicates it was one of the first 13 states Massachusetts |
#6774, aired 2014-02-13 | HISTORIC AMERICANS $600: After he was kicked out of a town in Massachusetts, this leader of the Green Mountain Boys settled in what's now Vermont Ethan Allen |
#6771, aired 2014-02-10 | FAMOUS HOMES $1,000 (Daily Double): Peacefield in Quincy, Massachusetts was the mansion of this man who purchased it in 1787 John Adams |
#6768, aired 2014-02-05 | LIKE HENRY JAMES? $800: Henry dealt with radical feminism in this novel whose title tells you it's set in Massachusetts The Bostonians |
#6753, aired 2014-01-15 | STATE THE SENATOR $200: In 1803:
John Quincy Adams Massachusetts |
#6744, aired 2014-01-02 | AMERICAN HISTORY $1600: With the consent of Massachusetts, this state was admitted to the union as part of the Missouri compromise in 1820 Maine |
#6737, aired 2013-12-24 | OUR HISTORICAL DOCUMENTS $800: This document remained in effect for 71 years, until Plymouth was incorporated into the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1691 Mayflower Compact |
#6731, aired 2013-12-16 | SECRET SERVICE CODE NAMES $800: This late Massachusetts senator was "Sunburn"; his mom, "Coppertone" Ted Kennedy |
#6712, aired 2013-11-19 | INDEPENDENCE NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK $200: (Kelly of the Clue Crew reports from Independence National Historical Park in Philadelphia, PA.) A quill box & shaker for sprinking sand over wet ink to speed drying are accessories of the silver ink stand used by the Declaration of Independence signers leading off with this Massachusetts man John Hancock |
#6709, aired 2013-11-14 | ANNUAL EVENTS $400: Its route begins in Hopkinton, Massachusetts & passes Fenway Park the Boston Marathon |
#6709, aired 2013-11-14 | U.S. HISTORY: THE FIRST 100 YEARS $600: In the first census, 1790, New York was America's largest city & this was the most populous state Virginia |
#6708, aired 2013-11-13 | THE YEAR 1713 $1600: A new type of boat got its name when someone said, "See how she scoons!" in this Massachusetts fishing town Gloucester |
#6695, aired 2013-10-25 | GRAPE JAM $200: Grape Island in this Massachusetts harbor was the site of a skirmish over hay during the Revolutionary War Boston Harbor |
#6694, aired 2013-10-24 | FRAGILE $600: This woman who won a Massachusetts Senate seat in 2013 co-wrote "The Fragile Middle Class" Elizabeth Warren |
#6689, aired 2013-10-17 | U.S. GOVERNORS $1200: In 2007 Deval Patrick became this New England state's first black governor & the second ever elected in the U.S. Massachusetts |
#6679, aired 2013-10-03 | INFLUENTIAL WRITING $1,000 (Daily Double): "A Winter Walk" & "Slavery in Massachusetts" are essays by this 19th century American Thoreau |
#6679, aired 2013-10-03 | BORN & DIED $3,000 (Daily Double): He was born in Brookline, Massachusetts in 1925 & died in Los Angeles June 6, 1968 RFK |
#6649, aired 2013-07-11 | CURRENT U.S. SENATOR BEFORE & AFTER $800: A Massachusetts female senator gets to the bottom of the JFK assassination as a group appointed on Nov. 29, 1963 Elizabeth Warren Commission |
#6628, aired 2013-06-12 | NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARKS $800: A New Bedford, Massachusetts park commemorates this 19th c. industry with a museum & a schooner whaling |
#6628, aired 2013-06-12 | NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARKS $1,000 (Daily Double): Concord, Massachusetts has a visitor center for the park with this kind of soldier in its name a minuteman |
#6611, aired 2013-05-20 | RELIGIOUS LEADERS $1,000 (Daily Double): In the 1880s she taught her healing methods to students at her Massachusetts metaphysical college Mary Baker Eddy |
#6608, aired 2013-05-15 | STUFF ABOUT STATES $7,200 (Daily Double): Of the 4 states officially called commonwealths, it's alphabetically last Virginia |
#6607, aired 2013-05-14 | AMERICA AFTER THE REVOLUTION $2000: This 1786-1787 rebellion of debtor farmers in Massachusetts was named for its leader Shays' Rebellion |
#6604, aired 2013-05-09 | WHATEVER $200: In 2013 this longtime senator from Massachusetts became U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry |
#6600, aired 2013-05-03 | THE BIG "BOARD" $600: Examples of these include Choate Rosemary Hall in Connecticut & Phillips Academy in Massachusetts boarding school |
#6600, aired 2013-05-03 | SEEKIN ASYLUMS $1200: This film with Leonardo DiCaprio seeking a patient was filmed at Medfield State Hospital in Massachusetts Shutter Island |
#6593, aired 2013-04-24 | BUT THE END IS ROUGH $800: In 1973 Albert DeSalvo, known as this Massachusetts killer, was slain in prison by the Walpole Shanker the "Boston Strangler" |
#6582, aired 2013-04-09 | BIG CITY SUBURBS $200: Concord,
Lowell Boston (Massachusetts) |
#6580, aired 2013-04-05 | HOW COLLEGES GOT THEIR NAMES $800: NYC's Fashion Institute of Technology got its name in imitation of this school up Boston way MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) |
#6571, aired 2013-03-25 | PHI BETA KAPPA $2000: 1842: at Bowdoin, a novelist from Salem, Massachusetts Nathaniel Hawthorne |
#6558, aired 2013-03-06 | "CROSS" WORD CLUES $1000: In 1843 Benedict J. Fenwick founded it as a men's college in Massachusetts Holy Cross |
#6537, aired 2013-02-05 | HIGH SCHOOL GEOGRAPHY $400: State where you'd find Cambridge Rindge & Latin School, dating back to 1648 Massachusetts |
#6535, aired 2013-02-01 | THE 113th CONGRESS $1600: This consumer advocate is the first female senator from Massachusetts (Elizabeth) Warren |
#6532, aired 2013-01-29 | AMERICAN KNIGHTS $600: In 2009, 6 months before his death, this giant of Massachusetts politics got a knighthood Teddy Kennedy |
#6517, aired 2013-01-08 | THE 6 NEW ENGLAND STATES $1,000 (Daily Double): The 2 whose names come from Native American words Massachusetts and Connecticut |
#6508, aired 2012-12-26 | 1892 $200: On January 20 this sport's first official game was played at the Springfield, Massachusetts YMCA gymnasium basketball |
#6503, aired 2012-12-19 | GOVERNORS $200: He governed Massachusetts from 2003 to 2007 Mitt Romney |
#6483, aired 2012-11-21 | GENERAL PRACTICE $800: Gen. Thomas Gage, military governor of this colony, ordered the redcoats to march on Lexington & Concord Massachusetts |
#6478, aired 2012-11-14 | THE MAP OF EUROPE $1200: This nation, though largely in Asia, has a small European section that's about the size of Massachusetts Turkey |
#6454, aired 2012-10-11 | PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES $600: At Columbia Point in Boston, Massachusetts John F. Kennedy |
#6440, aired 2012-09-21 | THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION $1000: Elbridge Gerry from this state refused to sign the Constitution because in it "liberties... were not secured" Massachusetts |
#6437, aired 2012-09-18 | AN A-PAUL-ING CATEGORY $2000: Seen here, he was a senator from Massachusetts Paul Tsongas |
#6435, aired 2012-08-03 | CREATURES $3,000 (Daily Double): (Jimmy of the Clue Crew delivers the clue from the Harvard Museum of Natural History in Boston Massachusetts) Discovered in 1935, a skull at the Harvard Museum of Natural History is called a type specimen, as it helped paleontologists establish this type of dinosaur the triceratops |
#6433, aired 2012-08-01 | POLITICIANS $800: This 2012 Republican presidential candidate was governor of Massachusetts from 2003 to 2007 Romney |
#6411, aired 2012-07-02 | THE QUICK PICK PAPERS $2000: As a legislator in Massachusetts from 1827 to 1837, this educator acted to get lottery ticket sales banned (Horace) Mann |
#6403, aired 2012-06-20 | UNOFFICIAL STATE NICKNAMES $600: "The Pilgrim State" Massachusetts |
#6392, aired 2012-06-05 | ALTARED STATES $1200: Old North Church, built in 1723 Massachusetts |
#6378, aired 2012-05-16 | THE BRITISH ARE COMING! $1200: On April 19, 1775 700 British troops reached this town near dawn; about 70 minutemen were there to greet them Lexington, Massachusetts |
#6373, aired 2012-05-09 | PLAY SETTINGS $400: "The Crucible": 1692 in this Massachusetts city Salem |
#6350, aired 2012-04-06 | THE CHILDREN OF ROBERT F. KENNEDY $400: Joseph P. Kennedy II was a 6-term congressman from this state where he was born Massachusetts |
#6340, aired 2012-03-23 | AUTHORS WITH MASS. APPEAL $400: An 1860s poem that begins "Because I could not stop for death" is by this woman from western Massachusetts Emily Dickinson |
#6335, aired 2012-03-16 | SHIP OUT $1000: On July 25, 1956 this Italian liner collided with a Swedish ship & sank off Massachusetts Andrea Doria |
#6320, aired 2012-02-24 | U.S. GEOGRAPHY $200: Massachusetts' Barnstable County mostly consists of this hook-shaped cape Cape Cod |
#6319, aired 2012-02-23 | LESSER-KNOWN WOMEN $1,700 (Daily Double): Massachusetts' state heroine is Deborah Samson, who, disguised as a male soldier, fought in this war The American Revolution |
#6316, aired 2012-02-20 | "SETT"ING $400: The only U.S. state that fits the bill Massachusetts |
#6315, aired 2012-02-17 | BORN IN 1912 $600: Born in Cambridge, he represented Massachusetts in the U.S. House for 34 years, 10 as speaker in the '70s & '80s Tip O'Neill |
#6308, aired 2012-02-08 | COLLEGE "M" $800: Emily Dickinson & Wendy Wasserstein were alums of this "Seven Sisters" school in South Hadley, Massachusetts Mount Holyoke |
#6301, aired 2012-01-30 | STATE FLOWERS $200: The mayflower Massachusetts |
#6287, aired 2012-01-10 | STATE OF THE UNION $200: This Union state's 6th regiment was nicknamed the Minutemen; its 20th was the Harvard Regiment Massachusetts |
#6283, aired 2012-01-04 | 19th CENTURY CONGRESSMEN $400: It wasn't "The Devil and" him repping Massachusetts in the House from 1823 to 1827--it was just him (Daniel) Webster |
#6274, aired 2011-12-22 | A WHALE OF A BOOK $2000: The hero stows away on a whaler in Poe's "Narrative of A. Gordon Pym, of" this Massachusetts island Nantucket |
#6272, aired 2011-12-20 | ZOOM IN FOR A CLOSE-UP $400: To start off, you're getting an aerial view of this state Massachusetts |
#6272, aired 2011-12-20 | ZOOM IN FOR A CLOSE-UP $2000: In the garden is this American, but not Massachusetts-born, hero on horseback, ready for his close-up George Washington |
#6267, aired 2011-12-13 | CAPES $800: In 1623 this Massachusetts cape was named for the then-queen of England Cape Ann |
#6258, aired 2011-11-30 | THIS LANDFILL IS MY LANDFILL $1000: South Hadley Landfill Massachusetts |
#6250, aired 2011-11-18 | SEEING A BIT OF AMERICA $1000: One if by land & two if by sea--seen here is this Massachusetts landmark the Old North Church |
#6236, aired 2011-10-31 | HOSPITALS $400: Sylvia Plath worked as a secretary at this hospital, MGH for short Massachusetts General Hospital |
#6235, aired 2011-10-28 | THE 1600s $600: For nearly 40 years, until 1679, New Hampshire was part of this colony the Massachusetts Bay Colony |
#6233, aired 2011-10-26 | NEWSPAPER HISTORY $1600: This Massachusetts daily's early issues included "The Sunday Pulpit", a review of local sermons The Boston Globe |
#6231, aired 2011-10-24 | COME TO OUR AIDE $2,600 (Daily Double): (Hi. I'm Chris Matthews.) Here's a tip for you: for 6 years, I was the top aide to this Democrat from Massachusetts when he was Speaker of the House Tip O'Neill |
#6228, aired 2011-10-19 | AMERICA BEFORE THE REVOLUTION $1,200 (Daily Double): It remained a separate colony for most of its 71 years until it was absorbed by Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1691 the Plymouth Colony |
#6225, aired 2011-10-14 | HOME FROM THE HOUSE $600: Let us be Barney Frank--the Harvard grad heads home to this state, where he also spent 8 years in its House Massachusetts |
#6211, aired 2011-09-26 | U.S. BIRTHPLACES $2000: This Massachusetts city is the "Birthplace of Basketball" Springfield |
#6208, aired 2011-09-21 | MONEY BEST PLACES TO LIVE $800: Cozy Sharon in this northeast state's Norfolk County is teeming with history: a church there has a Paul Revere bell Massachusetts |
#6203, aired 2011-07-27 | WITH THIS "RING" $800: Cities in Missouri & Massachusetts are called this, also the capital of a third state Springfield |
#6202, aired 2011-07-26 | U.S. PLACE NAMES $400: No big surprise--this hook-shaped peninsula of Massachusetts was named for the fish caught off its shores Cape Cod |
#6197, aired 2011-07-19 | MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL $200: (Sarah of the Clue Crew stands on a stage.) W.T.G. Morton made history here in Mass General's surgical amphitheater; on October 14, 1886 he performed the first public successful surgery using this anesthetic ether |
#6197, aired 2011-07-19 | MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL $400: (Jimmy of the Clue Crew stands in front of a piece of apparatus.) Massachusetts General is the only place where PET scanning & this imaging use one machine; the combination in 3-D images gives information faster in brain cancer patients, minimizing the time between detection & treatment MRI |
#6197, aired 2011-07-19 | MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL $600: (Jimmy of the Clue Crew stands in front of another apparatus.) A device that uses microchips to detect one cancer cell in a billion may supersede this technique of taking tissue samples from living patients & may lead to finding cancers before tumors form a biopsy |
#6197, aired 2011-07-19 | MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL $1000: (Sarah of the Clue Crew stands before another apparatus.) To spare healthy tissues while treating tumors, Massachusetts General uses a state-of-the-art cyclotron to deliver radiation; beams of these particles, hydrogen atoms whose electrons have been removed protons |
#6197, aired 2011-07-19 | MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL $2,800 (Daily Double): (Sarah of the Clue Crew is in front of another piece of apparatus.) Massachusetts General is one of the first hospitals to make genetic testing standard in cancer treatment; robotics allow the processing of up to 96 samples at once, so doctors can immediately target patients with these changes in DNA sequence mutations |
#6190, aired 2011-07-08 | NAME THE YEAR $800: The Pilgrims first come ashore in Massachusetts 1620 |
#6187, aired 2011-07-05 | AMERICANA $800: It's said that William Driver of Massachusetts gave the American flag this 2-word nickname Old Glory |
#6181, aired 2011-06-27 | OXFORD $1600: Worcester County is home to this state's town of Oxford, incorporated 1713 Massachusetts |
#6178, aired 2011-06-22 | BEN & JERRY'S FLAVORS $800: Ben & Jerry's has a flavor called this, also the name of the official dessert of Massachusetts Boston Cream Pie |
#6170, aired 2011-06-10 | NONFICTION $800: "Against All Odds" is this current Massachusetts senator's tale of overcoming a childhood of beatings & worse Scott Brown |
#6161, aired 2011-05-30 | BORN & DIED $200: Born: Feb. 22, 1932, Boston, Massachusetts. Died: Aug. 25, 2009, Hyannis Port, Massachusetts Ted Kennedy |
#6154, aired 2011-05-19 | PRESIDENTS OF THE CONTINENTAL CONGRESS $2,000 (Daily Double): This declaration signer from Massachusetts served the longest as President of Congress, 30 months John Hancock |
#6140, aired 2011-04-29 | STATE PARKS $600: Myles Standish State Park Massachusetts |
#6138, aired 2011-04-27 | PROFILES $1600: This Massachusetts man was still a student at Yale when he spoke with Vice President Hubert Humphrey John Kerry |
#6135, aired 2011-04-22 | FATHER'S IN LAW $400: Father was quite the cutup in Prof. Charles Fried's class at this Massachusetts law school founded in 1817 Harvard |
#6134, aired 2011-04-21 | STATE / PRISON $800: Cedar Junction & Framingham are wicked excellent prisons for the wicked Massachusetts |
#6124, aired 2011-04-07 | HIGHWAYS & BYWAYS $200: In the 1950s Paul Revere's ride was depicted on signs for this state's I-90 turnpike Massachusetts |
#6123, aired 2011-04-06 | ONE MAN, ONE BOAT $200: Alfred Johnson sailed alone in his aptly named dory "Centennial" from Massachusetts to Britain in this year 1876 |
#6121, aired 2011-04-04 | ARCHITECTURE $400: This style of home named for a Massachusetts peninsula features a gabled roof & a central chimney a Cape Cod |
#6107, aired 2011-03-15 | THE IDES OF MARCH $1000: In 1819 residents in this part of Massachusetts voted for separation; on March 15, 1820 it became a state Maine |
#6098, aired 2011-03-02 | FIRST THINGS FIRST $1,800 (Daily Double): Not surprisingly, the first architecture dept. at a college was established at this Boston-area school in 1865 MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) |
#6093, aired 2011-02-23 | THE 13 COLONIES $1600: In 1741 King George II set this colony's southern border with Massachusetts New Hampshire |
#6085, aired 2011-02-11 | THE CITY'S OLDEST RESTAURANT $200: Union Oyster House--a Massachusetts city Boston |
#6078, aired 2011-02-02 | NATIONAL HISTORIC LANDMARKS $1200: The site where he launched the first liquid fuel rocket in 1926 is now part of a golf course fairway in Massachusetts (Robert) Goddard |
#6074, aired 2011-01-27 | TOYS & GAMES $400: These Massachusetts siblings began their empire in the 1880s with a game called Banking Parker Brothers |
#6074, aired 2011-01-27 | WASN'T THAT AN '80s THING? $1200: He was elected Governor of Massachusetts in 1982 & 1986 & then it was on to the presidency! Well, not quite (Michael) Dukakis |
#6069, aired 2011-01-20 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES $800 (Daily Double): Opened in 1865, this N.E. college was started by a scientist for an increasingly industrialized America MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) |
#6069, aired 2011-01-20 | DESCRIBING THE FILM $1000: 2010: Affleck-ted directing;
Massachusetts mayhem;
you can bank (rob) on it The Town |
#6066, aired 2011-01-17 | DENZEL WASHINGTON FILMS $800: A member of the 54th regiment of the Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry Glory |
#6058, aired 2011-01-05 | CONTRARY TO POPULAR BELIEF $800: Some argue there are 46 states, not 50, as Virginia, Kentucky, Pennsylvania & Massachusetts are all these Commonwealths |
#6046, aired 2010-12-20 | BIRTH! HELPED FOUND THE USA! DEATH! $800: Born Jan. 12, 1737 in Massachusetts, served in the state's general court, signed out Oct. 8, 1793 John Hancock |
#6034, aired 2010-12-02 | TOP CHEF $1200: This Massachusetts native was the executive chef at Commander's Palace in New Orleans Emeril Lagasse |
#6033, aired 2010-12-01 | ME TARZAN $1200: This author of the Tarzan stories was expelled from Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts (Edgar Rice) Burroughs |
#6032, aired 2010-11-30 | MASSACHUSETTS STATE SYMBOLS $200: Hey Pilgrim! It's Massachusetts' State Historical Rock Plymouth Rock |
#6032, aired 2010-11-30 | MASSACHUSETTS STATE SYMBOLS $400: This ingredient in a Cape Codder cocktail is the State Beverage (Hint: it's not the vodka) cranberry juice |
#6032, aired 2010-11-30 | MASSACHUSETTS STATE SYMBOLS $600: This planter of fruit trees has been designated the official Folk Hero Johnny Appleseed |
#6032, aired 2010-11-30 | MASSACHUSETTS STATE SYMBOLS $800: Fittingly titled "Massachusetts", the official folk song was written by this folkie, Woody's son Arlo Guthrie |
#6032, aired 2010-11-30 | MASSACHUSETTS STATE SYMBOLS $1000: This depictor of small-town life who eventually made his home in Stockbridge is the official artist of the Commonwealth Norman Rockwell |
#6029, aired 2010-11-25 | WE'RE GONNA NEED A BIGGER BOAT $1200: This drama adapted from a book concerns the Massachusetts fishing boat the Andrea Gail The Perfect Storm (A Perfect Storm accepted) |
#6021, aired 2010-11-15 | STATE FACTS $400: As of 2008 Asians made up nearly 40% of this state's population Hawaii |
#6003, aired 2010-10-20 | STATE / COLLEGES $400: Berklee College of Music & Amherst College Massachusetts |
#6001, aired 2010-10-18 | AMERICAN HISTORY $600: (Sarah of the Clue Crew shows a map of New England on the monitor.) In May 1643, to discourage attacks by the Dutch & others, the United Colonies of New England was formed by 4 Puritan colonies: Massachusetts Bay, Connecticut, New Haven & this one Plymouth |
#5984, aired 2010-09-23 | ONE HOT TOWN $800: On Aug. 2, 1975 it was wicked hot in New Bedford in this state--1070! I nearly keeled ovah in the yahd! Massachusetts |
#5976, aired 2010-09-13 | THE ONION DESCRIBES THE STATE $400: "Home to hundreds of prestigious colleges... (it) is where the nation's best and brightest can't afford to go" Massachusetts |
#5965, aired 2010-07-16 | MUSEUMS $400: The Peabody Museum of Archaeology & Ethnology is at this Cambridge, Massachusetts institution Harvard |
#5961, aired 2010-07-12 | JUST A BILL ON CAPITOL HILL $400: Born in Quincy & educated in Braintree, Bill Delahunt has repped this state since 1997 Massachusetts |
#5957, aired 2010-07-06 | NEWS TO ME $1600: In a surprise, Ted Kennedy's old Senate seat in this state went to a Republican in a January 2010 election Massachusetts |
#5956, aired 2010-07-05 | PEOPLE FROM PENNSYLVANIA $1600: This "Little Women" author was born in Germantown, Pennsylvania in 1832 but grew up in Massachusetts Louisa May Alcott |
#5940, aired 2010-06-11 | LYRICAL POSTAL ABBREVIATIONS $2000: Bob Dylan:
"So don't fear if you hear a foreign sound to your ear it's alright, ____, I'm only sighing" Massachusetts (for Ma) |
#5929, aired 2010-05-27 | STATES' FORMER GOVERNORS $400: Michael Dukakis,
1983-1991 Massachusetts |
#5924, aired 2010-05-20 | WHO CARRIED THE STATE? $2,800 (Daily Double): Massachusetts,
1972 George McGovern |
#5912, aired 2010-05-04 | POTPOURRI $1000: Barry Manilow was born in Brooklyn; Michael Dukakis was born in this Massachusetts town Brookline |
#5909, aired 2010-04-29 | STATE LICENSE PLATE MOTTOS $1000: "The Spirit of America" Massachusetts |
#5905, aired 2010-04-23 | FACTS ABOUT AUTHORS $400: Born in Salem, Massachusetts in 1804, one of his ancestors was a judge at the Salem Witchcraft Trials in 1692 (Nathaniel) Hawthorne |
#5900, aired 2010-04-16 | EDIBLE STATE SYMBOLS $1000: Baked navy beans,
chocolate chip cookies,
cranberry juice Massachusetts |
#5898, aired 2010-04-14 | MADAM, I'M ADAMS $800: In my day, I was known as a declaration signer & a Massachusetts governor, not a beermaker Samuel Adams |
#5891, aired 2010-04-05 | "G"-MALE $800: Seuss was the middle name of this man born in Springfield, Massachusetts in 1904 (Theodor) Geisel |
#5885, aired 2010-03-26 | LAST OF A DYING BREED $1000: "Booming Ben", the last Heath hen, stopped booming in 1932 on this big Massachusetts island Martha's Vineyard |
#5883, aired 2010-03-24 | STATE FLAGS & SEALS $1,500 (Daily Double): Both its flag & seal were re-adopted in 1967 when a portrait by Gilbert Stuart was approved for the seal Washington |
#5872, aired 2010-03-09 | GOVERNORS $200: In 1780 he signed on as Massachusetts' first governor John Hancock |
#5868, aired 2010-03-03 | U.S. STATES' LARGEST ISLANDS $400: Martha's Vineyard Massachusetts |
#5860, aired 2010-02-19 | THE NATIONAL WORLD WAR II MEMORIAL $2000: (Sarah of the Clue Crew reads the clue from the National World War II Memorial in Washington, D.C.) A Quincy, Massachusetts ship inspector was the likely source of this 3-word phrase which was seen everywhere, often accompanying a cartoon figure during World War II Kilroy was here |
#5855, aired 2010-02-12 | LITTLE LANDS $400: This little Central American country is about the size of Massachusetts, but Belmopan, not Boston, is its capital Belize |
#5853, aired 2010-02-10 | BE TRUE TO YOUR SCHOOL $1000: In 1999 Sloan school alum Kenan Sahin made a surprise 9-figure donation to this institute the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (M.I.T.) |
#5845, aired 2010-01-29 | RELIGIOUS LEADERS $200: After coming to America in 1620, William Brewster served as religious leader for this colony Plymouth |
