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On May 11, 1862, this Confederate ironclad was blown up by Confederate States of America troops when the North approached Richmond |
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An ancient Egyptian who had a sweet tooth would reach for honey or this palm fruit |
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William Wordsworth wrote, "My heart leaps up when I behold" one of these colorful arches "in the sky" |
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The flat-top is a variation of this militaristic cut: it's squarer on top |
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Vineyard Sound separates Martha's Vineyard from the southernmost part of this cape |
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Sir Thomas More is beheaded in the last scene of this Robert Bolt play |
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On September 7, 1864, this Union commanding general entered Atlanta |
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Egyptians began riding around in these horse-drawn vehicles during the reign of the Hyksos |
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"New Hampshire", a poem with notes & grace notes, earned this poet the first of his four Pulitzers |
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A wedge-cut of the late '70s was named for this female skater, who popularized it at the Olympics |
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Rivers flowing into this bay include the Susquehanna, James, & Rappahannock |
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"American Buffalo", the title of a David Mamet play, refers to the buffalo on one of these coins |
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At the end of the war, Lincoln assigned this battlefield nurse the task of identifying missing soldiers |
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Egypt's capital during the Old Kingdom; its original name meant "The White Wall" |
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In 1971, a copy of his original manuscript for "The Wasteland" was published, with an introduction by his widow |
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During World War II, many women wore this shoulder-length style with the ends curled under from ear-to-ear |
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It's the state in which you'd find Suwannee Sound |
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Sula & Helena are robotesses in this Karel Capek play |
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Nicknamed "Fighting Joe", he replaced Ambrose Burnside as commander of the Army of the Potomac in 1863 |
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Biban Al Mullak is the Arabic name for this famous burial site in western Thebes |
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After writing about "The Wreck of the Hesperus", he wrote "The Building of the Ship" |
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From Middle French for "chain", it's a knot or coil of hair worn at the back of the head or neck |
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George Vancouver named this Washington state mountain for a friend in the British navy |
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It's the town in "Our Town" |
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This battle named for a Tennessee church was the first in the Western Hemisphere to engage 100,000 men |
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In early Egypt, the king's chief minister held this title that the Ottomans made grand |
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In an Edna St. Vincent Millay poem, "My candle burns at both ends; it will not" do this |
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In China it was once popular for men to shave their front hair & comb the back hair into this long braid |
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It's the only Great Lake not bordering the state of Michigan |
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The ghost of this great ruler, Xerxes's father, appears in Aeschylus's play "The Persians" |
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