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100 Black History Month Trivia Questions That Will Rearrange What You Think You Know

By
Robert Taylor
An elderly woman in a pink shirt sorting through old black and white family photographs, evoking nostalgia.

Carter G. Woodson chose February for a reason most people get wrong. They’ll tell you it’s the shortest month, and they’ll say it with the kind of confidence that means they heard someone else say it first. The real answer is that February already contained the birthdays of Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass, both of which Black communities had been celebrating since the late 1800s. Woodson wasn’t picking a month out of a hat. He was building on something that already existed. That’s the kind of detail that separates people who know Black history from people who know the chapter headings.

I’ve run black history month trivia for classrooms, corporate events, church halls, and bar nights where the stakes were nothing more than bragging rights and a free pitcher. The questions that land hardest aren’t always the hardest ones. Sometimes it’s the question that makes a whole table realize they’ve been picturing the wrong decade, or the one that turns a name they’ve heard a hundred times into someone they actually want to know more about. That’s what I tried to build here. A hundred questions with shape to them. Some will feel like layups. Some will make you argue with your phone. The best ones, I hope, will do both.

The Names Everyone Knows (And the Details They Don’t)

1. What was Harriet Tubman’s birth name?

Everyone knows Tubman. Almost nobody knows she was born Araminta Ross and didn’t take the name Harriet until around the time of her marriage to John Tubman. I’ve watched people who consider themselves Tubman experts go completely blank on this one.

Show Answer
Araminta Ross. She later adopted her mother’s first name, Harriet. The most common wrong answer is some variation of “Harriet Ross,” which gets the logic right but the fact wrong.

 

2. Before Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat in 1955, a 15-year-old girl did the same thing on a Montgomery bus nine months earlier. What was her name?

This is the question that always starts a conversation. Claudette Colvin’s story was deliberately kept out of the spotlight by civil rights leaders at the time because she was a pregnant teenager, and they believed Rosa Parks, a married seamstress and NAACP secretary, would be a more sympathetic figure for a legal challenge. The strategy worked. The cost was Colvin’s place in the popular narrative for decades.

Show Answer
Claudette Colvin. She was arrested on March 2, 1955. Many people guess “Mary Louise Smith,” who was another woman arrested before Parks, but Colvin’s case came first.

 

3. Martin Luther King Jr. skipped two grades in high school and entered Morehouse College at what age?

People consistently guess 16 or 17. The actual answer is younger than that, and it reframes King as something beyond the marble statue version of him. He was a kid on a college campus.

Show Answer
15 years old. He enrolled at Morehouse in 1944 without formally graduating high school.

 

4. What year did Black History Month officially become a nationally recognized, month-long observance in the United States?

This trips up people who know about Carter G. Woodson’s Negro History Week, which started in 1926. The jump from one week to one month took fifty years. Gerald Ford made it official during the nation’s bicentennial, which gives the answer a nice hook.

Show Answer
1976. President Gerald Ford urged Americans to “seize the opportunity to honor the too-often neglected accomplishments of Black Americans.” The most common wrong answer is 1926, which is the year Negro History Week began.

 

5. Frederick Douglass never knew his exact birthday. What date did he choose to celebrate it?

Douglass picked February 14. Valentine’s Day. His mother had called him “my little valentine” as a child, and he held onto that. It’s one of those answers that lands quietly in a room. People don’t expect tenderness from a question about Douglass.

Show Answer
February 14. Historians later determined he was likely born in February 1818, but the exact date remains uncertain.

 

6. Who was the first Black person to earn a PhD from Harvard University?

Most people’s instinct is W.E.B. Du Bois, and their instinct is correct. But the year surprises them.

Show Answer
W.E.B. Du Bois, in 1895. His dissertation was on the suppression of the African slave trade.

 

7. What was the name of the organization co-founded by W.E.B. Du Bois in 1909 that still operates today?

This is a gimme for most rooms, but I include it because it’s a confidence builder early in a set. Let people feel good before you pull the rug.

Show Answer
The NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People).

 

8. Malcolm X was assassinated in what New York City venue in 1965?

The name of the building has changed, which is part of what makes this question stick. People who’ve been to the site know it by a different name now.

Show Answer
The Audubon Ballroom in Washington Heights, Manhattan. The site now houses the Malcolm X and Dr. Betty Shabazz Memorial and Educational Center.

 

9. What was the original name of the holiday now widely celebrated as Juneteenth?

Juneteenth itself is a portmanteau, but before it became the standard term, the holiday went by several names in Texas and surrounding states. The most common formal name is the one people miss.

Show Answer
Emancipation Day (also known as Jubilee Day and Freedom Day in various regions). “Juneteenth” combines “June” and “nineteenth,” the date in 1865 when enslaved people in Galveston, Texas, learned of their freedom.