#5845, aired 2010-01-29 | THE U.S. SENATE $2000: The 9 honored with Reception Room portraits include the "Great Triumvirate": Clay, Calhoun & this Massachusetts man Daniel Webster |
#5841, aired 2010-01-25 | 19th CENTURY SENATORS BY STATE $400: John Quincy Adams Massachusetts |
#5839, aired 2010-01-21 | REMEMBERING TED KENNEDY $400: The third longest-serving senator in history, Kennedy represented this state for 47 years Massachusetts |
#5833, aired 2010-01-13 | STATES BY COUNTIES $400: Middlesex,
Essex,
Worcester Massachusetts |
#5820, aired 2009-12-25 | PRESIDENTS AT REST $1200: The 2 who are buried at the First Unitarian Church in Quincy, Massachusetts John Adams & John Quincy Adams |
#5789, aired 2009-11-12 | DETENTION $1600: In 1692 Tituba, a West Indian slave, spent 13 months in jail in this Massachusetts Bay Colony town Salem |
#5786, aired 2009-11-09 | "B.C." $1000: This Massachusetts Jesuit campus is in Chestnut Hill Boston College |
#5782, aired 2009-11-03 | DANGEROUS PLANET $400: In June 1953 one of these fatally touched down in Worcester, Massachusetts, far from the Midwest a tornado |
#5782, aired 2009-11-03 | YOUNG MR. PRESIDENT $800: He grew up in Greenwich, Connecticut, & attended private schools there & in Andover, Massachusetts George H.W. Bush |
#5760, aired 2009-10-02 | MOBY DICK $1000: The ominously named Peter Coffin owns the Spouter-Inn in this "New" Massachusetts whaling port New Bedford |
#5733, aired 2009-07-08 | GET OUTTA MY DREAMS $800: Representing this state in Congress, like Niki Tsongas & Barney Frank, would be a dream come true Massachusetts |
#5729, aired 2009-07-02 | THE STATE'S POSTAL ABBREVIATION $400: ...is Ma's husband Pennsylvania |
#5719, aired 2009-06-18 | OBSCURE AMERICA $1000: The Norumbega Fault Zone runs from Penobscot Bay in this state through Massachusetts Maine |
#5711, aired 2009-06-08 | POETRY IN EARLY AMERICA $400: William Bradford wrote of this Massachusetts city, "Thou now art grown / To be a great and wealthy town" Boston |
#5703, aired 2009-05-27 | STATES' GEOGRAPHIC CENTERS $1000: The northern part of the city of Worcester Massachusetts |
#5696, aired 2009-05-18 | STATES BY STATE PARKS $2,000 (Daily Double): Fall River Heritage State Park Massachusetts |
#5682, aired 2009-04-28 | FISH TALES $1000: Mark Kurlansky's book about this food fish says in 1895 a 211-lb. one was caught off the coast of Massachusetts cod |
#5673, aired 2009-04-15 | YOUR COLLEGE I.D. $1000: Massachusetts: clusters of feathers or hairs Tufts |
#5671, aired 2009-04-13 | SAM ADAMS $1000: In June 1776 Adams was selected as Massachusetts' lone delegate to help draft this first U.S. Constitution the Articles of Confederation |
#5668, aired 2009-04-08 | 18th CENTURY AMERICA $1200: Yum! Chocolate manufacturing in the American colonies began in 1765 in what is now this state, in Dorchester Massachusetts |
#5657, aired 2009-03-24 | REBELLIONS: SHAYS' & WHISKEY $400: Shays' Rebellion in this state in 1786-87 included an attack on the Springfield armory Massachusetts |
#5649, aired 2009-03-12 | NATIVE AMERICAN TRIBES $1200: The Penobscot are represented in the legislature of this state where you'll find Penobscot Bay Maine |
#5636, aired 2009-02-23 | IN THE PARK $200: In Massachusetts a national park honors these "men" who famously fought on April 19, 1775 minutemen |
#5619, aired 2009-01-29 | AMERICAN EDUCATION $1000: In 1838 this Massachusetts educator founded the biweekly Common School Journal for teachers Horace Mann |
#5609, aired 2009-01-15 | A SERIES OF UNFORTUNATE EVENTS $600: In 1970 Massachusetts became the first state to adopt this type of auto insurance no-fault |
#5603, aired 2009-01-07 | WOMEN'S TUITION $1600: Hillary Clinton became a Democrat while attending this Massachusetts school Wellesley |
#5596, aired 2008-12-29 | BIRTH, ART, DEATH $1200: Born 1834 in Massachusetts,
"Arrangement in Grey and Black, No. 2: Thomas Carlyle",
died 1903 Whistler |
#5563, aired 2008-11-12 | "A" IN GEOGRAPHY $800: It's home to Hampshire College & to a campus of the University of Massachusetts Amherst |
#5551, aired 2008-10-27 | POLITICS $2000: (I'm Candy Crowley, senior political correspondent.) A political cartoon depicting redistricting in Massachusetts gave us this term for a practice that's still around today gerrymandering |
#5549, aired 2008-10-23 | LET'S EAT $2,500 (Daily Double): Rumors that these snacks were named for a physicist are untrue; they're named for a town in Massachusetts Fig Newtons |
#5547, aired 2008-10-21 | BORN TO BE MILD $600: This writer began communing with nature on July 12, 1817 in Concord, Massachusetts Henry David Thoreau |
#5546, aired 2008-10-20 | NAME THAT CENTURY $400: The Mayflower first drops anchor off the coast of Massachusetts the 17th century |
#5535, aired 2008-10-03 | BIRTH OF A PRESIDENT $400: May 29, 1917 in Brookline, Massachusetts JFK |
#5535, aired 2008-10-03 | BIRTH OF A PRESIDENT $3,000 (Daily Double): June 12, 1924 in Milton, Massachusetts George Herbert Walker Bush |
#5525, aired 2008-09-19 | BOOKS & AUTHORS $400: "The Lobster Chronicles" is Linda Greenlaw's book about life on a small island off the coast of this state Maine |
#5508, aired 2008-07-16 | THIS IS YOUR LIFE, JOHN QUINCY ADAMS $2000: In 1767, when John Quincy Adams was born there, Quincy, Massachusetts was known by this name Braintree |
#5498, aired 2008-07-02 | WE'RE NOT IN KANSAS ANYMORE $1000: We've left Lawrence, Kansas for Lawrence in this state, Leonard Bernstein's birthplace Massachusetts |
#5486, aired 2008-06-16 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES $1,000 (Daily Double): Despite its name, it's located in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts & it's actually a university Boston College |
#5483, aired 2008-06-11 | THE JOY OF "SAC"s $1200: One half of the pair executed in Massachusetts in 1927 & then pardoned in 1977 (Nicola) Sacco |
#5479, aired 2008-06-05 | GOVERNMENT $600: The USA's oldest appellate court in continuous existence is this highest body in Massachusetts the Supreme Court of Massachusetts |
#5458, aired 2008-05-07 | HOW SOPHOMORIC! $1600: In 1933 Harvard hooligans fishnapped the "Sacred" this, a carving in the Massachusetts State House the Sacred Cod |
#5427, aired 2008-03-25 | MASSACHUSETTS $200: Historic places of interest in Massachusetts include the Old State House & the Old North Church in this city Boston |
#5427, aired 2008-03-25 | MASSACHUSETTS $400: The Pilgrims could tell you this is Massachusetts' official state flower the mayflower |
#5427, aired 2008-03-25 | MASSACHUSETTS $600: Minute Man National Historical Park is located between these 2 Massachusetts cities made famous in April 1775 Lexington & Concord |
#5427, aired 2008-03-25 | MASSACHUSETTS $800: We "checked": the first Massachusetts factory to make this fabric opened in 1846 gingham |
#5427, aired 2008-03-25 | MASSACHUSETTS $1000: Founded in 1620, this town is the seat of a Mass. county of the same name & sits on a bay of the same name Plymouth |
#5422, aired 2008-03-18 | NATIVE AMERICANS $600: This tribe's name was first on a bay, then a colony, then a state (which put 2 Ts in it) Massachusetts |
#5417, aired 2008-03-11 | STATE THE STATE $1600: On May 17, 2004 this eastern state became the first to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples Massachusetts |
#5412, aired 2008-03-04 | OFFICIAL STATE FOOD & DRINK $400: It's the official state berry of Massachusetts--let us all give thanks cranberry |
#5401, aired 2008-02-18 | BE A SPORT $800: A spike can be a kill, or you can get an ace using a jump serve in this sport invented in Massachusetts volleyball |
#5396, aired 2008-02-11 | CLIFFS NOTES $800: Massachusetts man spends 2 years living alone in a cabin in the woods; writes book Walden |
#5389, aired 2008-01-31 | PRO SPORTS HALL OF FAME CITIES $400: Springfield, Massachusetts basketball |
#5387, aired 2008-01-29 | ART-IFICIAL $1200: The statue "Man at the Wheel" in Gloucester, Massachusetts is dedicated to men in this profession fishermen |
#5379, aired 2008-01-17 | "GREEN" GEOGRAPHY $1200: They extend from Canada through Vermont into western Massachusetts Green Mountains |
#5375, aired 2008-01-11 | STATE THE GOVERNOR $1,000 (Daily Double): In 2006 Deval Patrick was elected this state's first African-American governor Massachusetts |
#5354, aired 2007-12-13 | IN THE MIDDLE OF THE STATE $1600: I'll "use" a map to drive to this state Massachusetts |
#5343, aired 2007-11-28 | CHILDREN'S AUTHORS $600: Esther Forbes lived most of her life in this state & set her novel "Johnny Tremain" there Massachusetts |
#5319, aired 2007-10-25 | FOOD STUFF $400: When salted & dried, this Massachusetts Bay Colony fish crop was stacked & shipped like lumber cod |
#5315, aired 2007-10-19 | BANNED $1600: After being banned from Massachusetts, he established the Rhode Island colony Roger Williams |
#5312, aired 2007-10-16 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES $2000: Lord Jeffs is the nickname of the athletic teams of this Massachusetts college Amherst |
#5304, aired 2007-10-04 | DOG TAGS $200: Born 1924, Milton, Massachusetts; pooch: Millie, a Springer spaniel George H.W. Bush |
#5299, aired 2007-09-27 | PARTY $800: Must have been quite a "party"; the British passed 1774's "Intolerable Acts" to punish Massachusetts for it the Boston Tea Party |
#5288, aired 2007-09-12 | WHERE AM I? $1600: (Sarah of the Clue Crew stands before an outdoor display of a whale skeleton.) Holy Cross is a college in Massachusetts; across the country, the name of this University of California campus means "holy cross" UC Santa Cruz |
#5287, aired 2007-09-11 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES $1600: Charles, not Sonny, was the benefactor of this Medford, Massachusetts university Tufts |
#5284, aired 2007-07-26 | POLITICIANS $1000: This former Massachusetts governor was CEO of the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City Mitt Romney |
#5273, aired 2007-07-11 | QUOTATIONS $1600: Told that there were already too many lawyers, Daniel Webster said, "There is always room" here at the top |
#5265, aired 2007-06-29 | THE FEMALE EQUIVALENT $200: The University of Massachusetts Minutemen the Minutewomen |
#5264, aired 2007-06-28 | THE 21st CENTURY $1000: A 2003 judgment said keeping 2 women from marrying each other violated this state's constitution Massachusetts |
#5262, aired 2007-06-26 | NEW HAMPSHIRE $400: Until around 1680, New Hampshire was officially a part of this colony Massachusetts |
#5257, aired 2007-06-19 | WHERE YA FROM, CONGRESSMAN? $400: John Quincy Adams after the presidency Massachusetts |
#5253, aired 2007-06-13 | CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICTS $400: Barney Frank reps this state's 4th, which includes Newton, Taunton & part of Fall River Massachusetts |
#5253, aired 2007-06-13 | CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICTS $1000: Woonsocket & Pawtucket are served by Patrick Kennedy of this state's 1st district Rhode Island |
#5242, aired 2007-05-29 | DR. SEUSS $800: Dr. Seuss grew up in Springfield, Massachusetts, near this street found in the title of his first book Mulberry Street |
#5234, aired 2007-05-17 | THE WRITE STUFF $1200: This author's collection "Tales of a Wayside Inn" is set at the Red Horse Tavern in Sudbury, Massachusetts Longfellow |
#5233, aired 2007-05-16 | 2006 NEWS $800: (Jon of the Clue Crew indicates the monitor.) The Democrats gained 6 of these, including a win in Massachusetts by Deval Patrick, the second African-American ever elected to one the gubernatorial seat |
#5232, aired 2007-05-15 | GETTING AROUND THE CITY $600: Just learn the alphabet--heading down Beacon St., it's Arlington, Berkeley, Clarendon, then Dartmouth Boston, Massachusetts |
#5232, aired 2007-05-15 | CHOP-A-HOLICS $800: In 1893 this Massachusetts woman was acquitted of giving her parents the axe Lizzie Borden |
#5209, aired 2007-04-12 | THE THEATRE $400: Arthur Miller's "The Crucible" is set in 1692 in this town Salem (Massachusetts) |
#5205, aired 2007-04-06 | MASSACHUSETTS $400: This patriot's foundry made the State House dome watertight in 1802 by sheathing it with a thick layer of copper Paul Revere |
#5205, aired 2007-04-06 | MASSACHUSETTS $800: In 1893 Springfield produced the USA's 1st gasoline-powered car; in 1901, the USA's 1st factory for these 2-wheelers motorcycles |
#5205, aired 2007-04-06 | MASSACHUSETTS $1200: Nye Lubricants, founded in New Bedford in 1844, sold the USA's last bottle of this type of oil in 1978 whale oil |
#5205, aired 2007-04-06 | MASSACHUSETTS $1600: This Western Mass. college, the state's oldest after Harvard, is a traditional rival of Amherst Williams |
#5205, aired 2007-04-06 | MASSACHUSETTS $4,000 (Daily Double): "The Spirit of '76" hangs in this town whose name comes from the misidentification of granite as another rock Marblehead |
#5195, aired 2007-03-23 | HAIL TO THE CHEF $400: The "essence of" this chef from Fall River, Massachusetts is that he likes to "kick it up a notch" Emeril Lagasse |
#5175, aired 2007-02-23 | BILLs & TEDs $200: He's Massachusetts' senior senator Ted Kennedy |
#5174, aired 2007-02-22 | THE NEXT STATE IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER $400: After Maryland Massachusetts |
#5173, aired 2007-02-21 | SOUND LIKE A LOCAL $400: To pass for a native of Danvers, Massachusetts, don't pronounce this letter in the town's name the R (the "Ah") |
#5158, aired 2007-01-31 | PRESIDENTIAL HITCHING POSTS $1200: Calvin & Grace Coolidge, on Oct. 4, 1905 Vermont |
#5151, aired 2007-01-22 | STATELY ARENAS $2,000 (Daily Double): TD Banknorth Garden,
Paul E. Tsongas Arena Massachusetts |
#5143, aired 2007-01-10 | MARINE BIOLOGY $1000: This Massachusetts village is home to the Marine Biological Laboratory & an oceanographic institution founded in 1930 Woods Hole |
#5138, aired 2007-01-03 | WEEKEND IN NEW ENGLAND $800: Boston Harbor is the mouth of this river that flows through Cambridge, Massachusetts Charles River |
#5128, aired 2006-12-20 | THE CONGRESSIONAL FAMILY NAME $400: Massachusetts' Sen. Ted & Rhode Island's Rep. Patrick are father & son Kennedy |
#5126, aired 2006-12-18 | 'ALLO, GOVERNOR $800: In office from 2003:
Mitt Romney Massachusetts |
#5113, aired 2006-11-29 | GOVERNORS $400: This son of Greek immigrants was elected governor of Massachusetts 3 times in the '70s & '80s (Michael) Dukakis |
#5095, aired 2006-11-03 | CENTURY OF THE TRIAL $1,500 (Daily Double): Sarah Good, Rebecca Nurse, et al.,
for witchcraft the 17th century |
#5090, aired 2006-10-27 | U.S.A. $200: Massachusetts' state rock is the Roxbury puddingstone; its state historical rock is this celebrated stone Plymouth Rock |
#5089, aired 2006-10-26 | COLLEGE COLLAGE $2000: This South Hadley, Massachusetts women's college was founded in 1837 Mount Holyoke |
#5072, aired 2006-10-03 | STATE GOVERNORS $400: This patriot known for his bold signature died in 1793 while serving his 9th term as governor of Massachusetts John Hancock |
#5069, aired 2006-09-28 | STATE SONGS $200: "All Hail To" this state (no beans about it) Massachusetts |
#5056, aired 2006-09-11 | STATE INSECTS $400: It might want to fly away home to Massachusetts, where it's the state insect the ladybug |
#5049, aired 2006-07-20 | ABBREVIATED U.S. STATES $1,200 (Daily Double): The 2 states whose abbreviations are informal words for father & mother Pennsylvania, PA & Massachusetts, MA |
#5046, aired 2006-07-17 | STATE FISH $200: A Massachusetts cape is named for this state fish, a valuable food source cod |
#5036, aired 2006-07-03 | THE U.S. CENSUS $800: The first U.S. census counted 3.9 million people, which is also the current population of this U.S. commonwealth Puerto Rico |
#5027, aired 2006-06-20 | AMERICAN GEOGRAPHY $600: We're sure the Berkshires are a chain of hills centered in the western part of this state Massachusetts |
#5024, aired 2006-06-15 | STATES' FORMER GOVERNORS $400: John Hancock &
Samuel Adams Massachusetts |
#5022, aired 2006-06-13 | THE SENATOR OF ATTENTION $800: The last words of this 19th c. Massachusetts senator & noted orator were "I still live" Daniel Webster |
#5020, aired 2006-06-09 | CITY OF THE DAY: MINNEAPOLIS $400: The information center at Minnehaha Park (off Hiawatha Ave.) is a replica of this poet's home in Massachusetts Longfellow |
#5014, aired 2006-06-01 | WOMEN IN POLITICS $600: Bobby Kennedy's daughter Kathleen Kennedy Townsend was the first female lt. governor of this state Maryland |
#5010, aired 2006-05-26 | "D" MEN $800: This cousin of an Oscar-winning actress was governor of Massachusetts for much of the 1970s & '80s Michael Dukakis |
#4985, aired 2006-04-21 | A BUG'S LIFE $800: This garden pest controller is the state insect of Delaware & Massachusetts ladybug |
#4982, aired 2006-04-18 | STATE OF DISASTER $600: In 1953 Worcester County saw one of the worst tornadoes in the history of this New England state Massachusetts |
#4953, aired 2006-03-08 | SOUNDS LIKE SPORTS EQUIPMENT $800: 4-letter first name used by Mr. Romney, the current governor of Massachusetts Mitt |
#4944, aired 2006-02-23 | COLLEGE KNOWLEDGE $2000: 2 of the 3 "Seven Sisters" colleges not located in Massachusetts--unlike the rest of the category (2 of) Bryn Mawr, Vassar, & Barnard |
#4942, aired 2006-02-21 | METROPOLITAN SOBRIQUETS $400: "The City of Witches",
Massachusetts Salem |
#4939, aired 2006-02-16 | THE LARGEST U.S. STATE $800: Massachusetts,
Maine,
Maryland Maine |
#4926, aired 2006-01-30 | CELEBRITY HIGH SCHOOL YEARBOOK $200: This comedian was once suspended for three days from his Andover, Massachusetts high school for burning rubber in the parking lot Jay Leno |
#4924, aired 2006-01-26 | GRADUATE SCHOOL $2,000 (Daily Double): These 2 institutes of technology are tied atop the latest U.S. News ranking of physics grad schools Massachusetts Institute of Technology & California Institute of Technology (MIT & Caltech) |
#4921, aired 2006-01-23 | HOLIDAYS & OBSERVANCES $200: June 17 is Bunker Hill Day in this state's Suffolk County Massachusetts |
#4915, aired 2006-01-13 | IT'S THE BERRIES $400: The 1st important American variety of this shortcake fruit was the hovey, grown in 1834 in Massachusetts strawberry |
#4906, aired 2006-01-02 | OFFICIAL STATE FOOD & DRINK $1,000 (Daily Double): This fruit juice is Massachusetts' state beverage cranberry juice |
#4901, aired 2005-12-26 | STATE OF THE UNION $400: Its name comes from a Native American word meaning "near the great hill" Massachusetts |
#4894, aired 2005-12-15 | POLITICAL JOHNS $800: He was born in a Colorado army hospital in 1943; the family moved to Massachusetts soon after (John) Kerry |
#4893, aired 2005-12-14 | U.S. HIGHWAYS & BYWAYS $1200: In Boston, Mass. Ave., Massachusetts Avenue, intersects Com. Ave., this street Commonwealth Avenue |
#4884, aired 2005-12-01 | TRAVEL & TOURISM $600: In June 1943 Boston Airport was renamed this to honor a native son who served in the Massachusetts Legislature Logan Airport |
#4875, aired 2005-11-18 | U.S. HISTORY: THE EARLY 1800s $800: In the Missouri Compromise, Massachusetts gave up its northern territory to form this state Maine |
#4873, aired 2005-11-16 | QUICK MOBY-DICK $800: Salem, Massachusetts author to whom the 1851 novel is dedicated Nathaniel Hawthorne |
#4872, aired 2005-11-15 | STATE THE GEOGRAPHIC CENTER $1600: The north part of the city of Worcester, once a center of abolitionism Massachusetts |
#4869, aired 2005-11-10 | COLLEGE AKA $800: In Massachusetts:
Small clumps of hairs, trees or grass Tufts |
#4865, aired 2005-11-04 | HEAD NORTH $400: All of Connecticut's almost 100-mile northern border is with this state Massachusetts |
#4828, aired 2005-09-14 | ALONG BOSTON'S FREEDOM TRAIL $1000: (Sarah of the Clue Crew reports from the Freedom Trail.) Begun in 1795, it's the building behind me that Oliver Wendell Holmes called the "hub of the solar system" the Bulfinch State House |
#4827, aired 2005-09-13 | THE SUPREMES $200: Appointed in 1994, this justice from Massachusetts was the last to join the court in the 20th century Breyer |
#4818, aired 2005-07-13 | IF I'M ELECTED... $1600: John Winthrop, who landed in the Americas in 1630, was elected governor of this colony 12 times the Massachusetts Bay Colony |
#4815, aired 2005-07-08 | DEATH OF A PRESIDENT $400: He died on Independence Day in 1826 in Quincy, Massachusetts John Adams |
#4796, aired 2005-06-13 | "HAY"ES $1000: This revolt, chiefly by farmers, took place in Massachusetts in 1786 Shays' Rebellion |
#4792, aired 2005-06-07 | U.S. REPS BY STATE $400: Barney Frank,
Edward Markey Massachusetts |
#4787, aired 2005-05-31 | 'ALLO, GOVERNOR! $400: Calvin Coolidge,
Michael Dukakis Massachusetts |
#4774, aired 2005-05-12 | GOVERNMENT & POLITICS $1000: He's Massachusetts' governor; his father served as the governor of Michigan in the '60s Mitt Romney |
#4766, aired 2005-05-02 | STATE FIRSTS $600: In 1869 this state scored big with the first professional baseball team, the Red Stockings Ohio |
#4745, aired 2005-04-01 | STATE CAPITAL IDEAS $400: It shares its name with a Massachusetts city famous for trials Salem (Oregon) |
#4740, aired 2005-03-25 | A MANN CALLED HORACE $200: Horace Mann began his career as "The Father of American Public Education" in the 1830s in this "Bay State" Massachusetts |
#4732, aired 2005-03-15 | THE STATE OF EDUCATION $2000: Suffolk University,
Brandeis University Massachusetts |
#4723, aired 2005-03-02 | 21 $400: (Sarah of the Clue Crew reports from a lectern at 21.) "A lot of people still don't really know who I am", said this Massachusetts senator at an April 2004 fundraiser at 21 John Kerry |
#4672, aired 2004-12-21 | U.S. CITIES $1000: John Adams said "the child of Independence" was born in "the old Council Chamber" of this city's Old State House Boston |
#4672, aired 2004-12-21 | THE CIVIL WAR $5,000 (Daily Double): Widely used by both sides, this rifle shares its name with the Massachusetts city where it was made Springfield |
#4645, aired 2004-11-12 | NAME THAT CENTURY $400: The Pilgrims arrive in Massachusetts the 17th century |
#4640, aired 2004-11-06 | OFFICIAL STATE FOOD & DRINK $2000: This alliterative state cookie of Massachusetts was invented there in the 1930s the chocolate chip cookie |
#4638, aired 2004-11-04 | GUNSMOKE $800: This U.S. state's official seal shows a man holding a gun & standing on a peninsula Michigan |
#4634, aired 2004-10-28 | SURVIVOR: CONGRESS $200: The tribe has spoken to the 8 Republicans who have run against this Massachusetts senator since 1962 Ted Kennedy |
#4630, aired 2004-10-22 | AMERICAN HEROES $1600: Sign in please if you know this Massachusetts man was chosen President of the 2nd Continental Congress John Hancock |
#4624, aired 2004-10-14 | NICKNAMES $600: Emily Dickinson was "the Belle of" & later "the Nun of" this Massachusetts town Amherst |
#4622, aired 2004-10-12 | WORD & PHRASE ORIGINS $200: Some say this tool with an adjustable jaw was invented by a Massachusetts mechanic named Monk a monkey wrench |
#4616, aired 2004-10-04 | THE 2004 PRESIDENTIAL RACE $800: George W. Bush won 91% of the vote in Massachusetts (unfortunately for him it was in this contest) the Republican primary |
#4602, aired 2004-09-14 | 19th CENTURY AMERICA $1600: This 19th C. glass was named for the Massachusetts village where it was made, not for a club or a dagwood Sandwich glass |
#4592, aired 2004-07-20 | COLONIAL AMERICA $400: The first stagecoach line was established in 1732 between Burlington & Amboy in this colony New Jersey |
#4592, aired 2004-07-20 | COLONIAL AMERICA $800: On October 9, 1635 this minister was banished from Massachusetts; he headed south to Rhode Island (Roger) Williams |
