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MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA TRIVIA

1) Who is the city of Montgomery, Alabama named after?


Richard Montgomery (1738-1775) was an Irish soldier who first served in the British Army and later became a major general in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War. He is most famous for leading the unsuccessful 1775 invasion of Quebec, during which he was killed.

2) What river flows through Montgomery?


The Alabama River played an important role in the growth of the economy in the region during the 19th century as a source of transportation of goods, which included slaves. The river is still used for transportation of farming produce, but is not as important as it once was due to the construction of roads and railways.

3) What famous social protest took place in Montgomery during the 1950s?


The Montgomery Bus Boycott took place after Rosa Parks, an African-American woman, was arrested for her refusal to surrender her seat to a white person. It was a seminal event in the civil rights movement in the United States and led to a U.S. Supreme Court decision that declared the laws that segregated buses were unconstitutional.

4) What is Montgomery's nickname?


Nicknames for Montgomery include the Cradle of the Confederacy and Birthplace of the Civil Rights Movement. The Gump is a more recent moniker popularized by rap group Deuce Komradz.

5) What Native American tribe inhabited the area now known as Montgomery before the arrival of Europeans?


Present-day Montgomery is built on the site of two Alibamu towns: Ikanatchati, meaning "red earth," and Towassa, built on a bluff called Chunnaanaauga Chatty.

6) Montgomery was the first U.S. city with citywide _____.


In 1886 Montgomery became the first city in the United States to install citywide electric streetcars along a system that was nicknamed the Lightning Route. Residents followed the streetcar lines to settle in new housing in what were then "suburban" locations.

7) What Montgomery church is recognized as a National Historic Landmark by the U.S. Department of the Interior?


Dexter Avenue Baptist Church was designated as a National Historic Landmark in 1974 because of its importance in the civil rights movement and American history. In 1978, the official name was changed to the Dexter Avenue King Memorial Baptist Church, in memory of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who was pastor there and helped organize the Montgomery bus boycott in 1955.

8) What year did Montgomery, Alabama, elect its first black mayor?


Upon taking office on November 12, 2019, Steven Reed became the first African-American mayor of Montgomery since its incorporation in 1819.

9) What is located one block south of the Alabama State Capitol?


The First White House of the Confederacy is an 1835 Italianate-style house in which President Jefferson Davis and family lived while the Confederate capital was in Montgomery.

10) What towns merged to form Montgomery?


Andrew Dexter Jr. founded New Philadelphia, the present-day eastern part of downtown Montgomery. He envisioned a prominent future for his town and set aside a hilltop known as "Goat Hill" as the future site of the state capitol building. New Philadelphia prospered, and Scott and his associates built a new town adjacent, calling it East Alabama Town. Originally rivals, the towns merged on December 3, 1819, and were incorporated as the town of Montgomery.

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