 

10. Who wrote the poem “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” often called the Black National Anthem?

The poem was written by one brother and set to music by another. People tend to know it was the Johnson brothers but mix up which one did what.

Show Answer
James Weldon Johnson wrote the lyrics in 1900. His brother, J. Rosamond Johnson, composed the music. The most common error is attributing both to James Weldon Johnson alone.

 

The Ones That Start Arguments

11. What was the first historically Black college or university (HBCU) founded in the United States?

This one causes genuine disputes. The answer depends on how you define “university” versus “institute” and whether you count institutions founded before the Civil War. I’ve seen tables nearly split over it.

Show Answer
Cheyney University of Pennsylvania, founded in 1837. Some argue Lincoln University (1854) or Wilberforce University (1856) because Cheyney started as the Institute for Colored Youth and didn’t become a degree-granting institution until later. The debate itself is the point.

 

12. The Emancipation Proclamation freed enslaved people in which states?

This is the question that catches the most people off guard. The Proclamation didn’t free enslaved people everywhere. It specifically applied to states in rebellion against the Union, meaning enslaved people in border states loyal to the Union were not freed by it. I’ve watched confident history buffs go quiet when they realize they’d been carrying a simplified version of this their whole lives.

Show Answer
Only the Confederate states (states in rebellion). Enslaved people in border states like Maryland, Kentucky, Missouri, and Delaware were not freed until the 13th Amendment was ratified in December 1865.

 

13. What city was the destination of the Great Migration’s largest wave of Black Americans leaving the South between 1910 and 1970?

People split between New York and Chicago. Both are defensible depending on which wave you’re counting, but one city absorbed more total migrants over the full period.

Show Answer
Chicago. Over the full span of the Great Migration, approximately 500,000 Black Americans moved to Chicago, though New York, Detroit, and Los Angeles also received massive numbers. New York is the most common wrong answer because Harlem looms so large in the cultural imagination.

 

14. The phrase “Black Power” entered mainstream use after being chanted by what civil rights leader during a 1966 march in Mississippi?

Most people attribute it to the Black Panther Party. The phrase predates them by a few months and was popularized by someone whose name doesn’t get said nearly enough.

Show Answer
Stokely Carmichael (later known as Kwame Ture) during the March Against Fear. The common wrong answer is Huey Newton or Bobby Seale, who founded the Black Panther Party later that same year.

 

15. In what year did the last known formerly enslaved person in the United States die?

This question does something to a room. People guess the 1910s or 1920s. The real answer collapses the distance between slavery and the present in a way that’s almost physical.

Show Answer
The last verified formerly enslaved person, Sylvester Magee, reportedly died in 1971, though his claims are disputed. The more widely accepted answer is Peter Mills, who died in 1972. More conservatively, the last undisputed survivor is often cited as dying in the late 1940s or 1950s. The point is: it’s far more recent than anyone guesses.

 

16. What was the name of the Black community in Tulsa, Oklahoma, that was destroyed in a 1921 massacre?

This has become more widely known in recent years, but the nickname is what people tend to remember, not the actual neighborhood name.

Show Answer
Greenwood District, often called “Black Wall Street.” Many people answer “Black Wall Street” but can’t name Greenwood itself.

 

17. How many people are estimated to have been killed in the Tulsa Race Massacre?

The official count and the estimated count are wildly different, and that gap is the whole story.

Show Answer
The official death toll was 36, but modern estimates range from 100 to 300, with some researchers suggesting even higher numbers. Mass graves are still being investigated as of the 2020s.

 

18. What constitutional amendment abolished slavery in the United States?

A breather question. But I’ve been in rooms where someone confidently says the 14th, and then the table has to have a whole conversation about what each Reconstruction amendment actually did.

Show Answer
The 13th Amendment, ratified on December 6, 1865.

 

19. Which state was the last to ratify the 13th Amendment?

The answer is more recent than anyone is comfortable with.

Show Answer
Mississippi didn’t officially ratify the 13th Amendment until 1995, and the ratification wasn’t filed with the Federal Register until 2013. That’s not a typo.

 

20. What does the 13th Amendment’s exception clause allow?

This question does real work. Most people have never read the full text of the amendment, and when they hear the answer, the room changes.

Show Answer
It allows involuntary servitude “as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted.” This exception has been the legal basis for prison labor in the United States ever since.

 

Science, Medicine, and the Inventions You Think You Know

21. George Washington Carver is famous for his work with peanuts. Did he invent peanut butter?

I love this question because almost everyone’s brain has already filed “Carver = peanut butter” as a fact. It’s one of those things that feels true because it was repeated so often in elementary school. The real story is more interesting.