#4579, aired 2004-07-01 | COLLEGE COLLAGE $2,400 (Daily Double): This town is home to Hampshire College & a U. of Massachusetts campus as well as the college that shares its name Amherst |
#4547, aired 2004-05-18 | LITERARY SETTINGS $400: Hawthorne's introductory essay to "The Scarlet Letter" is about a custom-house in this seaport Salem, Massachusetts |
#4546, aired 2004-05-17 | EARLY AMERICA $400: Harvard College was founded at Newtowne, Massachusetts in 1636; 2 years later the town was renamed this Cambridge |
#4546, aired 2004-05-17 | EARLY AMERICA $1600: In December 1620 the Pilgrims established Plymouth Colony on the rocky shore of this bay Cape Cod Bay |
#4539, aired 2004-05-06 | WHICH CAME FIRST? $2000: California statehood,
Texas statehood,
Massachusetts statehood Massachusetts statehood |
#4529, aired 2004-04-22 | "COOL", DUDE! $400: In the late 19-teens, he was the governor of Massachusetts Calvin Coolidge |
#4529, aired 2004-04-22 | THE MORGAN WEB $600: This game with indoor & outdoor versions was invented by William G. Morgan at a Massachusetts Y volleyball |
#4527, aired 2004-04-20 | OFFICIAL STATE CREATURES $600: It's not odd that its state fish is the cod Massachusetts |
#4521, aired 2004-04-12 | ER $2000: He based "ER" on his own time as a student at Massachusetts General Michael Crichton |
#4503, aired 2004-03-17 | SENATORS BY STATE $200: John Kerry & Edward Kennedy Massachusetts |
#4503, aired 2004-03-17 | -OLOGIES $800: (Jimmy of the Clue Crew at Cape Cod, Massachusetts) One of the chapters in "Moby Dick" is called this, the study of whales cetology |
#4493, aired 2004-03-03 | YOU CAN'T $1200: In Massachusetts you can get 5 years for hiding one of these, like the one Grandma cut you out of a will |
#4490, aired 2004-02-27 | U.S. BODIES OF WATER $800: This river that flows into Boston Harbor is the longest river entirely within Massachusetts the Charles |
#4489, aired 2004-02-26 | BOTANY $100 (Daily Double): The trailing arbutus, also known as this, is shipshape as the state flower of Massachusetts the mayflower |
#4487, aired 2004-02-24 | FOOD CHAIN $600: Offering "Home Style Meals" & a line of frozen entrees, this chain is headquartered in Colorado, not Massachusetts Boston Market |
#4485, aired 2004-02-20 | POLITICIANS $400: 2 years after his brother was elected President, this senator from Massachusetts took office Ted (or Edward) Kennedy |
#4485, aired 2004-02-20 | AFRICAN-AMERICAN FIRSTS $600: W.E.B. Du Bois was the first African-American to earn a doctorate from this prestigious Massachusetts university Harvard |
#4479, aired 2004-02-12 | THE 50 STATES $1200: Its state dessert is a cream pie named for its largest city Massachusetts |
#4475, aired 2004-02-06 | VICE PRESIDENTIAL BIRTHPLACES $400: October 30, 1735:
Braintree, Massachusetts John Adams |
#4475, aired 2004-02-06 | NATIVE AMERICAN PLACE NAMES $800: You'd have a whale of a good time visiting this Massachusetts island whose name may mean "the faraway land" Nantucket |
#4467, aired 2004-01-27 | INNS $1000: The Red Horse Inn in Sudbury, Massachusetts was the model for Longfellow's "Tales of" this "Inn" the Wayside Inn |
#4467, aired 2004-01-27 | NAUTICAL TERMS $2000: (Sarah of the Clue Crew in Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts) As well as cancelling, the name of this pin can also mean fastening belay/belaying |
#4465, aired 2004-01-23 | U.S. CITIES $400: This Kentucky city was founded in 1775 & named for a battle site in Massachusetts Lexington |
#4464, aired 2004-01-22 | WRITERS ON CAPE COD $200: (Sofia of the Clue Crew in Cape Cod, Massachusetts) In the years after leaving Walden Pond, he made four walking trips to Cape Cod, wishing to get a better view of the ocean (Henry David) Thoreau |
#4461, aired 2004-01-19 | A WHALE OF A CATEGORY $400: (Jimmy of the Clue Crew in Cape Cod, Massachusetts) Long used by whalers, this 3-word phrase lets others know a whale has been spotted Thar she blows! |
#4455, aired 2004-01-09 | GO FORTH ON AUGUST FOURTH $800: Aug. 4, 1892:
She allegedly axes her father & stepmother to death in Fall River, Massachusetts Lizzie Borden |
#4450, aired 2004-01-02 | 17th CENTURY NAMES $400: (Sarah of the Clue Crew presents from Provincetown, Massachusetts.) William Bradford's wife Dorothy died tragically in 1620 when she fell overboard here in Provincetown harbor, from this ship The Mayflower |
#4448, aired 2003-12-31 | BRANDS $4,600 (Daily Double): It's what the NE stands for in NECCO, a confectionery company headquartered in Massachusetts New England |
#4445, aired 2003-12-26 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES $600: Emily Dickinson's grandfather was one of the founders of this Massachusetts college Amherst |
#4438, aired 2003-12-17 | A WEEKEND AT THE CAPE $400: Chatham, Massachusetts is the point in Cape Cod that's usually compared to this body part the elbow |
#4422, aired 2003-11-25 | STATES BY COUNTY $800: Barnstable,
Nantucket,
Plymouth Massachusetts |
#4414, aired 2003-11-13 | HISTORIC NEW ENGLAND $1000: (Cheryl of the Clue Crew presents from Providence, Rhode Island) This rare Bible is the one John Elliot translated in the 1660s into this language, spoken by the Indians of Massachusetts Algonquian |
#4412, aired 2003-11-11 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES $800: Melvil Dewey (of Decimal System fame) graduated from this Massachusetts college named for a Lord Jeff Amherst |
#4412, aired 2003-11-11 | 19th CENTURY AMERICAN AUTHORS $1600: This "American Scholar" author settled in Concord, Massachusetts in 1834 Ralph Waldo Emerson |
#4411, aired 2003-11-10 | SCIENCE & NATURE $1,000 (Daily Double): (Jimmy of the Clue Crew at Cape Cod, Massachusetts) When lightning strikes the sand, it can melt & fuse it into a type of this, called fulgurite glass |
#4396, aired 2003-10-20 | THE GOODYEAR BLIMP $800: A winter visitor to Florida, or a Goodyear airship that stayed aloft for 11 days, going from Massachusetts to Florida via Africa the Snowbird |
#4395, aired 2003-10-17 | THE CIVIL WAR $600: This state's 54th, whose heroics are seen in the movie "Glory", was one of the first black regiments from the North Massachusetts |
#4386, aired 2003-10-06 | NATIONAL HISTORIC PARKS $600: Hawthorne's home is in the Massachusetts park named for one of these ready-in-a-moment soldiers a Minuteman |
#4378, aired 2003-09-24 | HOW LONG? $200: In 1620 it took this ship 66 days to sail from England to Massachusetts the Mayflower |
#4377, aired 2003-09-23 | STATES BY SCHOOL $400: Harvard University & Tufts University Massachusetts |
#4368, aired 2003-09-10 | HOME BOYS $200: Bay Staters Massachusetts |
#4366, aired 2003-09-08 | STAND BY YOUR BRAND $200: These popular jam cookies are said to be named for either a Massachusetts city or an English scientist Fig Newtons |
#4355, aired 2003-07-04 | DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE SIGNERS $1,000 (Daily Double): We all know John Hancock signed it, but how many of you know he did it representing this state Massachusetts |
#4353, aired 2003-07-02 | NAVAL VESSELS $400: The Massachusetts, this type of ship that sailed in WWII, was actually built in Quincy battleship |
#4350, aired 2003-06-27 | "G"EOGRAPHY $2000: FDR is among the famous alumni of the prep school in this Massachusetts town Groton |
#4340, aired 2003-06-13 | IT'S ALL ABOUT MONEY $600: The reverse of this state's quarter released in 2000 depicts the Minuteman statue & an outline of the state Massachusetts |
#4336, aired 2003-06-09 | "JUNIOR" COLLAGE $1000: It was started in 1919 as a collection of small, after-school business clubs in Massachusetts Junior Achievement |
#4333, aired 2003-06-04 | OH, GOOD GODDARD! $1600: Needing a place with clear skies, Goddard moved from Massachusetts to this spooky New Mexico town Roswell |
#4331, aired 2003-06-02 | ROCHESTER $400: Rochester in Plymouth County in this state is home to Witch Rock where witches were said to rise skyward Massachusetts |
#4329, aired 2003-05-29 | "C.C." SENOR! $400: This peninsula in southeastern Massachusetts is one of the prime tourist destinations in New England Cape Cod |
#4321, aired 2003-05-19 | POND CROSSERS $2000: This last name of British lord Jeffrey, who captured Montreal, is on a Massachusetts college Amherst |
#4309, aired 2003-05-01 | TV WORKPLACES $600: The title character on this NBC drama works for the Massachusetts State Coroner's Office Crossing Jordan |
#4303, aired 2003-04-23 | PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY ADDRESSES $600: Columbia Point, Boston, Massachusetts John F. Kennedy |
#4303, aired 2003-04-23 | HEIST-ERIA $1600: This duo seen here was executed in 1927 for robbery & murder at a Massachusetts factory in 1920 Sacco & Vanzetti |
#4295, aired 2003-04-11 | WAXING NOSTALGIC $400: This city's "Histeria Pass" will get you a discount to the Wax Museum of Witches and Seafarers Salem (Massachusetts) |
#4268, aired 2003-03-05 | SUPER BOWL BETS $1600: For Super Bowl XXXI, a Massachusetts mayor bet lobsters against the bratwurst of this state Wisconsin |
#4259, aired 2003-02-20 | PUBLICATIONS $1000: Published by the Massachusetts Medical Society, its roots go back to 1812 New England Journal of Medicine |
#4254, aired 2003-02-13 | OFFICIAL STATE THINGS $3,200 (Daily Double): The juice of this bog fruit is Massachusetts' state beverage cranberry |
#4252, aired 2003-02-11 | TALLEST, LONGEST, WIDEST, DEEPEST $800: One of the 3 states with 13 letters in their names (1 of 3) Massachusetts, North Carolina or South Carolina |
#4247, aired 2003-02-04 | SPORTS & FITNESS $1600: Appropriately, red, white & blue are the team colors of this NFL team based in Massachusetts New England Patriots |
#4244, aired 2003-01-30 | ORGANIZATIONS $2000: Its library & H.Q. in Plymouth, Massachusetts is on property once belonging to Pilgrim descendant Edward Winslow The Mayflower Society |
#4231, aired 2003-01-13 | "I" EXAM $1000: 2-word term for the laws passed by the British parliament in 1774 to punish dissidents in Massachusetts Intolerable Acts |
#4214, aired 2002-12-19 | BOSTON "T" PARTY $200: The state dog of Massachusetts is the "Boston" this terrier |
#4211, aired 2002-12-16 | POETRY $1000: Anne Sexton was acquainted with & influenced by this fellow Massachusetts-born suicidal female poet Sylvia Plath |
#4210, aired 2002-12-13 | THE MAINE EVENT $800: In 1820 Maine separated from this state to become the USA's 23rd state Massachusetts |
#4203, aired 2002-12-04 | PLYMOUTH COLONY $400: In 1691, after 71 years on its own, Plymouth became a part of this colony Massachusetts Bay |
#4199, aired 2002-11-28 | CIVIL WAR PEOPLE $400: William H. Carney, of the 54th Massachusetts Regiment, was the first black soldier honored with this medal the Congressional Medal of Honor |
#4190, aired 2002-11-15 | EARLY AMERICAN HISTORY $2000: Although it was a separate colony, New Hampshire shared a governor with this colony from 1669 to 1741 Massachusetts |
#4190, aired 2002-11-15 | STATE FACTS $2,200 (Daily Double): Of the 4 states called commonwealths, the 2 that are farthest south Kentucky & Virginia |
#4186, aired 2002-11-11 | FIRST LADIES $200: Born in Massachusetts, she was descended from the Quincy family on her mother's side Abigail Adams |
#4173, aired 2002-10-23 | '70s U.S. $1200: In 1970 Massachusetts introduced no-fault auto insurance & this state came up with no-fault divorce California |
#4172, aired 2002-10-22 | "MIS"QUOTES $2,000 (Daily Double): (Sofia of the Clue Crew at Ralph Waldo Emerson's house in Concord, Massachusetts) Emerson wrote his essays here, including the line "To be great is to be" this misunderstood |
#4169, aired 2002-10-17 | POLITICIANS $600: He's the U.S. representative from Massachusetts seen here Barney Frank |
#4161, aired 2002-10-07 | REMAKES $200: In 1957 a recreation of this ship made a recreation of its 17th century trip from England to Massachusetts the Mayflower |
#4158, aired 2002-10-02 | STATE THE COLLEGE $400: Skidmore,
Barnard,
Sarah Lawrence New York |
#4158, aired 2002-10-02 | STATE THE COLLEGE $800: Emerson,
Holy Cross,
Amherst Massachusetts |
#4150, aired 2002-09-20 | SCIENCE PRIZES $1600: An annual half-million-dollar prize for invention & innovation is given by MIT, the Massachusetts Institute of this Technology |
#4143, aired 2002-09-11 | TUTTI FRUITY $1600: This popular English pear was named for the Massachusetts man who introduced it to the U.S. Bartlett |
#4139, aired 2002-09-05 | THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION $400: The war began during Thomas Gage's tenure as the last British governor of this colony Massachusetts |
#4137, aired 2002-09-03 | INSPIRED CHARACTERS $600: (Sofia of the Clue Crew gives the clue from Louisa May Alcott's house in Concord, Massachusetts.) Here in the parlor in 1860, Anna Alcott, the model for this oldest March sister, married John Bridge Pratt Meg |
#4127, aired 2002-07-09 | CAPES $200: Barnstable, Massachusetts, including the village of Hyannis, is the largest city on this hook-shaped peninsula Cape Cod |
#4126, aired 2002-07-08 | 3-NAMED AUTHORS $400: When this "Paul Revere's Ride" author was born in what's now Portland, Maine, the city was part of Massachusetts Henry Wadsworth Longfellow |
#4110, aired 2002-06-14 | STATUARY HALL $800: Samuel Adams Massachusetts |
#4100, aired 2002-05-31 | POTPOURRI $400: (Sofia delivers the clue from Salem, Massachusetts.) In the era of the witch trials a male witch was called this, a far cry from L. Frank Baum wizard |
#4097, aired 2002-05-28 | STATE GATEWAYS $800: Logan International Massachusetts |
#4091, aired 2002-05-20 | CALLING ALL PAULS $2000: Massachusetts senator (1979 - 1985) & presidential hopeful (1992) Paul Tsongas |
#4090, aired 2002-05-17 | NEW ENGLAND $800: Nicknamed "The Pine Tree State", it became the 23rd state in 1820 after separating from Massachusetts Maine |
#4080, aired 2002-05-03 | KING ME! $2000: Born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Bhumibol Adulyadej grew up to become king of this country Thailand |
#4078, aired 2002-05-01 | LET THEM EAT CAKE $400: Despite its name this state dessert of Massachusetts is really a custard-filled cake Boston cream pie |
#4075, aired 2002-04-26 | MAKE MINE RARE $1600: Although rare due to disease, the American type of this tree is still the official tree of Massachusetts the elm |
#4071, aired 2002-04-22 | BLAME IT ON JOHN $600 (Daily Double): This man seen here
who died in 1793 is buried in Massachusetts'
Old Granary Burying Ground John Hancock |
#4068, aired 2002-04-17 | FRANKS & BEENS $1600: This Massachusetts congressman has been after the press for their "Gotcha" stories Barney Frank |
#4066, aired 2002-04-15 | KENTUCKY $1000: Kentucky is officially designated a commonwealth to honor this state which had owned the region Virginia |
#4056, aired 2002-04-01 | ENDS IN "ING" $1600: (Sofia of the Clue Crew presents from Salem, Massachusetts.) In 1692, Giles Cory had this type of engagement. It was the way he was executed
for refusing to cooperate
with the court pressing |
#4051, aired 2002-03-25 | COLONIAL TRADE $800: (Sofia of the Clue Crew is in Massachusetts.) A noted local product was this fish dried; remember, we're in Massachusetts cod |
#4045, aired 2002-03-15 | A DATE WITH HISTORY $1600: At Auburn, Massachusetts on March 16, 1926 this man launched his first successful liquid-fuel rocket Robert Goddard |
#4042, aired 2002-03-12 | PURPLE HEART WINNERS $800: A current senator from Massachusetts, this man earned a Silver Star, a Bronze Star & 3 Purple Hearts (John) Kerry |
#4031, aired 2002-02-25 | HARVARD UNIVERSITY $1600: To get to Boston from Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts you'll have to cross this river the Charles |
#4025, aired 2002-02-15 | 17th CENTURY AMERICA $400: After about 5 months in America, this ship left Plymouth, Massachusetts for England in April 1621 the Mayflower |
#4022, aired 2002-02-12 | AMERICAN LIT $400: (Sofia of the Clue Crew presents from Salem, Massachusetts.) This author once worked here at the Custom House in Salem & he wrote about it in his introduction to "The Scarlet Letter" Hawthorne |
#4020, aired 2002-02-08 | IT'S A FACT $200: Massachusetts Hall is the oldest surviving building at this oldest U.S. university Harvard University |
#4020, aired 2002-02-08 | THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION $1200: (Sarah of the Clue Crew presents from Concord, Massachusetts.) The Shot Heard Round the World was fired from this directional bridge as the Americans turned back the Redcoats the North Bridge |
#4017, aired 2002-02-05 | PLAY TIME $1200: (Sarah of the Clue Crew presents from the Witch Dungeon Museum in Salem, Massachusetts.) John Proctor & other characters in this 1953 play were based on real people in the Salem witch trials The Crucible |
#4008, aired 2002-01-23 | ON THE ROAD WITH JEOPARDY! $1600: In 1998 "Jeopardy!" shows 3261-3270 came from the capital of this New England commonwealth Massachusetts |
#4005, aired 2002-01-18 | U.S. STATES $200: It's nicknamed the "Baked Bean State" Massachusetts |
#3998, aired 2002-01-09 | STATE QUARTERS $400: The Massachusetts quarter has this "timely" guy on the back Minuteman |
#3990, aired 2001-12-28 | WOMEN IN HISTORY $400: Born in Weymouth, Massachusetts in 1744, she was wife of one President & the mother of another Abigail Adams |
#3982, aired 2001-12-18 | 17th CENTURY AMERICA $200 (Daily Double): In January 1636 this clergyman fled Massachusetts & settled in the Narragansett Bay area Roger Williams |
#3976, aired 2001-12-10 | THE ANDREW JACKSON 5 $1,000 (Daily Double): Jackson was the first U.S. president not born in either of these 2 states Virginia & Massachusetts |
#3972, aired 2001-12-04 | GO FISH $400: This state fish of Massachusetts is valued as a food & for its liver oil cod |
#3962, aired 2001-11-20 | I REPRESENT $300: Rep. Barney Frank Massachusetts |
#3962, aired 2001-11-20 | I REPRESENT $500: Rep. Patrick J. Kennedy Rhode Island |
#3954, aired 2001-11-08 | LICENSE PLATE MOTTOES $500: "Treasure the Chesapeake" Maryland |
#3938, aired 2001-10-17 | U.S. MEMORIALS $800: The fisherman's memorial seen here is in this Massachusetts city Gloucester |
#3931, aired 2001-10-08 | U.S. STATES $100: Its state dog is the Boston Terrier Massachusetts |
#3928, aired 2001-10-03 | AFTERMATH $1,500 (Daily Double): The Massachusetts General Court eventually annulled the convictions in this 1692 event the Salem Witch Trials |
#3925, aired 2001-09-28 | DR. SEUSS $200: The doctor was born before "the Great War", in this "Bay State"'s Springfield, in 1904 Massachusetts |
#3922, aired 2001-09-25 | LET'S CELEBRATE! $300: In 1621 Pilgrims celebrated the first traditional Thanksgiving in this Massachusetts colony Plymouth |
#3921, aired 2001-09-24 | U.S. POSTAL ABBREVIATIONS $800: MA Massachusetts |
#3918, aired 2001-09-19 | STATE CAPITALS $1000: Fall River, Massachusetts is part of the metropolitan area of this state capital Providence |
#3910, aired 2001-09-07 | "SEVEN" ON YOUR SIDE $800 (Daily Double): Located in Salem, Massachusetts, it's the literary inspiration seen here the House of the Seven Gables |
#3904, aired 2001-07-19 | BORDERLINE STATES $200: Massachusetts,
New Hampshire,
New York Vermont |
#3873, aired 2001-06-06 | HEAD FOR THE HILLS! $1,600 (Daily Double): The Massachusetts State House was built on this hill in the late 1790s Beacon Hill |
#3853, aired 2001-05-09 | CHURCH & STATE $400: The Old North Church, a beacon to worshippers since 1723, is in this state Massachusetts |
#3848, aired 2001-05-02 | '76ers $400: The musical "1776" includes the song "Sit Down, John", addressed to this gabby guy from Massachusetts John Adams |
#3847, aired 2001-05-01 | THEATRE $300: "Inappropriate" is a hit teen musical created at the DeSisto School in Stockbridge in this New England state Massachusetts |
#3838, aired 2001-04-18 | MISC. $300: Of a place in Massachusetts, a tuna salad or 2 glasses pressed together, what Sandwich glass is named for Place in Massachusetts |
#3829, aired 2001-04-05 | GOVERNORS AT STATEHOOD $200: John Hancock Massachusetts |
#3818, aired 2001-03-21 | LIBRARIES $200: The Chapin Library of Rare Books at Williams College in this state's Berkshire Hills has a 1787 copy of the Constitution Massachusetts |
#3808, aired 2001-03-07 | BIRTH OF A PRESIDENT $400: May 29, 1917 in Brookline, Massachusetts John F. Kennedy |
#3808, aired 2001-03-07 | BIRTH OF A PRESIDENT $600: June 12, 1924 in Milton, Massachusetts George (H.W.) Bush |
#3804, aired 2001-03-01 | 19th CENTURY AMERICA $400: In 1856 South Carolina Rep. Brooks gave Massachusetts Sen. Sumner a notorious beating with this a cane |
#3787, aired 2001-02-06 | TREASURE ISLAND $200: Homes list for well over $1 million on this valuable "Vineyard" island of Massachusetts Martha's Vineyard |
#3783, aired 2001-01-31 | U.S. CITIES $1000: This state's Medford in the Rogue River valley was named for Medford, Massachusetts Oregon |
#3780, aired 2001-01-26 | U.S. GEOGRAPHY $500 (Daily Double): The easternmost part of Rhode Island can't be reached by land without going through this state Massachusetts |
#3778, aired 2001-01-24 | U.S. CITIES $100: The 25 hospitals you can choose from in this city include the famous Massachusetts General Boston |
#3777, aired 2001-01-23 | CURRENT GOVERNORS $600: Frank Keating Oklahoma |
#3757, aired 2000-12-26 | MUSEUMS $400: There's a New England pirate museum in this Massachusetts city, as well as a witch museum Salem |
#3736, aired 2000-11-27 | U.S. CITY NICKNAMES $300: "The Witch City",
"The Witchcraft City" Salem, Massachusetts |
#3731, aired 2000-11-20 | THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION $400: More than 1000 British soldiers were killed or wounded in this June 17, 1775 battle in Massachusetts Bunker Hill |
#3722, aired 2000-11-07 | STATELY HOMES $800: You can visit the mansion of shipping magnate Jeremiah Lee in Marblehead in this state Massachusetts |
#3715, aired 2000-10-27 | HOSPITALS $400: This Harvard Med School teaching hospital is the oldest & largest general hospital in New England Massachusetts General Hospital |
#3710, aired 2000-10-20 | HEY, MIKEY! $200: Twice governor of Massachusetts, in 1988 he became a presidential candidate Michael Dukakis |
#3707, aired 2000-10-17 | GILBERT & SULLIVAN $400: This Cambridge, Massachusetts scientific university has a Gilbert & Sullivan players group MIT |
#3700, aired 2000-10-06 | YOU'RE HISTORY! $100: In December 1620, 3 months after leaving Plymouth, England, this ship arrived at Plymouth, Massachusetts the Mayflower |
#3695, aired 2000-09-29 | AT LAST COUNT $300: Undergrad tuition at this Cambridge "institute" is over $26,000; room, board & books add another $10,000 MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) |
#3675, aired 2000-07-21 | DONE THAT $300: Joshua Humphreys designed the U.S.S. Constellation as well as this famous ship now found in Massachusetts The Constitution ("Old Ironsides") |
#3673, aired 2000-07-19 | GETTING POSSESSIVE $400: You'll find this triangular island about 4 miles off the southeast coast of Massachusetts Martha's Vineyard |
#3672, aired 2000-07-18 | WORST OF THE FIRSTS $300: Pilgrim John Billington was the 1st man executed in America when he was hanged for murder in this city Sept. 30, 1630 Plymouth, Massachusetts |
#3660, aired 2000-06-30 | ARTHUR MILLER $600: "The Crucible" opens in 1692 in Reverend Parris' house in this Massachusetts town Salem |
#3655, aired 2000-06-23 | FUN FACTS ABOUT STATES & CAPITALS $600: One of the original 13, it's the only state whose name ends in 3 consonants Massachusetts |
#3652, aired 2000-06-20 | COMMUNITY COLLEGES $500: Cape Cod Community College is in Massachusetts; Cape Fear Community College is in this state North Carolina |
