All 60 bits of North Carolina trivia in the NYT crossword so far this year
At some point this past winter, I began noticing North Carolina trivia popping up in The New York Times crossword puzzle.
An Elon University here. An Emerald Isle there. Sports references galore.
I’ve been addicted to the puzzle for about a year now, and in love with North Carolina my whole life.
So in January, I started jotting the NC references down. The closer I looked, the more I found.
I’d planned to share the full list at year’s end, but we’re officially halfway through 2024, and my list has grown faster and more interesting than I could have ever imagined.
So I’m splitting the job in two.
Here’s all the Tar Heel state trivia the NYT crossword has featured from January through June.
A guide to reading:
The ANSWER is listed first, followed by the numbered clue. “A” is for across and “D” is for down. The day follows, to show the difficulty level. The puzzles get harder from Monday to Saturday. Sundays are moderately difficult, but the puzzles are jumbo-sized.
History
TWO
29D: Number of graduates in the first class at West Point (1802) (Wednesday, Jan. 10)
One of these was Joseph Gardner Swift, who soon moved to North Carolina to command Fort Johnson on the Cape Fear River. He married a woman from Wilmington.
REED
28D: Bacteriologist Walter who conducted yellow fever research (Friday, March 15)
The namesake of the favored hospital for U.S. presidents, Walter Reed grew up in Murfreesboro, on the coast near Virginia.
WEBB
47D: Telescope named for the second administrator of NASA (Friday, April 5)
James Webb spent a lot of time in North Carolina before moving to D.C. He grew up in Granville County, attended UNC-Chapel Hill and commanded a Marine Corps unit at Cherry Point.
APOLLO I
110A: Mission honored by the “Fallen Astronaut” lunar memorial (Sunday, April 14)
33A: Tragic NASA mission of 1967 (Wednesday, April 24)
Like many astronauts of their era, the three-man crew of Apollo I spent time in Chapel Hill’s Morehead Planetarium studying stars before the fatal 1967 test launch.
POLK
44A: President during the Mexican-American War (Sunday, April 21)
James K. Polk, the 11th U.S. president, was born in Mecklenburg County and graduated from the University of North Carolina.
ELLA
3D: Civil rights activist Baker (Sunday, May 12)
She spent most of her childhood in Littleton and graduated from Shaw University, where she helped found the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) an influential organization in the Civil Rights Movement.
WASPS
49D: Female flying group in W.W. II (Friday, May 31)
These pilots trained at Camp Davis, a military facility near Jacksonville.
Sports
CLINT
46D: American soccer icon ___ Dempsey (Saturday, Jan. 6)
After a legendary career, Clint Dempsey retired to Pinehurst.
SAN ANTONIO SPURS
17A: Tim Duncan’s longtime N.B.A. team (Monday, Jan. 8)
Duncan played for four years at Wake Forest University, where he was named the College Player of the Year in 1997.
ASHE
17A: Arthur who won Wimbledon in 1975 (Monday, Jan. 15)
12D: New York stadium eponym (Friday, Jan. 19)
7D: Arthur with a statue on Richmond’s Monument Avenue (Thursday, Feb. 1)
75A: Athlete Arthur (Sunday, Feb. 11)
3D: Arthur of the court (Wednesday, Feb. 21)
56A: “Off the Court” memoirist, 1981 (Friday, March 23)
Arthur Ashe shared his last name with Samuel Ashe, the former governor of North Carolina and namesake of Asheville, because the tennis great’s African ancestors were owned by Samuel Ashe in the 1700s. Arthur Ashe was born in Richmond, Virginia.
CAROLINA
15D: Panthers’ home (Saturday, Feb. 3)
The NFL team, making a rare February appearance.
HORNETS
16A: Members of the genus Vespa (Wednesday, Feb. 14)
Fun fact for fans of the Charlotte NBA squad.
ARENAS
16A: Where to watch the Lightning and Hurricanes (Wednesday, Feb. 21)
Raleigh’s PNC Arena is in for a major transformation over the next few years that will hopefully put it on par with Amalie Arena in Tampa.
HAMM
5D: Soccer great Mia (Monday, Feb. 26)
Mia Hamm went to North Carolina, winning four national championships and losing only one game during her time with the Heels.