Show Answer
No. Peanut butter predates Carver’s research. Various forms of peanut paste existed for centuries. Carver developed over 300 products from peanuts, including dyes, plastics, and gasoline, but peanut butter wasn’t one of his inventions.

 

22. Who performed the first successful open-heart surgery in the United States?

The answer is a Black surgeon, and the year will surprise people who assume this kind of surgery is a modern development.

Show Answer
Dr. Daniel Hale Williams, in 1893 at Provident Hospital in Chicago. He operated on a man who had been stabbed in the chest and repaired the pericardium.

 

23. What did Garrett Morgan patent in 1923 that you probably encountered on your way to wherever you’re reading this?

The phrasing gives people a nudge toward something everyday, and their brains start scanning the room. It’s a good one for getting people to look up from their phones.

Show Answer
The three-position traffic signal (the yellow/caution light between red and green). Morgan also invented an early gas mask.

 

24. Mae Jemison became the first Black woman in space in 1992 aboard which Space Shuttle?

People who know it was Endeavour sometimes mix it up with other shuttle missions. But the detail I find most interesting is what she brought with her.

Show Answer
Space Shuttle Endeavour, mission STS-47. Jemison brought an Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater poster and a flag from the Organization of African Unity with her into orbit.

 

25. Before becoming a NASA astronaut, Mae Jemison served in what branch of the U.S. government abroad?

People guess the military almost every time. The real answer reveals a different kind of service.

Show Answer
The Peace Corps. She served as a Peace Corps medical officer in Sierra Leone and Liberia from 1985 to 1987. The common wrong answer is the Air Force or Navy.

 

26. Who was the first Black American to earn a medical degree?

The year is what gets people. They guess post-Civil War. It was before.

Show Answer
James McCune Smith, who earned his MD from the University of Glasgow in 1837 because no American medical school would admit him. If the question specifies an American institution, the answer is David Jones Peck, who graduated from Rush Medical College in 1847.

 

27. Katherine Johnson, the NASA mathematician depicted in “Hidden Figures,” calculated trajectories for which two famous space missions?

Most people get one of them. Getting both is the challenge.

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Alan Shepard’s Freedom 7 mission in 1961 (the first American in space) and John Glenn’s Friendship 7 orbital mission in 1962. Glenn specifically requested that Johnson verify the computer’s calculations before he would fly.

 

28. What common household item’s precursor was patented by Lewis Howard Latimer, who also worked with both Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas Edison?

Latimer is one of those figures who keeps showing up in the footnotes of other people’s fame. He deserves more than a footnote.

Show Answer
The carbon filament for the incandescent light bulb. Latimer’s improved filament made light bulbs last significantly longer and more practical for widespread use. He also drafted the patent drawings for Alexander Graham Bell’s telephone.

 

29. Dr. Charles Drew revolutionized what medical field during World War II, then reportedly resigned from a major organization over its racial policies regarding the very thing he helped develop?

The irony of Drew’s story is almost too pointed to be real. But it is.

Show Answer
Blood banking and blood plasma preservation. Drew directed the first American Red Cross Blood Bank but resigned (or was asked to resign) after the military mandated that blood be segregated by the race of the donor, a policy he called unscientific.

 

30. Henrietta Lacks, whose cells were taken without her consent in 1951, contributed to medical breakthroughs through a cell line known by what name?

Her story has become more well known thanks to Rebecca Skloot’s book, but in a trivia setting, the two-syllable answer still catches people who know the story but never learned the scientific designation.

Show Answer
HeLa cells (from the first two letters of her first and last name). They were the first human cells to survive and reproduce indefinitely in a lab and have been used in research on polio vaccines, cancer, HIV, and more.

 

Politics, Law, and the Firsts That Came Later Than You Think

31. Who was the first Black U.S. Supreme Court Justice?

Most rooms get this without hesitation. It’s the year that makes them pause.

Show Answer
Thurgood Marshall, appointed in 1967 by President Lyndon B. Johnson.

 

32. Before being appointed to the Supreme Court, Thurgood Marshall argued and won what landmark case?

This one people know. But ask them what year it was decided and you’ll see confidence waver.

Show Answer
Brown v. Board of Education (1954), which declared racial segregation in public schools unconstitutional.

 

33. Who was the first Black woman elected to the United States Congress?

People split between Shirley Chisholm and Barbara Jordan. Both are correct answers to different questions, and the confusion between them is one of my favorite things to watch play out.

Show Answer
Shirley Chisholm, elected to the House of Representatives in 1968 representing New York’s 12th congressional district. Barbara Jordan was the first Black woman elected to Congress from the Deep South (Texas, 1972).

 

34. In what year did Shirley Chisholm run for president?

The year matters because of everything else happening in America at the same time.