#3644, aired 2000-06-08 | VIRGINIA MILITARY INSTITUTE $200: VMI is located in this Virginia city named for the Massachusetts town where the Revolutionary War began Lexington |
#3639, aired 2000-06-01 | COASTAL COMMUNITIES $300: Gloucester in this state has been a fishing center for over 3 centuries Massachusetts |
#3638, aired 2000-05-31 | STATE FACTS $200: If this insect were to "fly away home", it might fly to Massachusetts, where it's the state insect a ladybug |
#3634, aired 2000-05-25 | SMITH, JOHN SMITH $200: In 1608 Smith was elected president of this colony that earlier in the year wanted to hang him Jamestown |
#3633, aired 2000-05-24 | AROUND THE USA $300: Minute Man National Historic Park is on Liberty Street in this city Concord, Massachusetts |
#3632, aired 2000-05-23 | LICENSE PLATE MOTTOS $2,000 (Daily Double): "Native America" Oklahoma |
#3629, aired 2000-05-18 | HOLIDAYS & OBSERVANCES $800: Boston's annual marathon takes place on this Massachusetts holiday, the third Monday in April Patriots Day |
#3622, aired 2000-05-09 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES $1,500 (Daily Double): Despite its name, it's located in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts & it's actually a university Boston College |
#3617, aired 2000-05-02 | TV SHOWS $500: In 1999 stockade humor made a short-lived comeback in "Thanks", a sitcom set in 1621 in this colony Plymouth Colony |
#3615, aired 2000-04-28 | "FALL" $500: Lizzie Borden was tried in this Massachusetts town Fall River |
#3601, aired 2000-04-10 | TRAINS $400: The Granite Railway was built in Massachusetts in 1826 to haul the granite needed to build this monument Bunker Hill Monument |
#3595, aired 2000-03-31 | LYING IN STATE $1,800 (Daily Double): Peter Faneuil Massachusetts |
#3593, aired 2000-03-29 | AMERICAN HISTORY $200: In 1639 the Court of Massachusetts ordered that "The Colledge...to bee built at Cambridg" be called this Harvard |
#3583, aired 2000-03-15 | BE A ROADS SCHOLAR $800: You'll find many embassies on this Washington, D.C. avenue bearing the name of the sixth state to join the Union Massachusetts Avenue |
#3560, aired 2000-02-11 | THIS OLD HAUNTED HOUSE $200: The Ward House in this Massachusetts city is haunted by the ghost of witchcraft victim Giles Cory Salem |
#3554, aired 2000-02-03 | AMERICAN HISTORY $100: In May 1692 this village's jails were filled with witchcraft suspects, eventually totaling 150 Salem, Massachusetts |
#3546, aired 2000-01-24 | 13-LETTER WORDS $400: This state's Middlesex County is its largest with a population of over 1.3 million Massachusetts |
#3536, aired 2000-01-10 | FRUIT LOOPS $100: This present state, scene of a famous 1621 Thanksgiving feast, is a leading cranberry producer Massachusetts |
#3532, aired 2000-01-04 | 1999 EUROPEAN STAMPS $200: An Isle of Man series honoring this group has "Night Fever", "Words" & "Massachusetts" stamps Bee Gees |
#3530, aired 1999-12-31 | 19th CENTURY AMERICA $400: In 1891 this sport got off to a bouncing start in Springfield, Massachusetts basketball |
#3529, aired 1999-12-30 | STUCK IN THE MIDDLE $1,000 (Daily Double): Staying in the U.S. & going by land, you can't go from Massachusetts to Maine without going through this state New Hampshire |
#3522, aired 1999-12-21 | U.S. TRAVEL $100: The Museum of Fine Arts in this Massachusetts capital is noted for its Asiatic collection Boston |
#3518, aired 1999-12-15 | THEY WENT TO SCHOOL BACK EAST $1000: I.M. Pei,
George Ellery Hale,
Murray Gell-Mann MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) |
#3507, aired 1999-11-30 | 1690s AMERICA $500: With the French & Indian War, some New Hampshire towns considered a re-annexation to this colony in March 1690 Massachusetts |
#3504, aired 1999-11-25 | THE PILGRIMS $1000: The first English child born in New England, he was born in December 1620 aboard the Mayflower off Massachusetts Peregrine White |
#3503, aired 1999-11-24 | HOLIDAYS & OBSERVANCES $100: On June 17 Suffolk County in this state celebrates Bunker Hill Day Massachusetts |
#3502, aired 1999-11-23 | U.S. STATES $300: Reflecting its Catholic heritage, this state has 64 parishes & no counties Louisiana |
#3493, aired 1999-11-10 | SENATORS BY STATE $200: Edward Kennedy,
John Kerry Massachusetts |
#3489, aired 1999-11-04 | THE FAMILY CAR $500: Name of the system that transmits to police in case of theft, introduced in Massachusetts in 1986 LoJack |
#3487, aired 1999-11-02 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES $600: "Pax et Lux" ("Peace and Light") is the motto of this university located in Medford, Massachusetts Tufts |
#3484, aired 1999-10-28 | HISTORIC AMERICA $100: The last execution for this offense in Salem, Massachusetts took place September 22, 1692 Witchcraft |
#3477, aired 1999-10-19 | 17th CENTURY AMERICA $300: In 1652, in defiance of English law, Massachusetts set up one of these producing the pine tree shilling Mint |
#3476, aired 1999-10-18 | HIGHWAYS & BYWAYS $100: Depictions of Pilgrim hats are featured on the signs for this Bay State's turnpike Massachusetts |
#3475, aired 1999-10-15 | PLACE NAME PEOPLE $300: This early settler of Charlestown, Massachusetts got a hill named for him; a June 1775 battle was fought there George Bunker |
#3468, aired 1999-10-06 | LITERARY LOCALES $400: In "Moby Dick", the Pequod sails from this "New" Massachusetts seaport New Bedford |
#3456, aired 1999-09-20 | STARBUCK $1,200 (Daily Double): Starbuck was a native of this Massachusetts island, like that man in the limerick Nantucket |
#3450, aired 1999-09-10 | STATE CAPITALS $100: Massachusetts Boston |
#3450, aired 1999-09-10 | IN THE COOKIE JAR $500: Nabisco is unsure if these cookies were named for a scientist or a town in Massachusetts Fig Newtons |
#3438, aired 1999-07-14 | QUOTATIONS $200: Thoreau wrote that this "is the bared and bended arm of Massachusetts: the shoulder is at Buzzards Bay" Cape Cod |
#3421, aired 1999-06-21 | ENTERTAINING CANADIANS $300: Joshua Jackson, a star of this Massachusetts-set WB series, is a Vancouver native Dawson's Creek |
#3413, aired 1999-06-09 | LEGENDS OF SPORTS $600: Sadly, this undefeated boxing legend from Brockton, Massachusetts died in a plane crash in 1969 Rocky Marciano |
#3407, aired 1999-06-01 | SISTER CITIES $300: These sister university cities in England & Massachusetts share a name Cambridge |
#3405, aired 1999-05-28 | STATE FLOWERS $200: This state flower of Massachusetts shares its name with the ship that brought the Pilgrims to the New World Mayflower |
#3392, aired 1999-05-11 | COLLEGE FOUNDERS $800: Universalist Charles, who wanted to put "a light on the hill" in Medford, Massachusetts Tufts |
#3392, aired 1999-05-11 | COLLEGE FOUNDERS $1,000 (Daily Double): Massachusetts-born merchant William Marsh, who made a fortune in Houston Rice |
#3387, aired 1999-05-04 | CLIFFS NOTES $200: Massachusetts man spends 2 years living alone in a cabin in the woods; writes book "Walden" |
#3373, aired 1999-04-14 | MUSICAL STATES $500: In 1967 the Bee Gees sang, "The lights all went out in" this state "the day I left her standing on her own" Massachusetts |
#3367, aired 1999-04-06 | PLANTS & TREES $800: This bog fruit, Vaccinium macrocarpon, was first cultivated in Massachusetts around 1820 Cranberry |
#3364, aired 1999-04-01 | FOOD $1,000 (Daily Double): It's the Whitman, Massachusetts inn where the chocolate chip cookie was created in the 1930s Toll House Inn |
#3357, aired 1999-03-23 | U.S. GOVERNORS $1000: In 1997 he quit as Massachusetts governor only to be denied the ambassadorship to Mexico William Weld |
#3343, aired 1999-03-03 | THE 50 STATES $500: 2 of the 4 states officially called commonwealths (2 of) Kentucky, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Virginia |
#3336, aired 1999-02-22 | THE ROAD TO MELVILLE $800: Herman bought the farm "Arrowhead" in Pittsfield, in these hills of western Massachusetts the Berkshires |
#3328, aired 1999-02-10 | HENRY JAMES' BOSTONIANS $200: In the novel, this cape is referred to as "The Italy, so to speak, of Massachusetts" Cape Cod |
#3323, aired 1999-02-03 | C IS FOR... $400: Cambridge, home of this school opened in Boston in 1865 by geologist William Barton Rogers MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) |
#3313, aired 1999-01-20 | MAIN STREET U.S.A. $600: The home of this poet who was out of the mainstream is at 280 Main St. in Amherst, Massachusetts Emily Dickinson |
#3285, aired 1998-12-11 | ONCE UPON A DECEMBER $300: A DAR chapter in Massachusetts has one of the chests from this December 16, 1773 event Boston Tea Party |
#3276, aired 1998-11-30 | ENDS IN "EE" $1000: This Massachusetts town was the birthplace of John Adams & John Hancock Braintree |
#3264, aired 1998-11-12 | 1820s AMERICA $100: Once a part of Massachusetts, it became the 23rd state in 1820 with Portland as its capital Maine |
#3264, aired 1998-11-12 | "NEW" ENGLAND $600: This Massachusetts city on Buzzards Bay was a major whaling port in the 19th century New Bedford |
#3264, aired 1998-11-12 | "NEW" ENGLAND $800: A popular cookie shares part of its name with this city that was originally part of Cambridge, Massachusetts Newton |
#3262, aired 1998-11-10 | THE MAYFLOWER $200: A replica of the Mayflower is docked on the waterfront of this Massachusetts city Plymouth |
#3262, aired 1998-11-10 | YANKEE INGENUITY $500: He launched the first liquid propellant rocket in 1926 at his Aunt Effie's Massachusetts farm Robert Goddard |
#3240, aired 1998-10-09 | 17th CENTURY AMERICA $200: It was signed November 21, 1620 in Provincetown Harbor, Massachusetts The Mayflower Compact |
#3240, aired 1998-10-09 | THE 50 STATES $1,500 (Daily Double): This state saw the birth of America's first hospital & first circulating library Pennsylvania |
#3238, aired 1998-10-07 | BUSINESS & INDUSTRY $200: Founded in 1933, this bookstore chain was named for the Massachusetts pond that inspired Thoreau Walden |
#3238, aired 1998-10-07 | JUDGES $1,000 (Daily Double): (Hi, I'm Melissa Joan Hart.) Of all the judges that presided over the witchcraft trials in this city, only one, Samuel Sewall, admitted his error Salem (Massachusetts) |
#3235, aired 1998-10-02 | COLLEGES, HITHER & YON $800: Of the schools known as the Seven Sisters, this one in Massachusetts is alphabetically last Wellesley |
#3224, aired 1998-09-17 | OLD FARMERS $600: Around 1870 he bought some farmland in Massachusetts & developed his famous potato there Luther Burbank |
#3202, aired 1998-06-30 | AMERICAN HODGEPODGE $400: Its state song is "The Old North State" North Carolina |
#3202, aired 1998-06-30 | INVENTORS $500: In 1893 these brothers made a trial run of their gasoline-powered auto in Springfield, Massachusetts Duryea brothers |
#3190, aired 1998-06-12 | CONSERVATION $500: After escaping from a lab in Massachusetts, this European moth spread & damaged trees in the Northeast the gypsy moth |
#3189, aired 1998-06-11 | WHEN STATES FIGHT $300: Maine split from this state in 1819 in protest of high taxes, poor roads & the distance to the capital Massachusetts |
#3180, aired 1998-05-29 | PRESIDENTIAL BURIAL PLACES $200: Quincy, Massachusetts John Quincy Adams |
#3167, aired 1998-05-12 | POET-POURRI $600: This "Mending Wall" poet & his wife, Elinor, were co-valedictorians at Lawrence High School in Massachusetts Robert Frost |
#3159, aired 1998-04-30 | PINPOINTS ON THE MAP $600: Once a whaling center, Edgartown is now a resort area on this Massachusetts island Martha's Vineyard |
#3150, aired 1998-04-17 | THE EAST COAST $100: The original of this painting seen here hangs in Abbot Hall in Marblehead, Massachusetts "Spirit of 1776" |
#3135, aired 1998-03-27 | YOU GO, GIRL! $2,000 (Daily Double): Except for a few short trips, she spent all of her 35 years in Massachusetts, almost all of it in Amherst Emily Dickinson |
#3129, aired 1998-03-19 | AFTER THEY LEFT OFFICE $400: In 1820 at age 85, he served as a delegate at Massachusetts' Constitutional Convention John Adams |
#3098, aired 1998-02-04 | 19th CENTURY AMERICA $100: It wasn't incorporated as a city until 1836; perhaps witchcraft was to blame... Salem, Massachusetts |
#3095, aired 1998-01-30 | "C" THE U.S.A. $400: Cambridge, England is on the Cam River; Cambridge, Massachusetts is on this river the Charles River |
#3089, aired 1998-01-22 | THE TYLER ADMINISTRATION $600: In June 1843 Tyler attended the dedication of this Revolutionary War monument in Charlestown, Massachusetts Bunker Hill Memorial |
#3076, aired 1998-01-05 | TRAVEL & TOURISM $600: Crow Haven Corner, a witchcraft shop, is owned by the daughter of this city's official witch Salem, Massachusetts |
#3064, aired 1997-12-18 | AMERICAN PEAKS $500: Mount Greylock in these "hills" is the highest peak in Massachusetts Berkshires |
#3056, aired 1997-12-08 | PARK IT HERE $500: This 48-acre tract in Massachusetts was set aside in 1634 as a "cow pasture & training field" Boston Common |
#3054, aired 1997-12-04 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES $100: Encarta says this Massachusetts school has the largest private endowment of any university in the world Harvard |
#3035, aired 1997-11-07 | THEME PARK FUN $400: Spookyworld, a scary theme park in Berlin, Massachusetts, is only open this one full month October |
#3034, aired 1997-11-06 | mini-mountains $400: A women's college in South Hadley, Massachusetts is named for this nearby 878' mount Mount Holyoke |
#3018, aired 1997-10-15 | PRESIDENTIAL BIRTHPLACES $300: May 29, 1917
in Brookline, Massachusetts John Kennedy |
#2995, aired 1997-09-12 | WOMEN ON THE MAP $200: We heard it through the grapevine that it's the largest island in Massachusetts Martha's Vineyard |
#2993, aired 1997-09-10 | BAY WATCHING $400: This Atlantic seaboard state is home to the popular resort area of Buzzards Bay Massachusetts |
#2978, aired 1997-07-09 | U.S.A. $500: The Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival is an annual event in this New England state Massachusetts |
#2976, aired 1997-07-07 | TRAVEL U.S.A. $600: Built in 1672, Vincent House in Edgartown is the oldest known house on this Massachusetts resort island Martha's Vineyard |
#2976, aired 1997-07-07 | HAIL TO THE CHIEF $800: They're the 2 presidents born in Braintree, Massachusetts John Adams & John Quincy Adams |
#2970, aired 1997-06-27 | ANNUAL EVENTS $600: On or about April 19, Maine & this other New England state celebrate Patriot's Day Massachusetts |
#2969, aired 1997-06-26 | U.S. CITIES $300: Located in the heart of Kentucky's Bluegrass Region, it was named for a Massachusetts city Lexington |
#2958, aired 1997-06-11 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES $500 (Daily Double): The Robert Frost Library is at this Massachusetts college co-founded by Emily Dickinson's grandfather Amherst |
#2946, aired 1997-05-26 | HISTORIC HOMES $300: The birthplace of this founder of the American Red Cross is now a museum in North Oxford, Massachusetts Clara Barton |
#2942, aired 1997-05-20 | OBSCURE OPERA & BALLET $200: In 1926 the Chicago Opera Co. presented Charles Cadman's "The Witch Of" this Massachusetts town Salem |
#2929, aired 1997-05-01 | MONEY $200: America's first of these opened in 1652 to make coins for the Massachusetts Bay colony mint |
#2929, aired 1997-05-01 | U.S. GEOGRAPHY $400: In area, this New England state roughly equals Vermont, N.H., Connecticut & Massachusetts combined Maine |
#2922, aired 1997-04-22 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES $200: This New England school is known as M.I.T. for short Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
#2920, aired 1997-04-18 | TRAVEL U.S.A. $100: Restaurants on this Massachusetts cape include the Impudent Oyster & Aesop's Tables Cape Cod |
#2920, aired 1997-04-18 | HAIL TO THE CHIEF $500: This first president from Massachusetts was called "The Colossus of Independence" John Adams |
#2914, aired 1997-04-10 | THE WHITE HOUSE $800: A sofa once owned by this Massachusetts orator is in the Green Room; speak of the devil.... Daniel Webster |
#2900, aired 1997-03-21 | AMERICAN MUSEUMS $500: If you're crazy about quilts, you'll enjoy the New England Quilt Museum in Lowell in this state Massachusetts |
#2898, aired 1997-03-19 | AMERICAN HISTORY $200: In November 1620 John Carver was elected the first governor of this colony Plymouth Colony |
#2896, aired 1997-03-17 | CAPES $400: This state's Cape Ann is the site of such resorts as Gloucester & Essex Massachusetts |
#2885, aired 1997-02-28 | U.S. GEOGRAPHY $300: 2 of this state's largest lakes are Quabbin Reservoir & Wachusett Reservoir near Worcester Massachusetts |
#2880, aired 1997-02-21 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES $600: The Artificial Intelligence Laboratory is located at this Boston-area "institute" MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) |
#2873, aired 1997-02-12 | ANNUAL EVENTS $400: Mashpee, Massachusetts holds one of these American Indian conferences every July Pow-Wow |
#2872, aired 1997-02-11 | U.S. CITY NICKNAMES $200: Among the sobriquets used for this city are "Witchcraft City" & the "Paradise of New England" Salem, Massachusetts |
#2871, aired 1997-02-10 | THE 1996 ELECTION $800: This Massachusetts senator defeated Governor William Weld to retain his U.S. Senate seat John Kerry |
#2858, aired 1997-01-22 | U.S.A. $400: Built in 1876, the Flying Horses Carousel on this Massachusetts island is a national historic landmark Martha's Vineyard |
#2853, aired 1997-01-15 | THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION $600: Americans lost this June 17, 1775 battle at Charlestown, Massachusetts because they ran out of ammunition Bunker Hill |
#2852, aired 1997-01-14 | U.S. CITIES $400: The Wax Museum of Witches and Seafarers opened in this New England city in 1993 Salem, Massachusetts |
#2852, aired 1997-01-14 | COLONIAL AMERICA $500 (Daily Double): The Penobscot Indians, whose homeland is in this state, first encountered Europeans in the early 1500s Maine |
#2850, aired 1997-01-10 | AMERICAN HISTORY $100: For their part in this 1770 Massachusetts riot, 2 soldiers were branded on the thumb Boston Massacre |
#2841, aired 1996-12-30 | CONDUCTORS $1,000 (Daily Double): After 1936 Serge Koussevitzky conducted the Berkshire Music Festival at Tanglewood in this state Massachusetts |
#2837, aired 1996-12-24 | MANSIONS $200 (Daily Double): You'll find the 1731 Adams Mansion in this Massachusetts city Quincy |
#2826, aired 1996-12-09 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES $800: In the 1850s this Massachusetts educator founded Antioch College & became its first president Horace Mann |
#2825, aired 1996-12-06 | ANNUAL EVENTS $500: The Tanglewood Music Festival is a summer highlight in Lenox in this New England state Massachusetts |
#2823, aired 1996-12-04 | 19th CENTURY AMERICA $600: A stirring speech by Daniel Webster marked the dedication of this monument at Charlestown, Massachusetts the Battle of Bunker Hill |
#2817, aired 1996-11-26 | 1796 $800: Born in Massachusetts in 1796, this educator helped create the U.S.A.'s 1st state board of education Horace Mann |
#2815, aired 1996-11-22 | PENNSYLVANIA $600: Although called a state, Pennsylvania is actually this, as are Kentucky, Massachusetts & Virginia Commonwealth |
#2808, aired 1996-11-13 | STATE CAPITALS $200: This Massachusetts capital is the most populous city in New England Boston |
#2777, aired 1996-10-01 | U.S. GEOGRAPHY $200: Bays in this state include Hingham, Dorchester & Quincy Massachusetts |
#2774, aired 1996-09-26 | STATE SYMBOLS $300: This insect may want to "fly away home" to Massachusetts, where it's the state insect a ladybug |
#2762, aired 1996-09-10 | IN THE NEWS $300: Worcester in this state declared itself birthplace of the yellow smiley face; Harvey Ball drew it there in 1963 Massachusetts |
#2750, aired 1996-07-12 | FAMOUS NAMES $800: In 1881 this Christian Science leader founded the Massachusetts Metaphysical College Mary Baker Eddy |
#2744, aired 1996-07-04 | THE SUPREME COURT $3,000 (Daily Double): Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. served 20 years on this state's Supreme Court, 1882-1902 Massachusetts |
#2742, aired 1996-07-02 | POTPOURRI $100: The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in this Massachusetts capital is housed at Fenway Court Boston |
#2735, aired 1996-06-21 | POETS & POETRY $400: This Longfellow poem was suggested by a smithy under a chestnut tree in Cambridge, Massachusetts "The Village Blacksmith" |
#2721, aired 1996-06-03 | THE PLYMOUTH COLONY $800: In 1691 the Plymouth Colony & other New England colonies were absorbed into this colony the Massachusetts Bay Colony |
#2718, aired 1996-05-29 | STATUES $600: Erected in 1923, "The Man at the Wheel" honors the Gloucester fishermen of this state Massachusetts |
#2716, aired 1996-05-27 | FAMOUS HOMES $200: Holmesdale in Pittsfield, Massachusetts Oliver Wendell Holmes |
#2710, aired 1996-05-17 | HISTORIC QUOTATIONS $200: In 1968 this Massachusetts senator said, "Like my brothers before me, I pick up a fallen standard" Edward Kennedy |
#2699, aired 1996-05-02 | SCHOOL DAYS $200: A 1789 Massachusetts law required grammar schools to teach this 3rd "R" with reading & writing arithmetic |
#2697, aired 1996-04-30 | U.S. GEOGRAPHY $200: Provincetown, where the Pilgrims first landed, is at the tip of this Massachusetts cape Cape Cod |
#2696, aired 1996-04-29 | THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION $4,000 (Daily Double): He was the first governor of the state of Massachusetts John Hancock |
#2693, aired 1996-04-24 | TRAVEL & TOURISM $200: The story of the Pilgrims is told by life-size figures in a wax museum in this Massachusetts town Plymouth |
#2690, aired 1996-04-19 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES $400: Holy Cross in Worcester in this state is the oldest Roman Catholic college in New England Massachusetts |
#2684, aired 1996-04-11 | U.S. GEOGRAPHY $500: This river for which a state is named drains much of Massachusetts' upland region the Connecticut River |
#2681, aired 1996-04-08 | 19th CENTURY AMERICA $200: The Tremont House, the first modern first-class hotel, opened in this Massachusetts city in 1829 Boston |
#2669, aired 1996-03-21 | MEDICINE $800: This medical magazine published in Waltham, Massachusetts was founded in 1812 The New England Journal of Medicine |
#2665, aired 1996-03-15 | CATHEDRALS & CHURCHES $600: Built in 1632, St. Luke's near Smithfield in this state is the USA's oldest church of English foundation Virginia |
#2662, aired 1996-03-12 | BAYS $200: Buzzards Bay is an inlet at the base of Cape Cod in this state Massachusetts |
#2655, aired 1996-03-01 | LIBRARIES $600: This presidential library in Dorchester, Massachusetts is administered by the National Archives the JFK Library |
#2646, aired 1996-02-19 | THE 1820s $800: After voting to separate from Massachusetts, it became a state in 1820 under the Missouri Compromise Maine |
#2645, aired 1996-02-16 | TRANSPORTATION $400: The Everett Turnpike links this New Hampshire capital with Massachusetts Concord |
#2637, aired 1996-02-06 | FAMOUS AMERICANS $1000: After serving as president of the Continental Congress, he was elected governor of Massachusetts John Hancock |
#2599, aired 1995-12-14 | CLUBS $100: Appropriately, the Sans-Souci Club of this Massachusetts city was known for its tea parties Boston |
#2595, aired 1995-12-08 | GOVERNMENT & POLITICS $200: Since 1987 Joseph P. Kennedy II has represented this state in the U.S. House Massachusetts |
#2590, aired 1995-12-01 | SUPREME COURT JUSTICES $6,000 (Daily Double): The Waltham, Massachusetts university named for him was founded in 1948, 7 years after is death Brandeis |
#2586, aired 1995-11-27 | POTPOURRI $1000: Elbridge Gerry was 1 of the 5 signers of the Declaration of Independence from this state Massachusetts |