LOLA
26A: Bunny first appearing in “Space Jam” (1996) (Wednesday, Feb. 28)
The movie stars Wilmington’s own Michael Jordan, a six time NBA champion and perhaps the greatest basketball player of all time.
CANES
25D: Carolina N.H.L.’ers, informally (Thursday, March 14)
Next year is surely our year.
CHA
35A: The N.B.A.’s Hornets, on scoreboards (Saturday, May 11)
I confidently wrote in CLT at first. Oops.
NIKES
1A: Jordans, e.g. (Friday, May 17)
The first Air Jordan was released in 1985, the year after Michael Jordan left UNC. He won an NCAA championship while playing for the Tar Heels.
EMEKA
14D: _____ Okafor, 2004-05 N.B.A. Rookie of the Year (Saturday, May 18)
Okafor achieved the feat with the Charlotte Bobcats, who drafted him second overall.
DASHED HOPES
100A: S-O-L-O and L-A-N-G-E? (Sunday, June 2)
Half of this wordplay clue references Hope Solo, a longtime goalie for the U.S. women’s national soccer team who resettled in North Carolina after her playing career ended.
STEPH
51D: N.B.A. star Curry (Tuesday, June 4)
The elite point guard grew up in Charlotte and, in 2008, took the Davidson College Wildcats to the Elite Eight.
Places
ISLE
43A: Emerald ___ (Saturday, Jan. 6)
I filled this in without hesitation, then thought surely I’d have to correct it later. Now I know it’s most likely a reference to Ireland’s longtime nickname. Whatever.
ELON
47A: The Phoenix of the N.C.A.A. (Saturday, Jan. 27)
37A: Private university of North Carolina (Wednesday, Jan. 31)
I did not know their mascot, but was delighted when the first answer fell into place. I confidently wrote in Duke for the second mention. Elon University is situated halfway between Raleigh and Greensboro.
COASTAL AREA
22D: The Outer Banks or the Jersey Shore, e.g. (Thursday, March 28)
The barrier islands lent their name to a TV show of the same name.
UNC
53D: Chapel Hill sch. (Tuesday, June 18)
My heart leapt. Go Heels.
Food & Drink
ALE
23D: Sierra Nevada, e.g. (Wednesday, Jan. 17)
The clued brand opened a major brewery in the North Carolina mountain town Mills River a decade ago.
SOY
3D: Base for tofu and tempeh (Tuesday, Jan. 23)
Soybeans are North Carolina’s most widely farmed crop, with production valued at nearly $810 million in 2023.
PEPSI
21D: Coke competitor (Tuesday, Feb. 13)
Pepsi comes from New Bern.
SLAW
15A: Red ____ (serving at a Carolina barbecue) (Thursday, Feb. 15)
I’m from the blessed eastern side of the state, so I have never had this, but am assured it’s a very real thing.
YAM
67D: Thanksgiving serving (Wednesday, June 12)
North Carolina has produced more sweet potatoes than any other state since the 1970s.
Business
MOOG
14A: Pioneering synthesizer brand (Tuesday, Jan. 23)
Moog Music is based in Asheville.
TIM
63D: Cook with a long history at Apple (Wednesday, Feb. 21)
Tim Cook got his business degree in 1988 at Duke University while working on personal computers at IBM. He joined Apple a decade later and is now CEO.
MENU
56D: The Cheesecake Factory’s has more than 20 pages (Tuesday, March 26)
The Cheesecake Factory has two bakeries on either side of the country. The East Coast facility is in Rocky Mount.
MINI GOLF
18A: Popular pastime played with putters (Monday, May 13)
Well, what do you know? The first known miniature golf course in America was built in Pinehurst in 1919.
IBM
115D: Company that once generated more than 4,000 patents in a single year (Sunday, June 23)
The company has a sprawling campus in Research Triangle Park, hiring its first employee there in 1965. The patent achievement happened in 2008.
Arts & Culture
SHAW
20D: Jazz trumpeter Woody (Saturday, Jan. 20)
Woody Shaw hailed from Laurinburg, near the South Carolina border.
IDOL
54A: Longtime TV singing series, to fans (Wednesday, Feb. 7)
30D: “American ____” (Wednesday, March 27)
North Carolina is home to more American Idol winners than any other state:
Fantasia Barrino (2004) is from High Point
Scotty McCreery (2011) is from Garner
Caleb Johnson (2014) is from Asheville
ARTIE
52A: Jazz great Shaw (Thursday, Feb. 8)
One of Artie Shaw’s eight (!!!) wives was film darling Ava Gardner, who was from Johnston County and attended Atlantic Christian College.