Show Answer
1972. She sought the Democratic Party nomination, making her the first Black candidate for a major party’s presidential nomination and the first woman to run for the Democratic nomination.

 

35. Who was the first Black governor of a U.S. state?

This one is harder than it sounds. People guess wrong because they assume it happened earlier than it did, or in a different state.

Show Answer
L. Douglas Wilder, who became governor of Virginia in 1990. Yes, Virginia. People often guess a northern state.

 

36. Who was the first Black U.S. Senator?

The year of the answer does something to the room every time I ask it.

Show Answer
Hiram Revels of Mississippi, who took office in 1870 during Reconstruction. He occupied the Senate seat that had been vacated by Jefferson Davis when Mississippi seceded.

 

37. After Reconstruction ended, how many years passed before another Black person served in the U.S. Senate?

This is the follow-up that lands the punch. Blanche Bruce left the Senate in 1881. The gap after that tells you everything about what Reconstruction’s end actually meant.

Show Answer
It was 86 years. Edward Brooke of Massachusetts was elected in 1966, becoming the first Black U.S. Senator since Blanche Bruce in 1881.

 

38. The Voting Rights Act was signed into law in what year?

A straightforward question that anchors the timeline. People who know their civil rights chronology get it instantly. People who don’t tend to guess earlier than the real answer.

Show Answer
1965. President Lyndon B. Johnson signed it on August 6. The common early guess is 1964, which is the Civil Rights Act, a different (and equally important) piece of legislation.

 

39. What event directly prompted the introduction of the Voting Rights Act?

There were many events. But the one that forced the nation’s hand has a name.

Show Answer
Bloody Sunday, March 7, 1965, when state troopers attacked peaceful marchers on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama. The televised brutality shocked the country and created the political pressure for the legislation.

 

40. Who was the first Black woman to serve as U.S. Secretary of State?

People sometimes mix up the order of Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice, and then forget to account for the gender-specific wording of the question.

Show Answer
Condoleezza Rice, who served from 2005 to 2009 under President George W. Bush. Colin Powell was the first Black Secretary of State (2001-2005), and Rice was both the first Black woman and the second Black person to hold the office.

 

Culture, Art, and the Moments That Shaped Everything

41. The Harlem Renaissance is generally considered to have begun in what decade?

Straightforward, but people who know a little about it sometimes overshoot the start date. The movement was already in full swing before most people think it started.

Show Answer
The 1920s, though its roots extend back to the Great Migration’s first wave in the 1910s. It’s generally dated from about 1918 to the mid-1930s.

 

42. Who wrote “Their Eyes Were Watching God”?

One of the most important novels in American literature, and it was out of print for decades before Alice Walker championed its revival.

Show Answer
Zora Neale Hurston, published in 1937.

 

43. What Langston Hughes poem begins with the line, “What happens to a dream deferred?”

People know the line. They know the poem. But the title trips them up because it’s not what they expect.

Show Answer
“Harlem” (sometimes referred to as “A Dream Deferred”), published in 1951. Many people answer “A Dream Deferred” as the title, which is close but not technically correct.

 

44. A Lorraine Hansberry play took its title from that same Langston Hughes poem. Name the play.

I like pairing these two questions because the connection between them is itself a piece of Black literary history worth knowing.

Show Answer
“A Raisin in the Sun” (1959). It was the first play written by a Black woman to be produced on Broadway.

 

45. Who was the first Black author to win the Nobel Prize in Literature?

Two names fight for space in people’s heads. One is American, one is Nigerian. The Nigerian author won first, but most Americans guess the American.

Show Answer
Wole Soyinka of Nigeria, in 1986. The common wrong answer is Toni Morrison, who won in 1993 and was the first Black American to receive the prize.

 

46. Toni Morrison’s first novel, published in 1970, is called what?

People jump to “Beloved” or “Song of Solomon.” Her actual debut is quieter, and knowing it marks you as someone who’s read beyond the syllabus.

Show Answer
“The Bluest Eye.” “Beloved” (1987) and “Song of Solomon” (1977) came later and are more widely taught.

 

47. Who painted “The Migration Series,” a 60-panel depiction of the Great Migration?

This is a question that rewards people who’ve been to museums. The panels are split between two institutions, which is its own kind of story.

Show Answer
Jacob Lawrence, completed in 1941 when he was just 23 years old. The even-numbered panels are at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the odd-numbered panels are at the Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C.

 

48. What was the first major motion picture directed by a Black filmmaker to receive the Academy Award for Best Picture?

The phrasing matters here. I’m asking about the director, not just the film. And the answer is more recent than people want it to be.

Show Answer
“12 Years a Slave” (2013), directed by Steve McQueen. Barry Jenkins’ “Moonlight” won in 2017 (in that infamous envelope mix-up with “La La Land”). People often forget McQueen came first.