#2584, aired 1995-11-23 | NATIONAL STATUARY HALL $100: This cousin of John Adams represents Massachusetts in the collection Samuel Adams |
#2578, aired 1995-11-15 | POLITICS $800: Beginning in 1975 this Democrat served as Massachusetts governor for 12 years Michael Dukakis |
#2577, aired 1995-11-14 | LITERATURE $400: Longfellow based his tales of this inn on the Red Horse Inn in Sudbury, Massachusetts Wayside Inn |
#2569, aired 1995-11-02 | "Q" ON THE MAP $300: This city contains the birthplaces of the second & sixth U.S. presidents Quincy (Massachusetts) |
#2569, aired 1995-11-02 | AMERICAN HISTORY $500: During this 1786-87 rebellion by debt-ridden Massachusetts farmers, about 40 men were killed Shays' Rebellion |
#2566, aired 1995-10-30 | COOKIES & CANDY $200: Created in 1930, these original chocolate chip cookies are named for a Massachusetts inn Toll House |
#2565, aired 1995-10-27 | POTPOURRI $200: The general society of this ship's descendants is headquartered in Plymouth, Massachusetts the Mayflower |
#2564, aired 1995-10-26 | 1966 $1,500 (Daily Double): Edward Brooke of this state became the first popularly elected Black U.S. senator Massachusetts |
#2559, aired 1995-10-19 | 19th CENTURY AMERICANS $600: Massachusetts State Senator Horace Mann helped set up the first state board of this in the U.S. education |
#2549, aired 1995-10-05 | BORN ON THE FOURTH OF JULY $1,000 (Daily Double): Nathaniel Hawthorne was born July 4, 1804 in this Massachusetts town Salem |
#2542, aired 1995-09-26 | STATE SYMBOLS $500: This state's official rock is the Roxbury pudding stone Massachusetts |
#2539, aired 1995-09-21 | NOTORIOUS $500: Murderer Albert DeSalvo, known by this nickname, was stabbed to death in a Massachusetts prison in 1973 the Boston Strangler |
#2526, aired 1995-09-04 | NEW ENGLAND HODGEPODGE $400: Anne Whitney, a self-taught artist from this state, sculpted the statue of Samuel Adams for the U.S. Capitol Massachusetts |
#2525, aired 1995-07-21 | 1800 $400: In 1800 Massachusetts became the first state to require voters to this before voting register |
#2520, aired 1995-07-14 | STATE EMBLEMS $100: It sounds like you'd find this state flower of Massachusetts on Plymouth Rock the mayflower |
#2518, aired 1995-07-12 | HOLIDAYS & OBSERVANCES $400: On June 17 Bunker Hill Day is celebrated in Suffolk County in this state Massachusetts |
#2512, aired 1995-07-04 | ARCHITECTURE $200: Henry Hobson Richardson designed this Massachusetts city's Trinity Church in the Romanesque style Boston |
#2508, aired 1995-06-28 | AMERICAN WHIGS $1000: As 1 of 3 Whig presidential candidates in 1836, Daniel Webster carried only this state Massachusetts |
#2506, aired 1995-06-26 | NEW ENGLAND TRIVIA $500: This state produces 99% of the USA's wild blueberries Maine |
#2501, aired 1995-06-19 | AMERICAN HISTORY $500: In 1630 the village of Shawmut, Massachusetts changed its name to this Boston |
#2493, aired 1995-06-07 | AMERICAN HISTORY $1,400 (Daily Double): This Massachusetts uprising ended in February 1787 after its leader fled the state Shays' Rebellion |
#2487, aired 1995-05-30 | AMERICAN HISTORY $600: John Carver, elected the first governor of this colony in November 1620, died the following April Plymouth Colony |
#2481, aired 1995-05-22 | FIRST LADIES $1000: Her son Thomas, born in 1772, became a chief justice in Massachusetts Abigail Adams |
#2476, aired 1995-05-15 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES $1,200 (Daily Double): Colleges in this state include Daniel Webster & Franklin Pierce New Hampshire |
#2471, aired 1995-05-08 | U.S.A. $300: In 1609 Henry Hudson explored the area of Sandy Hook Bay in what is now this state New Jersey |
#2471, aired 1995-05-08 | U.S.A. $500 (Daily Double): Its official nickname is "The Bay State" Massachusetts |
#2452, aired 1995-04-11 | THE UNITED STATES $400: The Concord Monitor & Foster's Daily Democrat are 2 of this state's leading newspapers New Hampshire |
#2445, aired 1995-03-31 | ESCAPES $400: In 1838 this black abolitionist & author escaped from slavery to New Bedford, Massachusetts Frederick Douglass |
#2444, aired 1995-03-30 | FOUNDERS $800: 1 of the 3 Plymouth colonists who founded Duxbury, Massachusetts John Alden, Miles Standish, William Brewster |
#2435, aired 1995-03-17 | U.S. GEOGRAPHY $200: Massachusetts' largest island, it lies just off Cape Cod Martha's Vineyard |
#2420, aired 1995-02-24 | 1885 $600: Chartered in 1880, Bryn Mawr College opened in this state in 1885 Pennsylvania |
#2410, aired 1995-02-10 | POETS $1,000 (Daily Double): In 1847 & 1848 she attended Mount Holyoke Female Seminary in South Hadley, Massachusetts (Emily) Dickinson |
#2407, aired 1995-02-07 | TRAVEL & TOURISM $200: A museum at Washington Square in this Massachusetts city depicts the witch trials of 1692 Salem |
#2404, aired 1995-02-02 | THE WALTZ $400: The waltz named for this capital of Massachusetts features an occasional dipping turn Boston |
#2400, aired 1995-01-27 | SPEAK OF THE DICKINSON $800: Emily spent her life in her father's house in this city, many of the years in self-imposed seclusion Amherst, Massachusetts |
#2393, aired 1995-01-18 | MUSIC $200: Stravinsky wrote his "Symphony of Psalms" for the 50th anniversary of this Massachusetts orchestra the Boston Symphony |
#2387, aired 1995-01-10 | FINAL RESTING PLACES $400: This poetess is buried in the family plot in West Cemetery, Amherst, Massachusetts Emily Dickinson |
#2383, aired 1995-01-04 | COOKING $300: This "colorful Massachusetts" bread can be steamed in a coffee can covered with aluminum foil (Boston) brown bread |
#2377, aired 1994-12-27 | JACQUELINE KENNEDY ONASSIS $200: In 1993 the Clintons visited Jackie on this Massachusetts island where she had a summer home Martha's Vineyard |
#2371, aired 1994-12-19 | TRAVEL & TOURISM $100: A replica of this ship is docked in Plymouth, Massachusetts the Mayflower |
#2369, aired 1994-12-15 | U.S. "C"ITIES $200: It's Massachusetts' "University City" Cambridge |
#2358, aired 1994-11-30 | POLITICIANS $400: In the 1950s this current Massachusetts senator was an end on the Harvard football team (Ted) Kennedy |
#2358, aired 1994-11-30 | 1909 $800: During the year this Austrian psychiatrist gave a series of lectures at Clark University in Massachusetts Sigmund Freud |
#2357, aired 1994-11-29 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES $1000: In 1993 this state university decided to retain its mascot, the Minuteman Massachusetts |
#2354, aired 1994-11-24 | SHORT STORIES $200: This author's 1835 story "Young Goodman Brown" is a tale of witchcraft in Salem, Massachusetts Nathaniel Hawthorne |
#2349, aired 1994-11-17 | 1988 $100: At the July 1988 Democratic National Convention this Massachusetts governor was nominated for president Michael Dukakis |
#2348, aired 1994-11-16 | AMERICAN HISTORY $200: In 1765 Dr. James Baker opened his first factory in Massachusetts to make this - how sweet! Chocolate |
#2348, aired 1994-11-16 | NOTORIOUS $500: A county courthouse in Dedham, Massachusetts was the site of this infamous 1921 trial The trial of Sacco & Vanzetti |
#2326, aired 1994-10-17 | FLOWERS $1000: The state flower of Massachusetts is the mayflower, aka the trailing type of this the arbutus |
#2324, aired 1994-10-13 | FIRST LADIES $400: She missed her husband's 1797 inauguration because she was nursing his sick mother in Massachusetts Abigail Adams |
#2322, aired 1994-10-11 | POLITICIANS $400: He was the Assistant D.A. of Suffolk County, Massachusetts from 1961-62, while his brother was president Ted Kennedy |
#2319, aired 1994-10-06 | AMERICAN LITERATURE $1000: He wrote "Mosses from an Old Manse" while living in a Massachusetts home called the Old Manse (Nathaniel) Hawthorne |
Lisa Johnston, a fourth and fifth grade reading and religion teacher from East Boston, Massachusetts
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"She teaches at a parish that's focus is to dream big....
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Kathy Casavant, a high school English teacher from Oxford, Massachusetts
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"Originally she wanted to do anything but teach. Well, she's been...
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Peg Pruitt, a retired teacher from Swansea, Massachusetts
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Season 23 1-time champion: $8,100 + $2,000. The official Jeopardy! website...
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Eli Barrieau, a high school history teacher from Hardwick, Massachusetts
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"He found working in a window factory a 'pain'. Now it's...
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Erin Haramoto, a lab instructor from Sunderland, Massachusetts
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Season 25 player (2008-11-26).
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John Michael Higgins, an actor from Boston, Massachusetts
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"An actor from Boston, Massachusetts, since 2018, he's hosted the popular...
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Tom Aquino, a lawyer from Boston, Massachusetts
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Season 20 player (2004-07-06). KJL game 25. Last name pronounced like...
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Kristina Lukach, a youth minister from Shrewsbury, Massachusetts
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Season 30 player (2013-12-23).
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Katie Nolan, a sports comedy host originally from Framingham, Massachusetts
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2023 Primetime Celebrity Jeopardy! 2nd runner-up: $100,000 for the Association for...
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Timothy Shuker-Haines, a high school history teacher from Williamstown, Massachusetts
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"He teaches at a small school where the students chop the...
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Tom Nichols, a professor originally from Chicopee, Massachusetts
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\"A five-time champion in 1994, he used his winnings for a...
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Alexandra Bicks, a high school ESL teacher from Cambridge, Massachusetts
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2019 Teachers Tournament quarterfinalist: $5,000. At the time of the Teachers...
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Lisa Spardel-Krol, an educational marketer from Watertown, Massachusetts
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Season 28 player (2011-12-30).
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Clement Doucette, a 12-year-old seventh grader from Hudson, Massachusetts
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"This science lover wants to do something in the medical field....
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B.J. Novak, an actor from Newton, Massachusetts
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"An actor from Newton, Massachusetts, during its nine-season run, he wrote,...
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Jay Ben Markson, an actor originally from Lakeville, Massachusetts
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Season 28 player (2012-03-29).
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Dan Pawson, a legislative aide from Boston, Massachusetts
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2024 Jeopardy! Invitational Tournament quarterfinalist: $5,000. 2014 Battle of the Decades...
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Patrick Antle, a graduate student in chemistry from Billerica, Massachusetts
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Season 28 1-time champion: $22,800 + $1,000.
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Sara Glidden, a college theater manager from West Roxbury, Massachusetts
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Season 19 2-time champion: $27,950 + $2,000. Johnny Gilbert misspoke and...
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Fran Frederick, a school counselor and member of the Air National Guard from West Springfield, Massachusetts
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Season 28 player (2012-06-05). Fran was a sergeant in the Air...
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Sue McClung, a project manager from Boston, Massachusetts
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Season 20 player (2004-06-01).
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Grace Acton, from Harvard, Massachusetts
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"This competitive gymnast is hoping to score a perfect 10 for...
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Lisa Boles, a multimedia producer from Marlborough, Massachusetts
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Season 24 player (2008-06-03).
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Kelly Isenor, a TV news producer from Boston, Massachusetts
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Season 23 2-time champion: $31,800 + $1,000. According to the official...
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MaryLou McKenna, a high school math teacher from Harwich, Massachusetts
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2015 Teachers Tournament quarterfinalist: $5,000. Marylou taught algebra at Barnstable High...
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Karen Spinale, a high school teacher from Duxbury, Massachusetts
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Season 22 player (2005-12-21). According to the official Jeopardy! web site,...
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Tom Ricketts, a chemical engineer from Halifax, Massachusetts
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Season 22 player (2006-04-12).
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Fritz Holznagel, a writer from Somerville, Massachusetts
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"He was a writer living in Oregon when he won the...
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Doug Meyer, an editor originally from Cambridge, Massachusetts
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Season 21 player (2005-06-09). Season 20 player (2004-03-11). Doug previously appeared...
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Surabhi Iyer, a ten-year-old from Franklin, Massachusetts
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"Her research scientist dad has inspired her to become a neuroscientist....
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Tricia McRae, a systems project manager from Hull, Massachusetts
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Season 21 player (2005-06-07).
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Mark Eckard, an entrepreneur from Bedford, Massachusetts
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"A 2001 5-time champion as a software designer, he has now...
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John Zhang, a freshman at MIT originally from Lexington, Kentucky
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"He won the 2003 Teen Tournament. Today he's a freshman at...
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Inez Friedman-Boyce, an attorney from Newton, Massachusetts
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Season 21 player (2005-01-04).
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David Jackman, a doctor from Boston, Massachusetts
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Season 21 player (2005-01-03).
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Chris Rodrigues, a personal banking representative from New Bedford, Massachusetts
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Season 26 3-time champion: $41,498 + $2,000. Last name pronounced like...
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Becki Norris, a science and math teacher from Quincy, Massachusetts
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Season 26 player (2010-03-09). Sister of Season 28 player Sean Norris....
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Neal Freyman, a ten-year-old from Longmeadow, Massachusetts
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"He's not sure recess counts as a subject, but if it...
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Andy Davis, a Chyron operator from South Boston, Massachusetts
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Season 25 2-time champion: $49,799 + $1,000. Andy Davis - A...
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Sanders Kleinfeld, a publishing technology specialist from Cambridge, Massachusetts
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Season 25 1-time champion: $26,597 + $2,000. Jeopardy! Message Board user...
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Elizabeth Galoozis, a reference librarian from Cambridge, Massachusetts
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Season 26 2-time champion: $38,801 + $2,000. Elizabeth Galoozis - A...
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Virginia Ogozalek, a professor emeritus from Shrewsbury, Massachusetts
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Season 27 player (2011-04-27).
Last name pronounced like "oh-go-ZAH-lek".
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Lance Higgins, a data quality consultant from Medway, Massachusetts
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Season 20 player (2004-04-12).
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Andrew Swan, an eighth grade English teacher from Watertown, Massachusetts
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Season 25 player (2009-05-01).
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Carl Saras, a quality engineer from Hopedale, Massachusetts
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Season 26 player (2010-04-23).
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Walter Evans, a park ranger from Boston, Massachusetts
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Season 24 player (2007-11-01).
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Erik Nelson, a grad student originally from Boston, Massachusetts
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2009 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000.
Season 25 4-time champion: $94,404 + $2,000.
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Joe Sosnoff, a sales coordinator from Holden, Massachusetts
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Season 23 player (2007-06-27).
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Kim Zarkin, a college professor originally from Rockland, Massachusetts
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Season 24 player (2007-10-01).
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David Haglund, a freelance writer originally from Belmont, Massachusetts
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Season 23 player (2007-04-10).
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Jimmy Miotto, an 11-year-old from Northborough, Massachusetts
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"He wants to be a Disney Imagineer and the president of...
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Ssezi Mukasa, a software engineer from Salem, Massachusetts
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Season 23 player (2007-06-05).
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Leigh King, an elementary school librarian from Worcester, Massachusetts
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Season 23 player (2007-03-23).
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Charlton Wilbur, a software developer from Holyoke, Massachusetts
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Season 23 player (2006-09-22).
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Patricia DiMaggio, a school registrar from Maynard, Massachusetts
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Season 22 1-time champion: $14,001 + $1,000. According to the official...
|
John O'Leary, a middle school history teacher from Walpole, Massachusetts
|
Season 24 player (2007-12-04).
|
Sean Gilsdorf, a college teacher from Amherst, Massachusetts
|
Season 23 player (2006-12-06).
|
Sandi Lin, an economic consultant from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 23 player (2007-07-06).
|
Tom Unsworth, a human resources director from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 1-time champion: $10,000. In his first game, Tom was...
|
Cary Williams, from Milton, Massachusetts
|
"She won an award in math, and a letter of commendation...
|
Leah Greenwald, an architect from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
"A winner of 5 games in 1988, she has since become...
|
Tom Bergeron, an Emmy Award-winning host from Dancing with the Stars
|
2009 Celebrity Jeopardy! player: $25,000 to the Muscular Dystrophy Association. "He's...
|
Ankit Gupta, a product manager from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 37 1-time champion: $13,600 + $1,000.
|
Marianne McGowan, a writing professor from Framingham, Massachusetts
|
Season 41 player (2024-09-27).
|
Andrea Asuaje, a podcast producer from Allston, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2021-11-29).
|
Sean Sweeney, a speech language pathologist from Dorchester, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2022-01-07).
|
Mike Dindoffer, a writer and teacher from Greenfield, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 player (2019-04-12).
|
Shari Meyer, a high school English teacher from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 player (2019-07-25).
|
Martha Jane, a comic originally from Sharon, Massachusetts
|
Season 9 player (1993-01-22).
|
Gerald Dudley, a pub quiz host and writer from Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 player (2018-11-05).
|
Jen Petro-Roy, a writer from Chelmsford, Massachusetts
|
Season 39 player (2023-03-31).
|
Matt Anderson, a musician from Malden, Massachusetts
|
Season 36 player (2019-12-27). Not to be confused with Season 19...
|
Doug Antoniazzi, a test systems analyst from Hyde Park, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 3-time champion: $35,999 + Jeopardy! electronic game from Tiger...
|
Al Lewis, a marketing consultant from Westing, Massachusetts
|
Season 3 player (1987-06-22).
|
Joanna Wu, a program manager from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2021-12-29).
|
Eliza Cope, an elementary school science teacher originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 37 player (2021-05-31).
|
Maryellen Cyr, a registered nurse from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 3 player (1987-06-15).
|
Steve Kamin, a physician originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 8 player (1991-10-15).
|
Pete Tremblay, a law student originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 4 4-time champion: $44,702.
|
Michael Lemkin, an investment advisor originally from Lowell, Massachusetts
|
Season 9 player (1993-07-08).
|
Anika Gregg, an operations manager from Belmont, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 player (2019-04-02).
|
Ashleigh McCord, a marine resource management specialist from Beverly, Massachusetts
|
Season 36 player (2020-05-01).
|
Susan Miner, a systems manager from Charlestown, Massachusetts
|
Season 11 player (1994-09-19).
|
Lindsay Garces, an insurance underwriter from East Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 34 player (2018-06-20).
