Quiz: How Well Do You Know Our National Monuments?

The United States has 133 national monuments. Test your knowledge about them—and learn how to join REI Co-op in supporting the movement to designate several more.

From the Statue of Liberty standing tall above New York Harbor to Idaho’s volcanic Craters of the Moon, national monuments protect some of our country’s most prized places and objects, and tell some of our most important stories. Mountains, islands, caves, forts, ruins and birthplaces—anywhere “of historic or scientific interest” can be deemed a national monument with a law or presidential proclamation.

It just takes a few minutes to email your representatives and make a difference with the REI Cooperative Action Network.

Take action today

They protect millions of acres of public lands and offer some of the most scenic places to climb, hike, kayak and more, but national monuments also increasingly offer some of America’s least-crowded adventures—in part because many people don’t know a lot about them.

Do you? Test your knowledge of our national monuments.


A group of people sit on a log overlooking a lighthouse.
Lime Kiln Light overlooking Dead Man’s Bay; San Juan Islands National Monument, Washington. Photo credit: Ivan Lasso

Take the Quiz


Welcome to your howwelldoyouknowournationalmonuments

What is a national monument?

What was the first established national monument?

Which president designated the greatest number of national monuments?

Which of these songs could be on a playlist about our national monuments?

Which national monument had the most visitors in both 2021 and 2022?

How many national monuments are there?

Which of these national parks started out as a national monument?

President Biden recently proclaimed two national monuments in two weeks in Aug. 2023. One was the aforementioned Baaj Nwaavjo I’tah Kukveni—Ancestral Footprints of the Grand Canyon National Monument, in Arizona. What was the other?

Which state has the most national monuments?

What is the largest national monument in the Lower 48 states?

Bonus question: What are some ways you can support national monuments?


Hikers in a river crossing
Grand Staircase–Escalante National Monument, Utah. Photo courtesy of Arizona Outback Adventures

Mobilizing for Monuments

REI Co-op has joined the Conservation Alliance, The North Face, Patagonia, Keen, the Outdoor Alliance and more to form the Mobilizing for Monuments coalition, which encourages businesses, American citizens and everyone who loves the outdoors to act now to permanently protect our lands and waters from climate change and urban development. One of the swiftest ways to enact that big a change is by establishing and expanding national monuments.

This August, President Biden designated Baaj Nwaavjo I’tah Kukveni—Ancestral Footprints of the Grand Canyon National Monument, a nearly 1-million-acre addition to monument lands, thanks to an awareness initiative and campaign that has been led by 12 Indigenous tribes in the area. Now, through our REI Cooperative Action Network, we’re working with Mobilizing for Monuments to urge Biden to establish, expand and protect several more national monuments, including California’s San Gabriel Mountains National Monument and Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument and Colorado’s Dolores River Canyon Country National Monument

Together, we can join voices to support national monument designations across the U.S. Protecting the country’s remaining wild places and outdoor spaces, preserving cultural and historical sites, improving opportunities for recreation, getting more citizens outdoors and growing the economies of in-need communities—these are matters in everyone’s interest.

Join the REI Cooperative Action Network in advocating for America’s most precious places and learn more about how you can continue advocating for new and expanded national monuments.