 

49. Who was the first Black performer to win an Academy Award?

The answer is well known. The category and the year are what people miss, and the role itself tells you a lot about Hollywood in that era.

Show Answer
Hattie McDaniel, who won Best Supporting Actress for her role as Mammy in “Gone with the Wind” in 1940. She was not allowed to sit with her castmates at the ceremony due to the venue’s no-Blacks policy.

 

50. Who was the first Black man to win the Academy Award for Best Actor?

Sidney Poitier is the instinct, and the instinct is right. But the gap between McDaniel’s win and his tells its own story.

Show Answer
Sidney Poitier, for “Lilies of the Field” in 1964. That’s a 24-year gap between McDaniel’s win and the next Black acting Oscar winner.

 

Music That Changed the Country

51. What record label, founded in Detroit in 1959, became known as “Hitsville U.S.A.”?

An easy one that lets the room breathe. But the founding story is worth knowing: Berry Gordy borrowed $800 from his family to start it.

Show Answer
Motown Records, founded by Berry Gordy Jr.

 

52. What genre of music, originating in Black churches in the early 20th century, heavily influenced the development of rock and roll, soul, and R&B?

Everyone knows the answer is gospel. What they don’t always know is how direct the line is. Sister Rosetta Tharpe was playing distorted electric guitar in the 1940s, a decade before Chuck Berry.

Show Answer
Gospel music.

 

53. Often called the “Godmother of Rock and Roll,” this guitarist and singer was shredding electric guitar before most rock legends were born. Name her.

I just mentioned her, but in a live setting these questions wouldn’t be back to back. She deserves her own question regardless.

Show Answer
Sister Rosetta Tharpe. Her 1944 performance of “Strange Things Happening Every Day” is considered one of the first rock and roll records.

 

54. What Billie Holiday song, first performed in 1939, is considered one of the earliest protest songs in American popular music?

The song is haunting. The fact that it was written by a white Jewish schoolteacher from the Bronx named Abel Meeropol adds a layer that always surprises people.

Show Answer
“Strange Fruit.” The song depicts the lynching of Black Americans in the South.

 

55. What instrument did jazz legend Louis Armstrong play?

A breather. But Armstrong’s influence is so vast that some people actually hesitate, thinking the question must be a trick. It’s not.

Show Answer
Trumpet (and cornet). He was also one of the most influential vocalists in jazz history.

 

56. In what year did hip-hop’s founding event, a back-to-school party DJed by DJ Kool Herc, take place in the Bronx?

The birth of hip-hop has a specific date and address. That specificity is part of what makes this question fun. People guess the early ’80s. The real answer is earlier.

Show Answer
August 11, 1973, at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue in the Bronx, New York. The party was organized by DJ Kool Herc’s sister, Cindy Campbell.

 

57. Who was the first Black artist to have a number-one hit on Billboard’s pop chart?

The chart system matters here. People guess wrong because they’re thinking of artists who were popular but whose sales were tracked on separate “race records” charts.

Show Answer
Nat King Cole, with “(I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons” in 1946. Some sources cite the Ink Spots’ earlier chart success, but Cole’s is the most widely recognized first number-one on the pop chart.

 

58. Nina Simone’s “Mississippi Goddam” was written in response to what two events in 1963?

Simone wrote the song in under an hour, in a fury. The two events that triggered it were happening almost simultaneously, and naming both is the challenge.

Show Answer
The assassination of Medgar Evers in Mississippi and the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing in Birmingham, Alabama, which killed four young girls.

 

59. What was the first rap song to reach the Billboard Hot 100?

People always guess “Rapper’s Delight” and they’re right. But some people argue for earlier recordings. In terms of charting, there’s a clear answer.

Show Answer
“Rapper’s Delight” by the Sugarhill Gang, in 1979. It reached number 36 on the Hot 100.

 

60. What Stevie Wonder album, released in 1976, included the song “I Wish” and references to growing up in Saginaw, Michigan?

Stevie Wonder questions are great because his catalog is so deep that even fans second-guess themselves.

Show Answer
“Songs in the Key of Life.” Widely regarded as one of the greatest albums ever made.

 

Sports, and the Weight They Carried

61. Jackie Robinson broke Major League Baseball’s color barrier in 1947 playing for which team?

Almost everyone gets this. It’s the questions after this one that do the real work.

Show Answer
The Brooklyn Dodgers.

 

62. What was Jackie Robinson’s jersey number, which is now retired across all of Major League Baseball?

Another one most people know. But the fact that it’s retired league-wide, not just by the Dodgers, is a distinction worth noting. No other sport has done this for any player.