Last name pronounced like "GAR-sess".
|
David Hall, a musician from Melrose, Massachusetts
|
Season 7 2-time co-champion: $14,800.
|
Kelly Proulx, a non-profit communications director from Billerica, Massachusetts
|
Season 40 1-time champion: $16,801 + $3,000.
|
Dennis Chase, a biotech project manager originally from Hyannis, Massachusetts
|
2023 Champions Wildcard 2nd runner-up: $25,000. Season 37 2-time champion: $48,400...
|
Prairie Rose Clayton, a taxonomist from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 player (2018-10-16).
|
Karen Locascio, an enrollment specialist from Dorchester, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 player (2019-03-20).
|
Elizabeth Hamilton, a secretary from Everett, Massachusetts
|
Season 11 player (1994-09-12).
|
Diana Hsu, a legal records assistant from Malden, Massachusetts
|
Season 34 2-time champion: $44,601 + $2,000. Diana won $50,000 on...
|
Steve Bright, an attorney from Norwell, Massachusetts
|
Season 37 player (2021-05-06).
|
Brian Heavey, an assistant IT manager from Middleborough, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 player (2019-03-18).
|
Kirsten Rose, a librarian from Williamstown, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 player (2019-07-11).
|
Josh Moss, a new small business owner from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 40 player (2024-05-31).
Son of Season 38 player Randy Moss.
|
John Graziano, a painter and artist from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 7 player (1991-04-10).
|
Tim Latham, an accountant from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 36 1-time champion: $21,200 + $2,000.
|
Gerard Simonette, a retired mental health professional from Northampton, Massachusetts
|
Season 34 player (2018-01-22).
|
Andrew Nelson, an antiquarian bookseller from New Bedford, Massachusetts
|
Season 30 1-time champion: $12,000 + $1,000.
|
Karen Anderson, an entrepreneur from Newburyport, Massachusetts
|
Season 7 player (1991-03-26). Not to be confused with Season 23...
|
Barb Fecteau, a high school librarian from Beverly, Massachusetts
|
2023 Second Chance competition 2nd runner-up: $10,000.
Season 37 player (2021-07-27).
|
Maggie Beazer, a student from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 player (2018-10-03).
|
Barb Fecteau, a high school librarian from Beverly, Massachusetts
|
2023 Second Chance competition 2nd runner-up: $10,000.
Season 37 player (2021-07-27).
|
Jaimie Carlson, a robotics scientist from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2021-12-01).
|
Alyson Murray, a server from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 30 player (2013-12-31).
|
Doug Dodson, a classical singer from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 3-time champion: $52,799 + $2,000.
|
David Kleinman, a student from Sharon, Massachusetts
|
Season 34 1-time champion: $31,600 + $2,000.
|
Wade Markel, an Army captain from Wellesley, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 player (1996-12-09).
Wade appeared on the show in uniform.
|
Mike Flanagan, a non-profit executive from Winchester, Massachusetts
|
Season 40 player (2024-06-13).
|
Alison Comey, a property manager from Brighton, Massachusetts
|
Season 3 player (1987-06-03).
|
Ken Wells, a medical student originally from Woburn, Massachusetts
|
Season 7 players (1991-04-05).
|
Joanna LeRoy, an attorney from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 36 player (2019-12-02).
|
John Voorhuis, a songwriter from Watertown, Massachusetts
|
Season 1 player (1985-04-08).
|
Israel Yarchun, a U.S. Air Force rescue coordinator originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 9 player (1992-12-21). Israel appeared as the result of a...
|
Andi Brown, a director of development from Marshfield, Massachusetts
|
Season 4 player (1988-03-09): Avita professional rowing machine w/electronic display.
|
Michelle Rosen, a Ph.D. candidate from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 34 1-time champion: $18,401 + $2,000.
|
Kelly Donohue, a bank examiner from Winthrop, Massachusetts
|
Season 37 3-time champion: $79,601 + $1,000.
|
Ellen Keane, a librarian from Stoneham, Massachusetts
|
Season 36 1-time champion: $11,200 + $1,000.
|
Lianne Schaffer, a piano teacher and musician from Newton, Massachusetts
|
Season 40 player (2024-04-23).
|
Amogha Tadimety, a biotech startup founder from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 40 player (2024-06-07).
|
Amanda Levreault, a production manager from Chicopee, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 player (2018-09-20).
|
Patrick Landers, a litigation attorney originally from Wakefield, Massachusetts
|
Season 11 player (1995-05-22).
|
Edmund Dente, a media specialist from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 11 player (1995-05-19).
|
Brennan Harkin, a business analyst from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2021-11-12).
|
Rachel Hirsch, a high school history teacher from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 30 player (2013-12-12).
|
Skyler Kelemen, a healthcare data analyst from Watertown, Massachusetts
|
Season 34 player (2018-05-31).
|
J.R. Mannetta, a dean of students from Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts
|
Season 36 player (2020-03-31).
|
Robert Poreda, a research geologist originally from Worcester, Massachusetts
|
Season 2 player (1986-03-28).
|
Dave Blum, a biomedical engineer from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 36 player (2019-11-20).
|
Josh Levit, a union organizer from Brighton, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 1-time champion: $8,199 + $2,000.
|
Joanna Defenderfer, a marketing director originally from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 9 player (1992-10-15).
|
Suzanne Woods, a law student originally from Wellesley, Massachusetts
|
Season 7 player (1991-04-18).
|
Mike Norris, a researcher and writer from Beverly, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2021-11-01).
|
Adam Smith, a law student from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 36 1-time champion: $21,200 + $1,000.
|
Virginia Cummings, a geriatrician from Randolph, Massachusetts
|
Season 34 2-time champion: $51,200 + $2,000.
|
Gary Palmer, a physician from Palm Springs, California
|
1986 Tournament of Champions semifinalist: $5,000. Season 2 4-time champion: $18,400....
|
Tracy Carlson, a marketing consultant and author from Newton, Massachusetts
|
Season 30 player (2013-11-29).
|
Tom Campo, a project manager from West Roxbury, Massachusetts
|
Season 34 player (2018-05-24).
|
Morgan Burns, an accountant from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 player (2019-02-04).
|
John Kyle Grady, a substitute teacher originally from Hyde Park, Massachusetts
|
Season 30 1-time champion: $28,801 + $2,000. John won $60,000 on...
|
Dhruv Gaur, a grad student from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
2024 Jeopardy! Invitational Tournament quarterfinalist: $5,000. 2019 Tournament of Champions semifinalist:...
|
Maya Sudarsana, a customer success manager from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2022-06-02).
|
Ryan Alcorn, a product manager originally from Needham, Massachusetts
|
Season 40 player (2024-05-27).
|
Justin Bourassa, a high school English teacher and coach from Medford, Massachusetts
|
Season 34 player (2017-12-20).
Last name pronounced like "bur-AH-sah".
|
David Bond, a classical guitarist originally from Subury, Massachusetts
|
Season 11 2-time champion: $26,000.
|
Dewi Harjanto, a computational biologist from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 36 player (2020-03-12).
First name pronounced like "DAY-wee".
|
Anthony Giordano, a plumber from Walpole, Massachusetts
|
Season 36 player (2019-10-29).
|
Matt Amodio, a postdoctoral researcher from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
2024 Jeopardy! Masters 6th place player: $50,000. 2023 Jeopardy! Masters 3rd...
|
Jill Regan, an auditor from Dedham, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 2-time champion: $51,602 + $1,000.
|
Matt Amodio, a post-doctoral researcher from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
2024 Jeopardy! Masters 6th place player: $50,000. 2023 Jeopardy! Masters 3rd...
|
Beve Byer, a controller from Framingham, Massachusetts
|
Season 3 player (1987-05-29).
First name pronounced like \"BEV\".
|
Mary Ellis, a senior information center consultant from Randolph, Massachusetts
|
Season 3 player (1987-07-06).
|
Ben Raphel, a healthcare data analyst from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 34 1-time champion: $25,201 + $1,000. Last name pronounced like...
|
Margaret Beaton, a health policy analyst from Shrewsbury, Massachusetts
|
Season 36 player (2020-03-04).
|
Rachel Dratch, an actor, writer, and podcast host originally from Lexington, Massachusetts
|
2023 Primetime Celebrity Jeopardy! semifinalist: $50,000 for City Harvest.
|
Aline Dolinh, a MFA candidate from Allston, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2021-10-14).
|
Mike Breen, a college professor originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 7 player (1991-06-03).
|
Terri Evans, a writer and editor from Natick, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 player (2019-06-11).
|
A.Z. Madonna, a music journalist from Malden, Massachusetts
|
Season 39 player (2022-12-08).
|
Susan Hill, a pet sitter from Halifax, Massachusetts
|
Season 36 player (2020-02-28).
|
Suzy Langevin, a social worker from Framingham, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 player (2019-01-14).
|
Mark Thompson, a real estate investor from Lexington, Massachusetts
|
Season 8 player (1991-12-30). Season 7 player (1990-10-01). Mark returned to...
|
Carolyn Ramm, an attorney from Andover, Massachusetts
|
Season 11 player (1994-10-05).
|
Kate Jovin, a social worker from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 34 1-time champion: $28,799 + $1,000.
|
Mark Thompson, a Realtor from Lexington, Massachusetts
|
Season 8 player (1991-12-28). Season 7 player (1990-10-01). Mark returned to...
|
Nietzchka Keene, a sound technician originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 2 player (1985-10-28).
|
Ron Hogan, a film student originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 10 player (1994-03-21).
|
Dave Kaplan, a retired mixed martial artist from Westford, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 player (2019-01-10).
|
Maddie Williams, a Ph.D. candidate originally from Cape Cod, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2021-10-07).
|
Teagan O'Sullivan, a first-year student at American University from Watertown, Massachusetts
|
"A high school freshman from Charlotte, North Carolina, when she became...
|
Philip Peloquin, a stockbroker originally from Webster, Massachusetts
|
Season 7 player (1991-02-08).
|
Brendan Roach, a policy researcher and advisor from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 2-time champion: $58,700 + $2,000.
|
Alli Ross, a sophomore at Worcester Polytechnic Institute from Shrewsbury, Massachusetts
|
2018 College Championship semifinalist: $10,000.
|
Brian Reidy, a naval aviator originally from Quincy, Massachusetts
|
Season 16 player (1999-12-31).
|
Emily Wood, an attorney from Waltham, Massachusetts
|
Season 30 player (2013-10-23).
|
Thomas Dai, a Ph.D. student from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2021-10-01).
|
Marie Morris, an assistant sports editor from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 10 player (1994-03-07).
|
Raghuvansh Ramaswamy, a quality engineer from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 36 player (2019-10-03).
|
Kevin Patterson, a management consultant from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 1-time champion: $20,001 + $1,000.
|
Hollie Schmidt, a medical researcher from Lexington, Massachusetts
|
Season 34 player (2018-07-23).
|
Tim Everhart, an attorney originally from Brockton, Massachusetts
|
Season 37 player (2021-03-03).
|
Michael Aronson, a graduate student from Needham, Massachusetts
|
Season 3 player (1987-05-08).
|
Alex Jumper, a graduate student from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 34 player (2017-11-20).
|
Colin Hodgin, a U.S. Army sergeant originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 7 player (1990-09-24).
|
Arielle Lipshaw, a business analyst from Arlington, Massachusetts
|
Season 34 player (2018-04-05). Arielle won $26,666 on The Chase on...
|
Abby Jungreis, an editor from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 9 player (1993-03-09).
Last name pronounced like \"YUNG-ryes\".
|
Melissa John-Guisti, a corporate attorney from Salisbury, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2021-09-21).
|
Ashley Chapman, a history teacher from West Roxbury, Massachusetts
|
Season 34 player (2018-04-03).
|
Gary Capra, a freelance sportscaster originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 1 player (1985-03-28).
|
Amanda Graves, a writer from Whitinsville, Massachusetts
|
Season 30 player (2013-10-09).
|
Katie Labarge, a high school science teacher from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
2020 Teachers Tournament semifinalist: $10,000.
|
Carrie Blazina, a multiplatform copy editor from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 player (2018-12-20).
|
Vinny Byju, a student from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 36 1-time champion: $3,399 + $1,000.
|
Bob Priser, a sales and service manager from Brookline, Massachusetts
|
Season 7 player (1990-09-21).
|
Carol Vasconcellos, a physician originally from Fall River, Massachusetts
|
Season 5 player (1989-03-20).
|
Michael Colton, a screenwriter originally from Newton, Massachusetts
|
Season 37 2-time champion: $17,603 + $2,000.
|
Mike Monahan, a telecommunications specialist from West Springfield, Massachusetts
|
Season 8 player (1992-03-16).
|
Jacky McGoldrick, a university administrator from Maynard, Massachusetts
|
Season 36 player (2019-09-23).
|
Elizabeth Hunter, a community theatre artistic director from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2021-09-14).
|
Jean Billingham, a systems consultant originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 3 player (1987-01-20).
|
Matthew Ott, an accountant originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
2024 Champions Wildcard play-in game player (2024-01-12).
Season 39 1-time champion: $23,197 + $2,000.
|
Kyle Bostian, a senior from University of Massachusetts
|
1989 College Championship semifinalist: $5,000.
|
Paige Hermansen, an English professor from Amherst, Massachusetts
|
Season 36 player (2020-02-05). Wyatt appeared on The Chase on 2022-05-24...
|
Tom Nichols, a professor originally from Chicopee, Massachusetts
|
2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Round 1 player: $5,000. 1994 Tournament...
|
Michael Bastedo, a policy analyst from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 player (1996-09-12).
|
Steve Grant, a sales consultant originally from Newton, Massachusetts
|
Season 1 3-time champion: $28,900.
|
Tom Nichols, a political science professor originally from Chicopee, Massachusetts
|
2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Round 1 player: $5,000. 1994 Tournament...
|
Tom Nichols, a professor originally from Chicopee, Massachusetts
|
2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Round 1 player: $5,000. 1994 Tournament...
|
Michael Vallely, a data analyst from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
2023 Second Chance competition semifinalist: $2,000.
Season 39 player (2023-06-12).
|
Libby Hsu, a lecturer and associate director from Revere, Massachusetts
|
Season 39 player (2023-02-10).
|
Mary Hetherington, a social worker from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 10 1-time champion: $7,300.
|
Zhe Lu, a software engineer from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2022-04-12). Husband of Season 17 1-time champion Kara...
|
Gavin Reardon, a Marine Corps officer originally from Cape Cod, Massachusetts
|
Season 9 player (1992-10-20).
|
Carolyn Oliver, a poet and writer from Worcester, Massachusetts
|
Season 36 player (2019-09-11).
|
Adam Levin, a sports information director from Ashland, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 player (2019-04-29). Adam’s final total of $53,999 in his...
|
Wes Hazard, a standup comic and storyteller from Stoughton, Massachusetts
|
Season 34 3-time champion: $51,196 + $2,000.
Wes appeared on The Chase on 2021-01-21.
|
Martha Swartz, an associate director originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 10 player (1994-02-07).
|
Bob Tzudiker, a writer originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 10 1-time champion: $11,300.
|
Laurie Goldman, a whale researcher from Provincetown, Massachusetts
|
Season 10 player (1994-02-01).
|
Abby Roughton, a lawyer from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 35 player (2018-11-21).
|
Nadège Aoki, a marine biology graduate student from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2022-03-23).
Name pronounced like "nah-DEHZH ah-OH-kee".
|
John LeDonne, a book buyer from Arlington, Massachusetts
|
2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Round 1 player: $5,000. 1991 Tournament...
|
Caitlin Gillooly, an e-commerce professional from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2022-03-22).
|
Jim Flowers, a computer scientist originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 3 player (1986-09-30).
|
Bryan Shilowich, a graduate student of neuroscience from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 29 player (2012-12-04).
|
Chris Byrne, an engineer originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 5 player (1988-12-30).
|
David Hankins, a college student from Minneapolis, Minnesota
|
Season 21 player (2004-11-30). David won $100,000 on Who Wants to...
|
Sonrisa Cooper, a project assistant from Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts
|
Season 29 1-time champion: $4,400 + $2,000.
|
Cara Harley, a medical writer from Charlestown, Massachusetts
|
Season 29 player (2012-11-29).
|
Anne Kenney Chaplin, a housing court judge from Truro, Massachusetts
|
Season 28 player (2011-09-22).
|
James Weldon, an emerging markets investor from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 37 player (2021-08-05). After being defeated by Matt Amodio, James...
|
Sherry Harley, a library assistant from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2003-03-10).
|
Steve Heisel, a psychiatrist from Brookline, Massachusetts
|
Season 7 player (1990-12-04).
|
Doug Lloyd, a law student from Charlton, Massachusetts
|
Season 28 1-time champion: $12,400 + $2,000.
JBoard user name: Doug527
|
Maureen O'Neil, an executive assistant from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
2022 Tournament of Champions semifinalist: $10,000
Season 38 4-time champion: $58,200 + $1,000.
|
Alex Liteplo, an educational publishing digital producer from Wakefield, Massachusetts
|
Season 28 player (2011-09-20).
Last name pronounced like "luh-TEP-low".
|
Rob O'Leary, an educational development specialist from Springfield, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2003-03-05).
|
Susan Cohen, an arts administrator from Belmont, Massachusetts
|
Season 28 player (2012-07-06).
|
Rebecca Bailey, a reference librarian from Reading, Massachusetts
|
Season 39 player (2023-04-27).
|
Dee Williams, a research associate from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 39 player (2023-01-27).
|
Adrian Alcalá, a software developer from Great Barrington, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2022-03-04).
|
Dale Phillips, a technical writer from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 9 player (1993-04-20).
|
Justin Sockett, a travel company manager from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 12 1-time champion: $9,601.
|
Mike Cayer, a law clerk from Malden, Massachusetts
|
Season 10 player (1993-12-30).
|
Vibin Kundukulam, a mechanical engineering student from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 25 player (2008-10-09).
|
Ellen Pratt, a strategic projects director from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2022-02-28).
|
Theresa Donohoe, an inventory planning analyst from Waltham, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2022-02-25).
|
Ellen Jacobs, a librarian from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 player (1997-01-30).
|
Emily Dumas, a project manager from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 34 player (2017-09-28). Emily co-hosts Large Marge Sent Us, a...
|
Gina Bernal, a romance novel editor from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 28 player (2011-12-13).
|
Kate Cell, a communications consultant from Shutesbury, Massachusetts
|
Season 25 player (2008-10-08).
|
Carla Bradford, a mom and part-time graduate student from Bedford, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2003-04-09).
|
Tim Wong, a landscape designer from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 28 player (2012-06-27).
|
Debbie Lerner, an attorney from Brookline, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2003-07-01).
|
Alison Stern-Dunyan, a writer and editor from Lexington, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2003-04-08).
|
Judy Cole, a data analyst from Concord, Massachusetts
|
Season 29 player (2013-06-21).
|
Meredith Lowmaster, a medical research technician from Quincy, Massachusetts
|
Season 29 1-time champion: $16,000 + $1,000.
|
Kerri O'Neill, a sales representative from Peabody, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2003-04-04).
|
Aniket Dehadrai, a senior at M.I.T. in Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
2022 National College Championship quarterfinalist: $10,000. Aniket was majoring in chemistry...
|
Nancy Jankowiak, a program manager from Woburn, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2003-06-26).
|
Mike Lease, a computer programmer from Chelmsford, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 1-time champion: $14,801.
|
David Gard, a retail horticulturalist from Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts
|
2013 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000.
Season 28 4-time champion: $84,700 + $1,000.
|
Meg O'Hare, a product manager from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 37 player (2021-07-19).
|
John Eskew, a software engineer from Allston, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2003-04-02).
|
Karawan Meade, a mom and tutor from Wakefield, Massachusetts
|
Season 27 player (2011-07-18).
|
Sharla Zwirek, an editorial manager from Medway, Massachusetts
|
Season 28 player (2012-03-16).
|
Donna Lee DePrille, a professional musician from Westfield, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2003-04-01).
|
Margaret Swanson, a graduate student of architecture from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 28 3-time champion: $48,000 + $1,000.
JBoard user name: mswanson
|
Dan Pawson, a legislative aide from Boston, Massachusetts
|
2024 Jeopardy! Invitational Tournament quarterfinalist: $5,000. 2014 Battle of the Decades...
|
Martha Warren, an opera singer and voice teacher from Boxborough, Massachusetts
|
Season 29 player (2012-10-09).
|
Suzanne Judson-Whitehouse, an education program director from Greenfield, Massachusetts
|
Season 28 player (2011-12-02).
|
Kiran Kedlaya, a math professor originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 28 1-time champion: $30,801 + $2,000.
|
Peter O'Malley, a writer and teacher from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 1-time champion: $7,600 + $2,000.
|
Stephanie Pakula, an aerospace engineer from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 39 player (2023-01-17).
|
Eugene Chuang, a structural engineer from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 29 player (2013-06-18).
|
Sara Hathaway, a regional planner from Nantucket, Massachusetts
|
Season 12 player (1995-10-19).
|
Ray Stoddard, a computer programmer from Shrewsbury, Massachusetts
|
Season 4 player (1987-11-23).
|
Lara Owens, a middle school teacher from Amesbury, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2022-02-15).
First name pronounced like "LAIR-uh".
|
Freya Wolke, a marketing research manager from Newton, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2003-03-25).
|
Sean McGuire, an automotive service advisor from Plainville, Massachusetts
|
Season 28 player (2011-11-24).
|
Donna Corbett, an office manager from Plymouth, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2003-03-24).
|
Angela Gelineau, a project manager consultant from Franklin, Massachusetts
|
Season 37 player (2021-07-14).
|
Erik Nelson, a graduate student from Boston, Massachusetts
|
2009 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000.
Season 25 4-time champion: $94,404 + $2,000.
|
Liz Feltner, a senior at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts
|
2022 National College Championship 2nd runner-up: $50,000. Liz was majoring in...
|
Tom Welch, an accountant originally from Bedford, Massachusetts
|
Season 12 2-time champion: $27,412.
|
Kevin Leonard, a lawyer originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 11 player (1995-06-28). Not to be confused with Season 11...
|
Sandy Silk, a certified financial planner originally from Fall River, Massachusetts
|
Season 10 2-time champion: $15,800.
|
Andre Green, a data analyst from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 29 1-time champion: $25,200 + $1,000.
|
Alex McNeil, a court administrator from Newton, Massachusetts
|
Season 11 1-time champion: $9,000. Alex became a co-champion in his...
|
Karan Takhar, a senior from North Attleborough, Massachusetts
|
2008-B Teen Tournament semifinalist: $10,000. First name pronounced like "KUR-run". Jeopardy...
|
Susie Macksey, a stand-up comic from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 9 3-time champion: $27,100. Susie won $1,050 on Win Ben...
|
David Gard, a retail horticulturist from Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts
|
2013 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000.
Season 28 4-time champion: $84,700 + $1,000.
|
Neha Seshadri, a senior at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
2022 National College Championship semifinalist: $20,000. Neha was majoring in economics....
|
Mikalen Howe, a law student from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2003-04-24).
|
Joey Kornman, a junior at Brandeis University in Waltham, Massachusetts
|
2022 National College Championship semifinalist: $20,000. Joey was majoring in economics...
|
Brendan Sargent, a small business owner originally from Worcester, Massachusetts
|
2023 Champions Wildcard quarterfinalist: $5,000. Season 37 1-time champion: $7,600 +...
|
Brendan Sargent, a community organizer originally from Worcester, Massachusetts
|
2023 Champions Wildcard quarterfinalist: $5,000. Season 37 1-time champion: $7,600 +...
|
Cal Mason, a lawyer from Arlington, Massachusetts
|
Season 29 player (2013-07-19).
|
Joon Pahk, a college physics teacher from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
2011 Tournament of Champions semifinalist: $10,000.
Season 28 7-time champion: $199,000 + $2,000.
JBoard user name: jpahk
|
Daphne Moulton, a finance administrator from Lakeville, Massachusetts
|
Season 28 player (2012-05-29).
|
Gerry Waggett, a writer from Dorchester, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 2-time champion: $44,900 + $1,000.
|
Berek Marcus, a video game quality assurance tester from Northborough, Massachusetts
|
Season 29 1-time champion: $25,199 + $1,000.
Berek died 2020-11-16.