AMY
28D: Comedian Sedaris (Tuesday, March 5)
The Sedaris family relocated to Raleigh from New York when their kids were young, which figures into both Amy’s and her brother David’s comedy careers.
SMOOVE
30D: Actor J. B. of “Curb Your Enthusiasm” (Thursday, March 7)
The comedian was born in Plymouth, a small town on the Roanoke River.
RAP
9D: Genre for Da Brat or DaBaby (Monday, March 11)
DaBaby hails from Charlotte.
ESSO
61A: Indie pop duo Sylvan ____ (Friday, March 22)
“We are dead,” the duo posted in response.
RETTA
9D: One-named actress on “Parks and Recreation” (Friday, March 22)
Retta, who played Donna Meagle, went to Duke University.
SAX
113D: Coltrane’s instrument (Sunday, March 24)
The jazz artist was born in the small town of Hamlet and grew up in High Point.
TRIO
30D: Ben Folds Five, e.g., oddly enough (Thursday, April 4)
Ben Folds is from Greensboro and the band formed in Chapel Hill.
ENDERS
36D: “_____ Game” (sci-fi classic) (Thursday, April 4)
Author Orson Scott Card has lived in Greensboro since the 1980s.
BETTY
13D: Smith who wrote “A Tree Grows in Brooklyn” (Sunday, April 14)
The novel was written in North Carolina. In the 1930s, the federal government sent Betty Smith to Chapel Hill to work as part of her theater job in the Works Progress Administration.
ESP
78D: One of Eleven’s powers on “Stranger Things” (Sunday, April 21)
The show was created by Durham natives Matt and Ross Duffer, who are twin brothers.
I TOLD YOU SO
57A: 1988 #1 country hit for Randy Travis (Sunday, April 28 — This is a music-themed puzzle, so buckle up!)
The singer-songwriter grew up in Marshville, a teensy town outside of Charlotte.
NINA
45D: Singing Simone (Sunday, April 28)
The blues musician hails from Tryon, a small town on the edge of the Blue Ridge Mountains.
THE PIPS
58D: Gladys Knight’s backup group (Sunday, April 28)
Gladys Knight went to Shaw University and now lives near Asheville.
MILES
110D: Jazz trumpeter Davis (Sunday, April 28)
The trumpet Miles Davis recorded the landmark album “Kind of Blue” with now resides at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
ANGELOU
8D: “And Still I Rise” writer (Sunday, May 17)
Maya Angelou moved to North Carolina in 1981 after taking a professorship at Wake Forest University. She lived in Winston-Salem until her death in 2014.
MATT
13D: ____ James, ABC’s first Black “Bachelor” (Thursday, May 23)
He is a Raleigh native.
PAM
5D: Grier of “Foxy Brown” (Sunday, June 9)
The 1970s movie star was born in Winston-Salem.
BEBOP
34D: Monk’s style (Thursday, June 20)
Jazz artist Thelonious Monk was born in Rocky Mount.
TORI
15D: Singer Amos (Thursday, June 27)
Tori Amos was born in Catawba County.
Miscellany
THAT DOG DON’T HUNT
29A: “Bad plan!,” in Southern slang (Saturday, Jan. 6)
There’s no definitive source on where this came from, but it was very in-the-language for me. Our state dog, the Plott hound, is a “rugged, relentless hunting dog who is a mellow gentleman at home,” according to the American Kennel Club.
EPA
37D: Superfund grp. (Sunday, Jan. 7)
29A: Org. that regulates fertilizers (Saturday, Feb. 24)
66D: Lead regulator, for short (Wednesday, April 17)
58D: Org. that enforces the Toxic Substances Control Act (Wednesday, May 29)
62D: Org. concerned with climate change (Thursday, June 13)
36A: Emissions-monitoring org. (Tuesday, June 18)
The Environmental Protection Agency has a sprawling campus in Research Triangle Park where more than 2,000 people work.
Nearly hitting for the cycle. Can we get a Monday and a Friday before 2024 ends?
LOCAL PAPER
1A: Small-town issue (Saturday, April 27)
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