Show Answer
42. It was retired across MLB on April 15, 1997, the 50th anniversary of Robinson’s debut.

 

63. Before Jackie Robinson, the Negro Leagues featured some of the greatest baseball players in history. Who is often considered the best pitcher in Negro League history?

Satchel Paige’s name comes up fast, and it should. His career stats are almost mythological because complete records don’t exist for many Negro League games.

Show Answer
Satchel Paige. He eventually joined the MLB in 1948 at age 42 (possibly older; his exact birth date was disputed) and became the oldest rookie in major league history.

 

64. At the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City, Tommie Smith and John Carlos raised their fists on the medal podium. What event had they just competed in?

People remember the image but not the race. And almost nobody remembers the third man on the podium.

Show Answer
The 200-meter dash. Smith won gold and Carlos won bronze. The silver medalist, Peter Norman of Australia, wore an Olympic Project for Human Rights badge in solidarity and faced severe consequences in his home country for doing so.

 

65. Who was the first Black quarterback to win the Super Bowl?

This happened far more recently than most people assume. The NFL had Black quarterbacks for decades before one won it all.

Show Answer
Doug Williams, who led the Washington Redskins to victory in Super Bowl XXII in January 1988. He was also named Super Bowl MVP.

 

66. What Black boxer refused induction into the U.S. military during the Vietnam War, saying, “I ain’t got no quarrel with them Viet Cong”?

Everyone knows. But the three-year exile from boxing that followed, during the prime of his career, is the part of the story that doesn’t get told enough.

Show Answer
Muhammad Ali. He was stripped of his heavyweight title, banned from boxing for three years, and faced a five-year prison sentence (later overturned by the Supreme Court in 1971).

 

67. Who was the first Black woman to win a Wimbledon singles title?

People split between Althea Gibson and the Williams sisters. The timeline is the tell.

Show Answer
Althea Gibson, in 1957. She also won the U.S. National Championships (now the U.S. Open) that same year. Venus and Serena Williams came decades later.

 

68. Jesse Owens won four gold medals at the 1936 Berlin Olympics. In what city was he from?

People guess Alabama because he was born there. But his family moved north during the Great Migration, and the city where he grew up and attended high school is the answer.

Show Answer
Cleveland, Ohio. He was born in Oakville, Alabama, and moved to Cleveland as a child.

 

69. What Black sprinter set a 100-meter world record in 1988 that was stripped due to doping, and whose story became a cautionary tale about performance-enhancing drugs?

This is a tricky inclusion for Black History Month trivia, but Ben Johnson’s story intersects with questions about race, national identity, and how quickly a country can disown its heroes.

Show Answer
Ben Johnson of Canada. After his positive test, Canadian media coverage notably shifted from calling him “Canadian sprinter” to “Jamaican-born sprinter.”

 

70. Who became the first Black head coach to win the Super Bowl?

The year of this answer, given how long the NFL has existed, says something about the league’s hiring practices that no statistic could.

Show Answer
Tony Dungy, who coached the Indianapolis Colts to victory in Super Bowl XLI in February 2007. Lovie Smith, who is also Black, coached the opposing Chicago Bears, making it the first Super Bowl with a Black head coach on either side and guaranteeing the first Black winner.

 

The Ones That Make You Do Math

71. For how many years was slavery legal in what became the United States (counting from the arrival of the first enslaved Africans to the passage of the 13th Amendment)?

People don’t do this math on their own. When they do, the number is staggering.

Show Answer
Approximately 246 years (1619 to 1865). For context, the United States has existed as an independent nation for less time than slavery existed on its soil.

 

72. How many years passed between the end of slavery and the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964?

Another math question. The gap between legal freedom and legal equality is the point.

Show Answer
99 years (1865 to 1964).

 

73. Ruby Bridges, the first Black child to desegregate an all-white elementary school in the South, is how old today (or at the time of her death)?

Ruby Bridges is still alive. That fact alone does the work. She was born in 1954 and as of 2024 is 70 years old. School desegregation is not ancient history. It happened within a living person’s childhood.

Show Answer
Ruby Bridges was born September 8, 1954, and is still alive. She was six years old when she walked into William Frantz Elementary School in New Orleans in 1960, escorted by federal marshals.

 

74. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 was signed into law how many days after President Kennedy’s assassination?

Kennedy introduced the legislation, but it was Lyndon Johnson who pushed it through Congress. The timeline between Kennedy’s death in November 1963 and the signing in July 1964 is about seven and a half months.

Show Answer
Approximately 235 days. Kennedy was assassinated on November 22, 1963, and the Civil Rights Act was signed on July 2, 1964.

 

75. How many enslaved people are estimated to have been transported across the Atlantic during the entire transatlantic slave trade?

People underestimate this number. Consistently and dramatically.