JBoard user name: beardedtoyman
|
Tim Courchaine, a fund administration manager from Everett, Massachusetts
|
Season 29 player (2013-01-14).
|
Alex Johnson, an actor and theater intern originally from Danvers, Massachusetts
|
Season 28 player (2011-10-27). Not to be confused with 2012 Kids...
|
Elizabeth McCullough, a freelance researcher and administrative assistant from Lowell, Massachusetts
|
Season 29 player (2013-05-28).
|
Gary Palmer, a physician from Palm Springs, California
|
1986 Tournament of Champions semifinalist: $5,000. Season 2 4-time champion: $18,400....
|
Catherine Radford, a property manager from Charlestown, Massachusetts
|
Season 29 player (2013-05-24).
|
Sue Adams, a software developer from North Weymouth, Massachusetts
|
Season 39 player (2022-09-26).
|
Abby Fisher, a professional volunteer from Belmont, Massachusetts
|
Season 29 player (2013-03-21).
|
Molly Mastantuono, a director of university communications from Natick, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2022-02-04).
|
Catherine Muldoon, a graduate student from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 25 player (2008-11-03).
|
Sheila Balch, an international dog show judge from Monterey, Massachusetts
|
Season 2 player (1986-04-08). Sheila won on Jeopardy! in the 1970s....
|
Emily Kelly, a university librarian from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 28 player (2012-01-27).
|
Ben Sloat, an artist and art professor from Brookline, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2022-02-02).
|
Sean McShane, a tour guide from South Boston, Massachusetts
|
2024 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000. Season 39 3-time champion: $80,401...
|
Toby Crew, a commercial pilot from Natick, Massachusetts
|
Season 29 player (2013-07-12).
|
Tristan Snell, a patent litigator from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 25 player (2008-10-29).
|
Sarah Shemkus, a freelance writer from Manchester, Massachusetts
|
Season 29 player (2012-12-31).
|
Ben Sack, an Internet entrepreneur from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 27 player (2011-06-10). Ben wrote about "Identifying Competitive Advantage in...
|
Bob Mahoney, a public affairs officer originally from Melrose, Massachusetts
|
Season 6 player[?] (1990-04-13).
|
Ed Bryant, a lawyer from Springfield, Massachusetts
|
Season 8 1-time champion: $11,401.
|
Spencer Pace, a store operations associate originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 37 player (2021-06-28).
|
Fiona Power, a registered nurse from South Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 10 1-time champion: $2,198.
|
Liz Good, a freelance editor from Brockton, Massachusetts
|
Season 28 player (2011-10-13).
|
Juliana Marmon, a pediatrician from Concord, Massachusetts
|
Season 39 player (2022-09-20).
|
Anjali Tripathi, a senior from MIT
|
"Math and science were her favorite subjects in seventh grade. We're...
|
Amal Dorai, a product manager originally from Lexington, Massachusetts
|
2023 Champions Wildcard quarterfinalist: $5,000.
Season 37 2-time champion: $43,200 + $2,000.
|
Kathy Lague, a telecommunications consultant from Sudbury, Massachusetts
|
Season 25 player (2005-10-23).
Last name pronounced like "LAY-gyoo".
|
Steve Shimberg, an insurance agent from Melrose, Massachusetts
|
Season 12 player (1996-04-18).
|
Tim Paine, a writer originally from Springfield, Massachusetts
|
Season 9 player (1993-05-27).
|
Brennan Bushee, a software developer from Malden, Massachusetts
|
2015 Tournament of Champions semifinalist: $10,000.
Season 31 5-time champion: $126,404 + $2,000.
|
Brian Donahue, a research scientist originally from Wellesley, Massachusetts
|
Season 9 2-time champion: $12,398.
|
Sam Oglesby, a software support rep from Wilmington, Massachusetts
|
Season 33 player (2017-02-27).
|
Patrick Hume, a project manager originally from Stoneham, Massachusetts
|
2023 Champions Wildcard quarterfinalist: $5,000.
Season 37 3-time champion: $60,500 + $2,000.
|
LeeAnn Plona, a 7th grade teacher from Woburn, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2003-07-04).
|
Alistair Bell, a computer chip designer from Berlin, Massachusetts
|
Season 29 3-time champion: $56,800 + $2,000. JBoard user name: ThreeIfByAir...
|
Jorge Quiñones, a front end web developer from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2022-01-17).
|
Rachel Ostrow, a full-time parent from Arlington, Massachusetts
|
Season 38 player (2022-01-14).
|
Erin McLean, a sophomore from Boston University from Danvers, Massachusetts
|
2011 Tournament of Champions wildcard semifinalist: $10,000. 2010-B College Championship winner:...
|
Erin McLean, a junior at Boston University from Danvers, Massachusetts
|
2011 Tournament of Champions wildcard semifinalist: $10,000. 2010-B College Championship winner:...
|
Mike Barrett, a cashier and writer from Medford, Massachusetts
|
Season 32 1-time champion: $20,801 + $2,000.
JBoard user name: jeopardymike
|
Eric Fleury, a professor of political science from Worcester, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 player (2015-04-24).
|
Matt Collins, a graduate student in economic policy from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 28 player (2012-07-16).
|
Dan Weber, a legislative aide from Charlestown, Massachusetts
|
Season 29 player (2013-07-02).
|
Christine Qualey, a retired teacher from Abington, Massachusetts
|
Season 32 player (2015-11-02).
|
Joon Pahk, a college physics teacher from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
2011 Tournament of Champions semifinalist: $10,000.
Season 28 7-time champion: $199,000 + $2,000.
JBoard user name: jpahk
|
Michael Brady, a user experience designer from Norwood, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 2-time champion: $33,602 + $2,000.
|
Evan Nolan, a contract attorney from Winchester, Massachusetts
|
Season 28 player (2012-04-17).
|
Marilyn Muller, a social worker from Beverly, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2003-06-09).
|
Joe Shipman, a mathematical consultant from Melrose, Massachusetts
|
Season 7 player (1990-11-26).
|
Will Austin, an undergraduate student from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 player (1999-06-08).
|
Hanley Baxter, a research analyst from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 2-time champion: $44,202.
|
Erin Steinhart, a clinical research coordinator originally from Worcester, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 player (2015-04-16).
|
Laurie MacDougall, a cancer registrar originally from Medford, Massachusetts
|
Season 32 3-time champion: $78,000 + $2,000.
|
Rosanna Cavallaro, a law professor from Brookline, Massachusetts
|
Season 23 player (2007-02-28).
|
Shannon Poole, a customer support specialist from North Attleboro, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 player (1999-04-26).
|
Stacy Layton, a business strategist from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 30 player (2014-06-05).
|
Brenna McGowan, a financial services consultant from Holliston, Massachusetts
|
Season 20 player (2003-12-31).
|
Eleanor McGourty, a publications coordinator from Milton, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2003-06-03).
|
Elin Gaynor, a secretarial school teacher from Chicopee, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 player (1997-05-26).
|
Maria Valgenti, an administrative assistant from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 player (1999-04-21).
|
Seale Pylate, a law student from Brighton, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 player (1999-06-02).
|
Larry Goldberg, a lawyer from Springfield, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2002-09-11).
|
Franklin Leonard, a student from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 player (1999-07-13).
|
Amy Winograd Friedman, a business librarian originally from Lexington, Massachusetts
|
Season 5 1-time champion: $7,201
|
Katie Hamill, a lawyer from Arlington, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 1-time champion: $12,800 + $1,000.
|
Avishai Gebler, a rabbinical student originally from Sharon, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 1-time champion: $25,200 + $2,000.
|
Brian Loughnane, an investment operations manager from Scituate, Massachusetts
|
Season 30 1-time champion: $22,600 + $2,000. Last name pronounced like...
|
Robin Travers, a dermatologist from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 player (1999-04-16).
Sister of Season 15 player Karin Travers.
|
Hope Weinman, an administrative assistant from Marshfield, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2003-05-27).
|
Eileen Tremblay, a marketing specialist from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 player (1999-05-26.)
|
Ed Clarke, a special education teacher from Mansfield, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 player (1999-04-15).
|
Michan Connor, a graduate student originally from Sutton, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2002-10-15).
|
Anne Hand, a nonprofit program manager originally from Acton, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 player (2014-12-17).
|
Evan Bick, a graduate student in psychology from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 player (2015-04-07). Evan won $70,000 of a $210,000 jackpot...
|
Christie Whitman, a former governor from New Jersey
|
"She was New Jersey's first woman governor, and later became administrator...
|
Rick Doyon, a higher education administrator from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 32 player (2016-06-10).
|
Ruth Doucette, a protocol systems coordinator from Reading, Massachusetts
|
Season 24 player (2008-05-21).
|
James Wu, a store manager from Medford, Massachusetts
|
Season 16 player (1999-09-20).
|
Maryann Correll, a research scientist from Sterling, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2003-05-21).
|
Len Krisak, an editor from Newton, Massachusetts
|
1995 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $1,000.
Season 12 4-time champion: $43,399.
|
Heidi Wakeman, a teacher assistant from Gloucester, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 player (2002-04-23).
|
Ethan Rasiel, a consultant originally from Marblehead, Massachusetts
|
Season 9 player (1992-11-23)
|
Tom Gould, a software developer from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 player (2002-07-01). Not to be confused with Season 15...
|
Robert Arrowood, a former realtor from Provincetown, Massachusetts
|
Season 32 1-time champion: $25,500 + $2,000.
|
Jeanne Kaiser, a law professor from Springfield, Massachusetts
|
Season 30 player (2014-05-27).
|
Laura Weiner, a customer service representaive from Quincy, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 player (2015-03-26).
|
Amy Ramsay, a program director from Medford, Massachusetts
|
Season 33 player (2016-09-15).
|
Karen Baptiste, a project manager from Andover, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 player (1999-04-02).
|
Miriam Kadansky, a research manager from Westford, Massachusetts
|
Season 20 player (2003-12-15).
|
Kate Martin, a researcher and editor from New Bedford, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2002-10-08).
|
Scott Duquette, a junior from South Hamilton, Massachusetts
|
1999-B Teen Tournament quarterfinalist: $2,500.
16 at the time of the Teen Tournament.
|
Jason Schneiderman, an editor from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2002-10-08).
|
Amanda Harvey, an arts administrator from Newton, Massachusetts
|
Season 33 player (2017-02-01).
|
Peter McGillicuddy, a human resources director from Holliston, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 2-time champion: $18,799 + $1,000.
|
Gautam Mukunda, a professor from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 1-time champion: $24,401 + $1,000.
First name pronounced like "GO-thum".
|
Karin Travers, an HIV research scientist from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 player (1999-06-24).
Sister of Season 15 player Robin Travers.
|
Judy Flanagan, an attorney from Lynn, Massachusetts
|
Season 5 player (1989-04-03).
|
Loren Lee Chen, a basketball podcaster from West Newton, Massachusetts
|
Season 33 2-time champion: $36,038 + $1,000.
|
Kate Hoffman, a corporate librarian from East Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 30 player (2014-05-20).
|
Irene Brockman, a graduate student in chemical engineering from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 player (2015-03-17).
|
Elayna Kotsaftis, a treasury associate from Natick, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2003-05-23).
|
Rebecca Jacobs, an administrator originally from Quincy, Massachusetts
|
Season 9 player (1993-06-29).
|
John Byrne, a student affairs director from Watertown, Massachusetts
|
Season 24 player (2008-03-24).
|
Janet Byrne, an accounting manager from Mansfield, Massachusetts
|
Season 16 player (2000-02-28).
|
Hugh McElaney, a U.S. Air Force contract negotiator from Upton, Massachusetts
|
Season 5 1-time champion: $9,401.
|
Brian Clouse, a design engineer from Saugus, Massachusetts
|
Season 12 player (1996-06-27). Brian won $32,000 on Who Wants to...
|
Ben Chaput, a water service inspector from Lowell, Massachusetts
|
Season 24 player (2008-02-07).
|
Len Krisak, an editor from Newton, Massachusetts
|
1995 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $1,000.
Season 12 4-time champion: $43,399.
|
Beth Slattery, a college admissions officer originally from Brockton, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 player (1999-03-26).
|
Norah Piehl, a freelance writer and permissions editor from Brookline, Massachusetts
|
Season 24 player (2008-04-10).
Jeopardy! Message Board user name: PineapplePrincess
|
George Hicks, a law student from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 1-time champion: $21,998 + $1,000.
|
Linda Ferrazzara, a network administrator from Randolph, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 player (1999-03-19).
|
Arianna Kelly, a law student from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 24 player (2008-01-30). Season 24 player (2008-07-08). Sister of Season...
|
Joe Bartolomeo, a professor and associate dean from Florence, Massachusetts
|
Season 33 2-time champion: $36,500 + $2,000.
|
Jen Jabaily Blackburn, an academic assistant from Northampton, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 1-time champion: $19,700 + $2,000.
|
Karen Lempert, a librarian from Walpole, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 1-time champion: $19,200.
|
S.E. Cupp, a political commentator from CNN, New York Daily News, and Glamour
|
"She writes for the New York Daily News, is a contributor...
|
Bobby O'Neill, a senior fraud investigator from Andover, Massachusetts
|
Season 32 player (2015-09-17).
|
Carol Ruggiero, a teacher from Lynn Massachusetts
|
Season 6 player (1989-10-20): Lloyd Flanders All-Weather wicker patio furniture +...
|
Scott Candage, an internet sports columnist from Fall River, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-06-26).
|
Craig Chambers, a manager from Holliston, Massachusetts
|
Season 6 player (1989-10-19).
|
Hallie Boston, a content manager from Dorchester, Massachusetts
|
Season 33 player (2016-12-27).
|
Mike Garrido, an electronic commerce consultant originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 16 player (1999-10-12).
|
Kris Springer, a children's librarian from Brighton, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-06-25).
|
Christy Woodman, a substitute teacher from Canton, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-02-26).
|
James Kossuth, a lexicographer originally from Melrose, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 player (2001-11-22).
Last name is pronounced like "kus-OOTH."
|
Caitlin Malcuit, a writer and editor from North Reading, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 1-time champion: $12,200 + $1,000.
Last name pronounced like "MAL-kweet".
Twitter handle: @badlycooked
|
Conor Sullivan, a Jesuit volunteer and gym teacher from Hingham, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 player (2014-11-03).
|
Kristin McAuliffe, a higher-education administrator from Brighton, Massachusetts
|
Season 30 player (2014-04-17).
|
Alex Kania, an economic consultant from Westboro, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-03-26).
|
Jake Bryant, a programmer and analyst from Weymouth, Massachusetts
|
Season 30 player (2014-04-18).
|
Jessica Raine, a graduate student from Brookline, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-04-04).
|
Anne Andrea, an accounting systems consultant from Holbrook, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-04-03).
|
Siobhan Quinlan, an Italian instructor and study abroad director from Lexington, Massachusetts
|
Season 32 player (2016-07-15).
First name pronounced like "shuh-BAHN".
|
Liam Healy, an attorney from Needham, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-06-15).
|
Michelle St. James, an attorney from Baldwin, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-03-19).
|
Kara Miller, a graduate student from Carlisle, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 1-time champion: $8,100.
Wife of Season 38 player Zhe Lu.
|
Prabal Chakrabarti, a graduate student from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 player (1999-01-19).
|
Jessica Tanner, a graduate student from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 22 player (2006-06-08).
|
Dori Phillips, an IRS agent from Salem, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 player (2014-10-21).
|
Chris Walkey, a jeweler originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 3 2-time champion: $14,801.
|
Melanie Evans, a librarian from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 player (2002-05-17).
|
Brooke Scarpa, a web design manager from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-02-19).
|
Luke Fontano, a stay-at-home dad from Framingham, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 player (2001-12-05).
|
Michael Malyszko, a commercial photographer from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 33 player (2016-11-30).
|
Britt Harter, an enviromental sustainability consultant from Dorchester, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 player (2015-02-23).
|
David Thorne Scott, a musician from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-05-30).
|
Beth Kopley, a fundraiser from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-03-14).
|
Keith Ulrich, a pilot and computer programmer originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 10 player (1993-09-30).
|
Phil Bergen, a librarian from Needham, Massachusetts
|
Season 5 1-time champion: $8,250.
|
Bill Duncliffe, a VP of sales from Danvers, Massachusetts
|
Season 22 player (2006-06-05).
|
Gerry Sullivan, a teacher from Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts
|
Season 6 player (1989-10-03).
|
Liz Bakulski, an investment advisor originally from Andover, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-05-25).
|
Michelle Leppert, a senior managing editor from Danvers, Massachusetts
|
Season 30 1-time champion: $24,700 + $2,000.
|
Kelly Suber, a client services consultant from Lexington, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-07-10).
|
Steve Calechman, a freelance writer and stand-up comedian from Waltham, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 player (2002-03-01).
|
Nancy Goldstone, an academic specialist from Brookline, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-03-29).
|
Peyton Paxson, a college professor from Westford, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-07-09).
|
Jenn Reilly, a teaching assistant from Lowell, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 player (1999-02-01).
|
Sharon Rozines, a solutions support engineer from Natick, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-07-04).
|
Rita Hedgespeth, a computer consultant and software trainer from Braintree, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 player (2002-02-27).
|
Trish Miller, an administrative assistant from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 player (2001-11-28).
|
John Campbell, a romance novelist from Weymouth, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 2-time champion: $35,400 + $2,000. John (middle initial P.)...
|
Jen Bobolia, a registered nurse from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 player (2002-02-25).
|
Amy Ware, a registered nurse from South Deerfield, Massachusetts
|
Season 32 player (2016-07-12).
|
Rebekah Lacey, an environmental scientist from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 1-time champion: $20,800.
|
Nancy Mitchell, a human resources systems manager from Easthampton, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-04-20).
|
Dan Tran, a Ph.D. student in physics originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 1-time co-champion: $5,600 + $2,000.
|
Matt Cushman, a paintings conservator from North Adams, Massachusetts
|
Season 25 player (2009-02-19).
|
Christina Boyadjian, a writer from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 33 player (2016-11-23).
|
Paul Holland, a Jesuit priest from Storrs, Connecticut
|
Season 18 player (2002-02-19). Fr. Holland is a director at the...
|
Brad Hoff, a senior from Pembroke, Massachusetts
|
2004 Teen Tournament quarterfinalist: $2,500
|
Sheri Young, an assistant functions coordinator from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-02-28).
|
Elizabeth Heichler, a newswire editor from Arlington, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-06-27).
|
Beth Chalecki, a Ph.D. student from Medford, Massachusetts
|
Season 22 player (2005-11-23).
|
Gary Tarpinian, a writer and artist from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 4 player (1987-12-23).
|
Gail Fouts Bernstein, an advertising account executive from Salem, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 player (1998-12-23).
|
Andrea Yanes, a high school biology teacher from Brookline, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 player (2001-10-09).
Name pronounced like "AHN-drey-ah YAHNS."
|
Hallie Greenburg, a registered nurse originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 4 player (1987-11-05).
|
Jenn Carlson, a proposal writer from Foxborough, Massachusetts
|
Season 22 player (2005-12-01).
|
Venkat Krishnan, an I.T. manager from Sharon, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 player (2014-10-09).
|
Matt Prasse, an attorney from Needham, Massachusetts
|
Season 30 player (2014-03-25).
Last name pronounced like "PRAHSS-ee".
|
Annie Moriondo, a bookseller from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 32 1-time champion: $22,300 + $2,000.
|
Myra Backner, an office worker from Stoughton, Massachusetts
|
Season 3 player (1987-06-25).
|
Dan Atherton, a fundraising data analyst from Quincy, Massachusetts
|
Season 33 player (2017-04-25).
|
Sara d'Anjou, a college academic specialist from Norfolk, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 player (1996-12-30).
|
David Rozenson, a lawyer from Newton, Massachusetts
|
2006 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000.
Season 21 3-time champion: $76,000 + $1,000.
|
Kathy Reiff, a homemaker from Groton, Massachusetts
|
Season 22 1-time champion: $5,200 + $2,000.
Last name pronounced like "RIFE".
|
Nina Mulligan, a homemaker from Belchertown, Massachusetts
|
Season 14 2-time champion: $23,501.
|
Kathryn Masters, a stage manager from Marlborough, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 player (2001-10-03).
|
Brian Quinn, a management consultant from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 player (2015-01-27).
|
Peggy Sheehan, a teacher from Arlington, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 1-time champion: $16,799.
|
Jill Panall, an H.R. consultant from Newburyport, Massachusetts
|
Season 32 1-time champion: $26,400 + $2,000.
|
Akiva Fox, a junior from Newton, Massachusetts
|
1997-A Teen Tournament 2nd runner-up: $7,500. Won $100,000 on Who Wants...
|
Michele Liguori, an applications engineer and technical trainer from Maynard, Massachusetts
|
Season 20 1-time champion: $20,001 + $2,000.
|
Matt Hoffer-Hawlik, an investment banker and strategy consultant from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 32 1-time champion: $29,601 + $2,000.
|
Nathan Meyers, a software developer from Medford, Massachusetts
|
Season 22 1-time champion: $15,801 + $2,000.
Jeopardy! Message Board user name: bosox2004
|
Marina Matuzek, an attorney from Worcester, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 player (1996-12-20).
|
Mark Mironer, a crash avoidance engineer from Waltham, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 player (1997-02-25).
|
Matt Pressman, a graduate student in history from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 3-time champion: $46,700 + $2,000.
|
Greg Carbone, a customer service manager originally from Weston, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 player (1997-02-24).
|
Irv Kaplan, a physician from Newton, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 player (1996-12-19).
|
Shana Macks, an educator from Arlington, Massachusetts
|
Season 32 player (2016-02-18).
|
Sandra Gore, a researcher originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
1988 Tournament of Champions 2nd runner-up: $13,000.
Season 4 5-time champion: $53,507.
|
Myretta Robens, a technology & operations manager from Medford, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 player (1996-12-18).
|
Chris Breen, a sophomore at Princeton University from Springfield, Massachusetts
|
2005 College Championship quarterfinalist: $5,000. According to the official Jeopardy! web...
|
Sara Tess Neumann, a museum educator from Quincy, Massachusetts
|
Season 30 player (2014-07-09).
|
Kerstin Nordstrom, a physics professor from Northampton, Massachusetts
|
Season 32 player (2016-04-04).
|
Jennifer Furlong, an account manager from Brighton, Massachusetts
|
Season 22 player (2005-10-27).
|
Laura Dziorny, a lawyer and school district administrator from Charlestown, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 player (2014-09-25).
|
Brian O'Rourke, a director of development from Marblehead, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 player (2001-09-10).
|
Pam Maine, a mutual fund accountant from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 21 player (2005-06-28). Won $32,000 on Who Wants To Be...
|
Fariha Ali, an attorney from Wellesley, Massachusetts
|
Season 32 player (2016-03-31).
|
Susan Insoft, an attorney and stay-at-home mom from Newton, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-07-12).
|
Abbie Micucci, a stay-at-home mom from Westborough, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 player (2015-01-13).
Last name pronounced like "mee-KOO-chee".
|
Evelyn Pan Bavier, a museum administrator from Arlington, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 player (2001-09-07).
Last name pronounced like "BAH-vee-yay".
|
Beverly Garcia, a lawyer from Quincy, Massachusetts
|
Season 30 player (2014-07-03).
|
Atissa Banuazizi, a writer and communication instructor from Allston, Massachusetts
|
Season 33 player (2017-04-11).
|
Rosemary Foster, a research scientist from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 1-time champion: $12,601.
|
Christen O'Connor, a mother of three from Acton, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 player (2001-09-06).
|
Suzanne Fatta, a graduate student from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 player (2001-09-18).
|
Beth Cimini, a junior at Boston University from East Longmeadow, Massachusetts
|
2005 College Championship semifinalist: $10,000.
Jeopardy! Message Board user name: BrightStars1212
|
Juliet Chase, a high school English teacher from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 player (2001-09-17).
|
George Kane, an editor from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 7 player (1991-06-28).
|
Theon Banos Cross, a writer and educator originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 3 player (1987-06-17).
|
Brennan Bushee, an operations analyst from Malden, Massachusetts
|
2015 Tournament of Champions semifinalist: $10,000.
Season 31 5-time champion: $126,404 + $2,000.
|
Howard Ray, a laser applications engineer from East Longmeadow, Massachusetts
|
Season 30 1-time champion: $30,200 + $2,000.
|
Irene Dennis, a freelance copy editor from Medford, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 player (1996-09-04).
|
Elaine Golden, a law student from Newtonville, Massachusetts
|
Season 5 player (1989-03-01).
|
Ayofemi Stowe, a design engineer originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 2 player (1985-09-26). Ayofemi was a big winner on Tic...
|
Tom Walker, a lawyer from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 21 1-time champion: $23,201 + $2,000.