Show Answer
An estimated 12.5 million enslaved Africans were shipped across the Atlantic between the 16th and 19th centuries. Approximately 10.7 million survived the crossing. The most common wrong guesses are in the low millions.

 

The Questions Nobody Expects

76. What popular children’s toy was invented by Lonnie Johnson, a former NASA engineer?

This is one of my favorite Black History Month trivia questions because it plays completely differently than the rest of the set. The room lights up.

Show Answer
The Super Soaker. Johnson was working on a heat pump that used water instead of Freon when a prototype shot a stream of water across his bathroom. He realized the commercial potential immediately.

 

77. What Black cowboy is believed to have inspired the legend of the Lone Ranger?

The American West was far more diverse than Hollywood ever showed. Bass Reeves’ story is better than any Western ever filmed.

Show Answer
Bass Reeves, a formerly enslaved man who became one of the first Black deputy U.S. marshals west of the Mississippi. He arrested over 3,000 felons and was never shot in his 32-year career.

 

78. What percentage of cowboys in the post-Civil War American West are estimated to have been Black?

Following up the Reeves question with this one always gets a reaction. People guess 5% or less.

Show Answer
Approximately 25%, or one in four. Many were formerly enslaved people who had learned cattle herding on Southern plantations.

 

79. What Black explorer is credited with being the first non-Native American to set foot in present-day Arizona and New Mexico?

This predates the Pilgrims by nearly a century. People don’t expect Black history to start this early on the North American continent.

Show Answer
Esteban (also known as Estevanico or Esteban de Dorantes), a Moroccan-born enslaved man who traveled with Spanish explorers in the 1530s.

 

80. What Black architect designed the campus plan for Tuskegee Institute (now Tuskegee University)?

People know Booker T. Washington founded Tuskegee. They don’t know who designed it.

Show Answer
Robert Robinson Taylor, who was also the first accredited Black architect in the United States, graduating from MIT in 1892.

 

81. What African American newspaper, founded in 1827, is considered the first Black-owned newspaper in the United States?

1827. Before the telegraph, before photography, before the Civil War was even a distant possibility. Black Americans were publishing.

Show Answer
Freedom’s Journal, founded by John Russwurm and Samuel Cornish in New York City. Its first editorial declared: “We wish to plead our own cause. Too long have others spoken for us.”

 

82. Who was the first Black billionaire in the United States?

People guess Oprah almost every time. She was the first Black woman billionaire, but not the first Black billionaire overall.

Show Answer
Robert L. Johnson, founder of BET (Black Entertainment Television), who became a billionaire in 2001. Oprah Winfrey became the first Black woman billionaire in 2003.

 

83. What was the name of the Black community on the coast of South Carolina and Georgia whose members speak Gullah, a creole language with strong West African roots?

The Gullah Geechee culture is one of the most direct surviving links to West African traditions in the United States, and it’s still living and evolving.

Show Answer
The Gullah Geechee people. Their culture, language, and traditions have been preserved in the Sea Islands and coastal regions of South Carolina, Georgia, North Carolina, and Florida. The Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor was established by Congress in 2006.

 

84. What Black mathematician and astronomer published an almanac, corresponded with Thomas Jefferson about racial equality, and helped survey the land that became Washington, D.C.?

Benjamin Banneker’s letter to Jefferson is one of the most remarkable documents in American history. He essentially told Jefferson that his words about equality were meaningless as long as he owned slaves.

Show Answer
Benjamin Banneker. His 1791 letter to Jefferson challenged the future president to reconcile the ideals of the Declaration of Independence with the reality of slavery.

 

85. What was the name of the network of safe houses and secret routes used by enslaved people to escape to free states and Canada?

Everyone knows this one. I include it because in a mixed room, you need questions that let younger players or people less familiar with American history contribute without feeling left behind.

Show Answer
The Underground Railroad.

 

The Modern Era Isn’t as Settled as You Think

86. What year was Barack Obama elected as the 44th President of the United States?

Easy. But I’ve watched people second-guess themselves between 2008 and 2009 because the inauguration was in January 2009. The election was in 2008.

Show Answer
2008. He was inaugurated on January 20, 2009.

 

87. What was the name of the movement, founded in 2013, that became a global protest movement against police brutality and systemic racism?

The founding year catches people. Most associate it with 2014 or later, but the hashtag and the organization began a year earlier.

Show Answer
Black Lives Matter, founded by Alicia Garza, Patrisse Cullors, and Opal Tometi in 2013 following the acquittal of George Zimmerman in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin.

 

88. Ketanji Brown Jackson became the first Black woman to serve on the U.S. Supreme Court in what year?

Recent enough that people should get it, but the specific year trips up anyone who wasn’t paying close attention to the timeline.

Show Answer
2022. She was confirmed by the Senate on April 7, 2022.

 

89. The phrase “I can’t breathe” became a rallying cry after the deaths of two Black men at the hands of police. Name either one.

Both answers are correct. The fact that the same phrase applies to two separate deaths, six years apart, is the point.

Show Answer
Eric Garner (2014, Staten Island, New York) and George Floyd (2020, Minneapolis, Minnesota).

 

90. What city saw the largest single-day protest in American history on June 6, 2020?

People guess Minneapolis or New York. The answer reflects how widespread the movement was.

Show Answer
There wasn’t a single city. An estimated 500,000 people protested across nearly 550 locations in the United States on that single day. If forced to pick one city with the largest turnout, Washington, D.C. saw some of the densest gatherings.

 

91. What executive order did President Biden sign in 2021 to establish Juneteenth as a federal holiday?

Trick structure here. It wasn’t an executive order. It was an act of Congress.

Show Answer
It wasn’t an executive order. Biden signed the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act into law on June 17, 2021, after it passed both chambers of Congress. It became the first new federal holiday since Martin Luther King Jr. Day was established in 1983.

 

92. Amanda Gorman became the youngest inaugural poet in U.S. history at whose inauguration?

Her poem, “The Hill We Climb,” became a bestseller before most people had finished watching the ceremony.

Show Answer
President Joe Biden’s inauguration on January 20, 2021. She was 22 years old.

 

93. What 2020 documentary about the 13th Amendment, directed by Ava DuVernay, shares its name with the amendment itself?

This actually came out in 2016, not 2020. People misremember the year because of how much attention it received during the 2020 protests. The question is designed to catch that.

Show Answer
“13th,” released in 2016 on Netflix. If you said 2020, you’re not alone, but you’re off by four years.

 

94. What Pulitzer Prize-winning project, published by The New York Times in 2019, reframed American history by placing the year 1619 and the arrival of enslaved Africans at its center?

Whether you agree with its framing or not, this project reshaped how millions of people think about when American history begins.

Show Answer
The 1619 Project, created by journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones.

 

95. What historically Black sorority, founded in 1908, is the oldest Greek-letter organization established by Black women?

Divine Nine questions always get a reaction. Someone in the room is a member of one of these organizations, and they will not be quiet about it. That’s the fun.

Show Answer
Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc., founded at Howard University on January 15, 1908.

 

The Stretch Run

96. What city is home to the National Museum of African American History and Culture, which opened in 2016?

The museum’s location is easy. The fact that it took over 100 years from the first proposal to its opening is the part that lands.

Show Answer
Washington, D.C. It’s part of the Smithsonian Institution and sits on the National Mall. The first proposal for a national museum dedicated to Black history was made in 1915.

 

97. Who said, “The cost of liberty is less than the price of repression”?

People guess King or Douglass. The actual speaker is someone whose name they already know from earlier in this set.

Show Answer
W.E.B. Du Bois, from his 1909 biography of John Brown.

 

98. What was the name of the 1831 slave rebellion in Virginia, the largest and deadliest in U.S. history, which led to even harsher slave codes across the South?

The rebellion’s aftermath, in which the Virginia legislature seriously debated abolishing slavery and then chose instead to double down on it, is one of the great what-ifs in American history.

Show Answer
Nat Turner’s Rebellion (also called the Southampton Insurrection). Turner and his followers killed approximately 55 white people before the rebellion was suppressed. In retaliation, white mobs killed an estimated 200 Black people, most of whom had no connection to the uprising.

 

99. Carter G. Woodson, the “Father of Black History,” earned his PhD from what university, becoming only the second Black American to earn a doctorate there?

The first was Du Bois. The second was Woodson. Same institution, two decades apart, both men who spent their lives insisting that Black history was American history.

Show Answer
Harvard University. Woodson earned his PhD in 1912, seventeen years after Du Bois.

 

100. In his “Letter from Birmingham Jail,” Martin Luther King Jr. wrote that the greatest obstacle to Black freedom was not the Ku Klux Klan or the White Citizens’ Council, but a different group. Who was he describing?

I save this one for last because it still starts arguments. King’s answer wasn’t who people expect, and it forces a room to sit with an uncomfortable idea. He wrote that the “white moderate” was the greatest stumbling block, the person “who is more devoted to order than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice.” That line was written in the margins of a newspaper, in a jail cell, in 1963. And it sounds like it could have been written this morning. That’s the thing about Black history month trivia done right. It’s not about the past. It’s about how short the distance is between then and now, and how much of what we think we’ve settled is still an open question.

Show Answer
The “white moderate.” King wrote: “I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro’s great stumbling block in his stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen’s Counciler or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate.”

 

Robert Taylor

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