Father's Jeopardy! Message Board user name: ProudFather
|
Mary Sue Hoban, a marketing and strategy consultant from Belmont, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2002-09-05).
|
Norm Burger, a manufacturing operations specialist originally from Watertown, Massachusetts
|
Season 6 2-time champion: $13,801.
|
Amy Fine, a part-time teacher from Bethesda, Maryland
|
"She was the last 5-time winner in the 1993-94 season. A...
|
Sandra Gore, a researcher originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Round 1 player: $5,000. 1990 Super...
|
Leah Greenwald, an architect from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Round 1 winner: $56,800. Lost in...
|
Lindsay Oxx, a senior from Longmeadow, Massachusetts
|
2009 Teen Tournament wildcard semifinalist: $10,000.
|
Tom Cubbage, an attorney from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
|
"He was the very first College Champion, and the only one...
|
Tricia Riley, a nurse practitioner from Quincy, Massachusetts
|
Season 33 player (2017-03-29).
|
Clare O'Keeffe, an editorial assistant from Hyannisport, Massachusetts
|
Season 25 player (2009-07-08).
|
Lisa Cerrato, a managing editor from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 26 player (2010-06-25).
|
Jen Noon, an editor from Woburn, Massachusetts
|
Season 21 1-time champion: $19,103 + $2,000.
Jeopardy! Message Board user name: BostonJen73
|
Alex Rubington, a marketing communication coordinator from Natick, Massachusetts
|
Season 21 1-time champion: $6,800 + $1,000.
|
Desirée Zicko, a marketing manager from Reading, Massachusetts
|
Season 30 player (2014-06-18).
Last name pronounced like "ZEE-ko".
|
Russell Allen, a public health program manager originally from Yarmouth, Massachusetts
|
Season 32 player (2016-01-21).
|
Lisa Evans, an office manager from Easthampton, Massachusetts
|
Season 33 2-time champion: $62,402 + $2,000.
|
Autumn Haag, an archivist from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 26 player (2010-06-22). Last name pronounced like "HAYG", with a...
|
David Fishbach, a consulting program manager from Watertown, Massachusetts
|
Season 21 player (2004-09-15).
KJL game 46.
|
Laura Gustafson, an information manager from Acton, Massachusetts
|
Season 21 player (2004-09-08).
KJL game 41.
|
Jamison Hedin, a high school librarian from Chicopee, Massachusetts
|
Season 26 player (2009-10-27).
|
Christine Valada, a photographer and attorney originally from Walton, New York
|
2010 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000. Season 26 4-time champion: $68,703...
|
John Collier, a graduate student originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 6 1-time champion: $11,600.
|
Tegan Brown, an MBA student originally from Harvard, Massachusetts
|
Season 27 player (2010-09-30).
|
Tui Sutherland, a children's book author from Watertown, Massachusetts
|
Season 25 2-time champion: $44,200 + $2,000. First name pronounced like...
|
Kyle Hutchinson, a school of pharmacy librarian from Brookline, Massachusetts
|
Season 26 1-time champion: $19,000 + $1,000.
Jeopardy! Message Board user name: mskyle
|
Sarah Rubin, a clinical research coordinator from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 26 player (2010-03-12).
|
Ivan Tan, a graduate student originally from Lexington, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 player (2015-05-28).
|
Marianne Durgavich, a nurse from Watertown, Massachusetts
|
Season 4 player (1988-04-05): a video camcorder + Jeopardy! box game.
|
Stephanie Garrone-Shufran, a teacher educator from Woburn, Massachusetts
|
Season 33 1-time champion: $17,400 + $1,000.
|
Justin Bernbach, a lobbyist from Brooklyn, New York
|
2010 Tournament of Champions semifinalist: $10,000. Season 25 7-time champion: $155,001...
|
Gerry Cuddyer, an elections administrator from South Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 26 player (2010-06-02). Last name pronounced like "kuh-DY-er" (or "kuh-DY-yuh"...
|
Gordon Marx, a software architect from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 player (2015-05-22).
|
Carl Kruglak, an actuary from Needham, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 1-time champion: $13,801.
|
Sue Kuelzer, a restaurant owner from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 8 player (1991-09-30).
Sue died 2002-12-22. Obituary.
|
Tim Malec, an assistant district attorney from Newton, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 player (1996-11-01).
|
Anne Damon, a box office manager from Medford, Massachusetts
|
Season 26 player (2010-03-01).
Wife of Season 23 player Jack Martin.
|
Cindy de la Peña, a religious education coordinator from Southborough, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 player (2015-05-18).
|
Frank Sitarski, a manager from Plainville, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 player (1996-11-04).
|
Dan Woloshen, a lawyer originally from Peabody, Massachusetts
|
Season 8 player (1992-02-13).
|
Pat Gavin, a sophomore from Kingston, Massachusetts
|
1992 Teen Tournament wildcard semifinalist: $5,000.
|
Mike Duval, a television production coordinator from Norwood, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 player (2015-05-06). Mike won $100,000 on Who Wants to...
|
Genevieve Sheehan, a private equity professional from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 26 player (2009-10-08). First name pronounced like "JEN-uh-veev". Genevieve won...
|
Praggya Rustagi Barretto, a project coordinator from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 31 player (2015-05-04).
|
Lew Barlow, a college teacher from Duxbury, Massachusetts
|
Season 4 player (1988-06-28): a trip to Florida's Space Coast.
|
Dave Gramling, a teacher and department chairman from Chelmsford, Massachusetts
|
Season 4 1-time champion: $7,800.
|
Jon Korn, a film festival programmer originally from Concord, Massachusetts
|
Season 26 1-time champion: $25,602 + $1,000.
|
Patricia Franco, a library assistant from Arlington, Massachusetts
|
Season 32 1-time champion: $16,401 + $2,000.
|
Meg Miller, a high school Latin teacher from Milton, Massachusetts
|
Season 26 2-time champion: $29,299 + $2,000.
|
Becky Galipeau, a customer service representative from Lowell, Massachusetts
|
Season 20 player (2004-03-31).
|
Ed Rozmiarek, a high school assistant principal from Beverly, Massachusetts
|
Season 25 player (2008-12-29).
Last name pronounced like "rose-MARE-ik".
|
Markus Kolic, a database developer and stay-at-home dad from Dighton, Massachusetts
|
Season 32 1-time champion: $15,300 + $2,000.
Last name pronounced like "KOH-litch".
|
Dan Highlands, a legal assistant from Quincy, Massachusetts
|
Season 26 player (2010-07-22).
|
Gerard Coletta, a library assistant from Braintree, Massachusetts
|
Season 27 player (2011-01-17).
|
Dan D'Addario, a senior from Columbia University
|
2010-A College Championship wildcard semifinalist: $10,000. Hometown: Farmington, Connecticut. Daniel D'Addario...
|
Beth Ford, a professor of African-American literature from Wellesley, Massachusetts
|
Season 25 player (2009-06-11).
|
Christine Detz, a legal assistant from West Springfield, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2000-12-07).
|
Katie Price, a paraprofessional from Peabody, Massachusetts
|
Season 32 1-time champion: $13,000 + $1,000.
|
Jane Curtin, an actress from Kate & Allie and 3rd Rock from the Sun
|
"One of Saturday Night Live's original Not Ready for Primetime Players,...
|
Mikey Stewart, an economist from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 25 player (2008-12-26).
Jeopardy! Message Board user name: hpanic7342
|
Stephanie Munroe, a movie editor from Brookline, Massachusetts
|
Season 27 player (2011-04-12).
|
Suzanne Doran, a middle school teacher from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 16 player (1999-12-07).
|
Katie O'Reilly, a receptionist from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 26 player (2009-09-25).
Jeopardy! Message Board user name: kamarile
|
Tony Barreto, a deputy district attorney originally from New Bedford, Massachusetts
|
Season 3 player (1986-09-11): Ricci's Art Deco Collection heavy silver-plated flatware...
|
Jordan Piel, a speech language pathologist from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 26 player (2010-01-29).
Last name pronounced like "PEEL".
|
Kristin Schleicher, a graduate student from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 25 player (2008-12-22).
|
Kevin Joyce, a customer service representative from Leominster, Massachusetts
|
Season 25 3-time champion: $111,299 + $2,000. Kevin was the alternate...
|
Helen Hostetter, a homemaker from Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts
|
Season 27 player (2011-04-07).
|
Craig Schneider, a health policy analyst from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 1-time champion: $12,601.
|
Anna Tschetter, a legal assistant from Danvers, Massachusetts
|
Season 26 1-time champion: $3,400 + $1,000.
|
Angela Toussaint, a schoolteacher from West Roxbury, Massachusetts
|
Season 16 1-time champion: $11,000.
|
Dennis Loo, a tutor from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 27 player (2010-12-22).
|
Garrett Laws Weinberg, a software engineer from Arlington, Massachusetts
|
Season 25 player (2009-02-02).
|
Dru Daigle, an administrative assistant from Dracut, Massachusetts
|
Season 16 player (2000-06-29).
|
Serge Botsaris, a psychiatrist from Worcester, Massachusetts
|
Season 16 player (1999-11-26).
|
Elizabeth Perkins, an actress from Weeds
|
"For the past five seasons, she's played the calculating and manipulative...
|
Carl Goldman, a funeral director from Peabody, Massachusetts
|
Season 16 player (2000-06-22).
|
Anne Reilly, a stay-at-home mom from Stow, Massachusetts
|
Season 25 1-time champion: $21,200 + $2,000.
|
Keri McConaghy, a social worker from Chelsea, Massachusetts
|
Season 27 player (2010-12-13).
Last name pronounced like "mick-KAWN-ah-ghee".
|
Don Lessem, a dinosaur expert and writer from Newton, Massachusetts
|
Season 16 player (2000-01-24). Don made a deal with Mark Cuban...
|
Sonia Chawla, a grad student from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 25 player (2009-03-26).
Last name pronounced like "CHAV-la".
|
Mimi Collins, an assistant professor from Marlborough, Massachusetts
|
Season 16 player (2000-06-20).
|
Bern Samko, a Ph.D. student in linguistics originally from Worcester, Massachusetts
|
Season 26 player (2010-01-20).
|
Barbara Delisle, a homemaker from Westwood, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 player (1996-10-02).
|
Chris Schleicher, a student from Winchester, Massachusetts
|
Season 25 player (2009-01-22).
|
Ben Bishop, a student originally from Seattle, Washington
|
2009 Tournament of Champions semifinalist: $10,000. Season 25 4-time champion: $114,800...
|
Bill Cute, a social studies teacher from Rehoboth, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 2-time champion: $19,601.
|
Adrianne Hiltz, an editorial assistant from Brighton, Massachusetts
|
Season 26 player (2010-01-13).
|
Kara McDermott, an Internet content editor from Newton, Massachusetts
|
Season 16 2-time champion: $8,400.
|
Doug Meyer, an editor from Newton, Massachusetts
|
Season 21 player (2005-06-09). Season 20 player (2004-03-11). Doug later returned...
|
Amy DeLisa, an attorney from Framingham, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-03-12).
|
Terry Coombs, an automotive bookkeeper from Lynn, Massachusetts
|
Season 16 player (2000-01-13).
|
Alycia Kennedy, a 13-year-old from Lynnfield, Massachusetts
|
"She runs the fastest mile in her grade; tonight, we'll see...
|
Frank Butterworth, a business development manager from Hingham, Massachusetts
|
Season 16 2-time champion: $19,000.
|
Emily Bruemmer, a history and East Asian studies student from Orleans, Massachusetts
|
Season 25 player (2009-07-24).
Last name pronounced like "BREM-mer".
|
Kizzle Cote, a 12-year-old from Ludlow, Massachusetts
|
"This future ichthyologist has a 30-gallon aquarium in his bedroom..." 2007...
|
Elizabeth Perkins, an actress from Big and Weeds
|
2009 Celebrity Jeopardy! player: $25,000 to the New England Learning Center...
|
Bobby Goldstein, a database administrator from Arlington, Massachusetts
|
Season 20 3-time champion: $42,200 + $2,000.
Jeopardy! Message Board user name: GoBobbyGo
|
Bridget Bue, a high school teacher originally from Chelmsford, Massachusetts
|
Season 16 player (1999-12-20).
|
Gwyneth Connell, a senior at Amherst College from Great Barrington, Massachusetts
|
2000-A College Championship quarterfinalist: $2,500.
20 at the time of the College Championship.
|
Stephanie Gumble, an associate director of policy from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 27 player (2010-11-24).
|
Fran Balin, a business analyst from Sharon, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2000-09-11).
|
Andrea Saenz, an immigration attorney from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 26 1-time champion: $32,200 + $2,000. Name pronounced like "ahn-DRAY-ah...
|
Adam Michaels, a trial lawyer from Brookline, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2000-10-24).
|
Cinnamon Stetler, a research technician from Natick, Massachusetts
|
Season 16 player (2000-06-08).
|
Melanie DeCarolis, an editor from Brookline, Massachusetts
|
Season 14 player (1998-01-07).
|
Mark Staloff, an editor from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 1-time champion: $9,799.
|
Matt Blum, a web designer from Burlington, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2000-10-23).
|
Peter Breeze, a junior at Ithaca College from Bolton, Massachusetts
|
2000-A College Championship quarterfinalist: $2,500. 20 at the time of the...
|
Molly Secrest, a speech pathologist from Westborough, Massachusetts
|
Season 16 player (2000-01-04).
|
Helen Andrews, an antique games dealer from Brookline, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 player (1996-12-02).
|
Annie Bienvenue, a high school history teacher from Lowell, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2000-10-17).
|
Daniel Pollack-Pelzner, a grad student from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 23 player (2007-04-18).
|
Brian Frates, an actor and comedian from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2000-10-13).
|
Hayes Davenport, a television writer originally from Dover, Massachusetts
|
Season 26 player (2009-12-31).
|
John Foster, a product manager originally from Cape Cod, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 player (1997-04-10).
|
Katie Fulton, a 12-year-old from Tewksbury, Massachusetts
|
"She's thinking vet, because she loves animals and everything about them..."...
|
Carol Tierney, an administrative assistant originally from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 14 player (1998-03-20). Season 14 player (1997-12-05). Jeopardy! returned Carol...
|
Beth Coughlin, a librarian from Danvers, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 1-time champion: $13,601.
|
Leah Greenwald, an architect from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Round 1 winner: $56,800. Lost in...
|
Don Stewart, a teacher from Belmont, Massachusetts
|
Season 23 player (2007-06-21).
|
Chris Possinger, a mechanical engineer from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 23 player (2007-04-04).
|
George Miller, a radio broadcaster and writer from Northfield, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 player (1997-03-28).
|
Kathryn Erbe, an actress from Law & Order: Criminal Intent
|
"On stage, she earned a 1991 Tony nomination for Speed of...
|
Dave Hampton, a student from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 2-time champion: $16,400.
|
Stephanie Overby, an online journalist from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2000-09-22).
|
Leah Greenwald, an architect from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Round 1 winner: $56,800. Lost in...
|
Arianna Kelly, a law student from Somerville, Massachusetts
|
Season 24 player (2008-01-30). Season 24 player (2008-07-08). Sister of Season...
|
Brian Hamill, a chemical engineer from Nahant, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 1-time champion: $5,550.
|
Brady Cassis, a junior from Yale University
|
2007 College Championship quarterfinalist: $5,000. 20 at the time of the...
|
Jim Spilman, a purchasing manager from Gloucester, Massachusetts
|
Season 23 1-time champion: $25,550 + $2,000.
Jeopardy! Message Board user name: Belisarius
|
Kevin Cuddeback, an online marketing executive from Medford, Massachusetts
|
Season 26 player (2009-12-16).
|
Steven Melendez, a computer consultant from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 24 player (2008-01-28).
|
Heather Derby, an ad agency account executive from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2000-11-22).
|
Susan Sanchez, a schoolteacher originally from Newton Center, Massachusetts
|
Season 2 player (1986-04-22).
|
Jennifer LeBow, a bookstore manager from Nahant, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-01-02).
|
John LeDonne, a bookbuyer from Arlington, Massachusetts
|
2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Round 1 player: $5,000. 1991 Tournament...
|
Meg Sullivan, an online editor from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 16 player (2000-05-03).
|
Mike Currie, an Air Force officer from Hanscom AFB, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-01-01).
|
Deborah Walsh, a travel agent from Belchertown, Massachusetts
|
Season 20 player (2004-02-23).
|
Bruce Leggat, a nonprofit consultant from Westford, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2000-11-07).
|
Lauren Cercone, a consumer new products developer originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 16 player (2000-05-24).
|
Jack Martin, a civil engineer from Medford, Massachusetts
|
Season 23 player (2006-09-19). Won $250,000 on Who Wants to Be...
|
Harry Stessel, a college teacher and potter from Westfield, Massachusetts
|
Season 23 player (2007-03-07).
|
Arthur Phillips, a speechwriter from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Round 1 winner: $25,000. 1998 Tournament...
|
Amasa Wainwright, a freelance proofreader from Beverly, Massachusetts
|
Season 19 player (2003-06-13).
|
Peter Gay, a graphic designer from Stoughton, Massachusetts
|
Season 10 1-time champion: $14,801 + Jeopardy! '92 home game.
|
Mike Emerman, a campaign administrator from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 2-time champion: $14,402.
|
Steven McKenna, a director of banquets originally from Holyoke, Massachusetts
|
Season 10 1-time champion: $15,401.
|
Chris McCarthy, a technical support specialist from Brockton, Massachusetts
|
Season 24 1-time champion: $28,401 + $1,000.
|
Judie Cole, an administrative assistant from Quincy, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 player (1998-10-19).
|
Jenny Fielding, a marketing coordinator from Beverly, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2001-01-22).
|
Pam Bybell, a homemaker from West Medford, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 player (1998-10-28).
|
Mia McIver, a graduate student from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 player (1998-10-27).
|
Paul Murray, a theater teacher from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 15 1-time champion: $8,001.
|
Justin Budinoff, an administrative coordinator from Framingham, Massachusetts
|
Season 22 player (2006-07-18).
|
Bruce Pickett, a bond trader from South Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 17 player (2000-12-12).
|
Guy Pugh, a medical student from Canton, Massachusetts
|
Season 6 player (1990-05-01).
|
Linda Lipkin, a high school teacher and administrator from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 24 player (2007-09-21).
|
Wes Ulm, a medical student from Boston, Massachusetts
|
1998 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $2,500. Season 13 4-time champion: $63,201....
|
Donal Coomey, a masonry restoration specialist from Arlington, Massachusetts
|
Season 24 1-time champion: $14,100 + $2,000.
Ex-husband of Season 26 player Becki Norris.
|
Margaret J. McCarthy, a retired attorney originally from Boston, Massachusetts
|
Season 22 player (2006-07-24).
|
Pam Storm, a lawyer from Hingham, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 1-time champion: $11,801.
|
Martin Gostanian, an advertising copywriter from Medford, Massachusetts
|
Season 6 1-time champion: $17,200.
|
Carol Feingold, a medical librarian from Amesbury, Massachusetts
|
Season 13 player (1997-04-16).
|
Rebecca Mathews, an institutional researcher from Cambridge, Massachusetts
|
Season 18 player (2002-01-08).
|
Glen Savory, an Air Force contracting officer originally from Georgetown, Massachusetts
|
Season 16 3-time champion: $33,600 + a trip to Sweptaway, Jamaica.
|
Paul Canty, a homemaker from Easthampton, Massachusetts
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Season 22 player (2006-01-27).
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Joel Zuckerman, a financial analyst originally from Longmeadow, Massachusetts
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Season 14 player (1997-10-20).
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Glenn Barnes, a nonprofit development director from Watertown, Massachusetts
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Season 22 player (2006-01-26).
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Jesse Liu, a grad student from Boston, Massachusetts
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Season 22 player (2006-01-12).
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Nicole Burnham Onsi, a freelance writer from Hopkinton, Massachusetts
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Season 16 player (2000-07-17).
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Mark Eckard, a software designer from Bedford, Massachusetts
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2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Round 1 winner: $35,600. 2001 Tournament...
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Bev Schwartzberg, a teacher originally from Amherst, Massachusetts
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2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Round 1 winner: $25,000. 1993 Tournament...
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Ray Baxter, a lawyer from Boston, Massachusetts
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Season 6 1-time champion: $3,200.
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Macee Damon, an administrative assistant from Arlington, Massachusetts
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Season 13 player (1997-06-05).
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Stephen Heuser, an editor and writer from Boston, Massachusetts
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Season 13 1-time champion: $12,401.
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Pablo del Real, a substitute teacher originally from Acton, Massachusetts
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Season 14 player (1997-09-12).
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Bev Schwartzberg, a history teacher originally from Amherst, Massachusetts
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2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Round 1 winner: $25,000. 1993 Tournament...
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Tracy Ross, an account manager from Boston, Massachusetts
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Season 15 player (1998-11-13).
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Mindy Eakin, an administrative assistant from Arlington, Massachusetts
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Season 13 player (1997-06-12).
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Hardy Watts, an elementary school teacher from Boston, Massachusetts
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Season 18 player (2001-09-03).
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Jim Zanotti, a law student from Cambridge, Massachusetts
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Season 15 player (1998-11-10).
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Coral Sullivan, a registrar from Wayland, Massachusetts
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Season 15 player (1998-11-25).
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Emily Scott, an independent graphic designer from Cambridge, Massachusetts
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Season 13 player (1997-05-29).
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David Kahn, a law student from Brookline, Massachusetts
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Season 6 player (1990-01-12).
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Phil Duffy, a designer from Cambridge, Massachusetts
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Season 13 player (1997-07-17).
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Maura O'Keefe, a legal assistant from West Roxbury, Massachusetts
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Season 19 player (2003-04-14).
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Arthur Phillips, a speechwriter from Boston, Massachusetts
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2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Round 1 winner: $25,000. 1998 Tournament...
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Kim Haase, a technical writer from Arlington, Massachusetts
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Season 13 player (1997-07-16).
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Nancy Baron, a medical writer and editor from Holliston, Massachusetts
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Season 13 player (1997-07-14).
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Oz Vazquez, a law student from Cambridge, Massachusetts
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Season 23 player (2006-10-12). According to the official Jeopardy! web site,...
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Pat Connor, a management consultant from Cummaquid, Massachusetts
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Season 27 player (2011-06-23).
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Nancy Fisher, a computer software salesperson from Brookline, Massachusetts
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Season 17 player (2001-06-11).
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Lynne Crawford, a carpenter originally from West Springfield, Massachusetts
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Season 1 player (1984-09-11).
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Mark Eckard, a software engineer from Bedford, Massachusetts
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2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Round 1 winner: $35,600. 2001 Tournament...
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David Rozenson, a lawyer from Newton, Massachusetts
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2006 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000.
Season 21 3-time champion: $76,000 + $1,000.
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Alan Fletcher, a musician from Newton, Massachusetts
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Season 6 1-time champion: $16,500.
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Michael Delgado, a graduate student from Cambridge, Massachusetts
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Season 17 player (2001-06-01).
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Jaya Lakshminarayanan, a musician from Somerville, Massachusetts
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Season 21 player (2005-06-01).
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Paul Smith, an attorney from Sutton, Massachusetts
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Season 17 player (2000-10-11).
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Nicholas Vallas, a waiter originally from Cambridge, Massachusetts
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Season 1 player (1984-12-03).
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Carol Tierney, a program manager originally from Cambridge, Massachusetts
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Season 14 player (1998-03-20). Season 14 player (1997-12-05). Jeopardy! returned Carol...
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Annette Wilkinson, a stay-at-home mom from Andover, Massachusetts
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Season 17 player (2000-10-31).
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Eric Moore, a chemist and writer from Brookline, Massachusetts
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Season 17 player (2000-11-01).
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Sharona Nelson, a technical writer from Marlborough, Massachusetts
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Season 15 player (1998-09-23).
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Mary Flaherty, a professor and lawyer from Gloucester, Massachusetts
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Season 15 player (1998-09-22).
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Julie Seitter, a voice talent from Littleton, Massachusetts
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Season 22 player (2006-02-28). Julie's voice can be heard in the...
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Michael Abracham, an accountant from Boston, Massachusetts
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Season 6 player (1990-03-14).
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