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         Wilson Woodrow Us President:     more books (31)
  1. Woodrow Wilson (Getting to Know the Us Presidents) by Mike Venezia, 2007-03
  2. Philosophy and Policies of Woodrow Wilson (Midway Reprint Ser) by Latham, 1958-03
  3. Woodrow Wilson The State of the Union Address (President) by Woodrow Wilson, 2009-07-18
  4. President Wilson's Addresses - Woodrow Wilson by Woodrow Wilson, 2009-07-17
  5. The Inaugural Speeches of the President - Woodrow Wilson by Woodrow Wilson, 2009-10-15
  6. Woodrow Wilson as president (1916) by Eugene Brooks, 2010-10-17
  7. Address of the President of the United States, delivered at a joint sessio by Woodrow Wilson United States. President (1913-1921 : Wilson), 2009-08-14
  8. PRESIDENT WILSON'S FOURTEEN POINTS SPEECH by Woodrow Wilson, 2009-05-12
  9. President Wilson's Addresses by Woodrow Wilson, 2010-05-21
  10. "State of the Union Addresses of Woodrow Wilson" by Woodrow Wilson, 2008-12-31
  11. Woodrow Wilson, the Story of His Life by William Bayard Hale, 2010-05-18
  12. Woodrow Wilson, His Life and Work by William Dunseath Eaton, Harry Cyril Read, 2010-05-18
  13. Woodrow Wilson a Biography by Current History Maga, 1925
  14. Woodrow Wilson as I Know Him by Joseph P. Tumulty, 2009-03-18

81. Johns Hopkins Magazine April 2000
Thomas woodrow wilson (PhD 1886) was the first us president witha doctorate, but that's not why he's celebrated here. What put
http://www.jhu.edu/~jhumag/0400web/19.html
APRIL 2000
CONTENTS
PIONEERS
GUEST BOOK
As president, Woodrow Wilson laid the groundwork for today's United Nations. APRIL 2000
Pioneers of Advocacy
In a League of His Own
By Dale Keiger
Thomas Woodrow Wilson (PhD 1886) was the first U.S. president with a doctorate, but that's not why he's celebrated here. What put him on our list was his staunch advocacy of a set of principles that led to the League of Nations, principles that remain as current today as they were in 1919. After his stint at Hopkins, Wilson went on to be a professor, president of Princeton University, governor of New Jersey, and finally the occupant of the Oval Office in 1912. As U.S. president, his legislative agenda led to the establishment of the Federal Trade Commission and the Federal Reserve Board. He kept the country out of World War I until Germany's unrestricted submarine warfare and other factors exhausted his patience and forced his hand, leading to a declaration of war in 1917. After the war, Wilson formulated his Fourteen Points peace proposal. Several of the points still resonate powerfully: open public diplomacy with no secret agreements, freedom of navigation, the removal of trade barriers between nations, reduction of arms to the lowest possible point, and "a general association of nations...for the purpose of affording mutual guarantees of political independence and territorial integrity to great and small states alike." The last was the idea undergirding the League of Nations. The League didn't fare too well, hamstrung by many factors including the failure of the U.S. Congress to ratify the Treaty of Versailles. It ceased activity during the Second World War, but the concept was revived in 1946 with the founding of the United Nations.

82. World Almanac For Kids
woodrow wilson. The residence of the us president was called the president's Palace, the president's House, and the Executive Mansion, before Theodore
http://www.worldalmanacforkids.com/explore/presidents.html
'); else document.write(''); // This script will choose the CSS (stylesheet) to use based on browser // End > EXPLORE ANIMALS ENVIRONMENT HISTORICAL BIRTHDAYS ... home Presidents of the United States Click on a president below to get to know him better. Sorry, no female presidents yet.
George Washington
Benjamin Harrison John Adams Grover Cleveland ... Grover Cleveland
Presidential Thumbnails Take a quick look at some presidential statistics in order of appearance... George Washington to
Andrew Jackson
Grover Cleveland to
Woodrow Wilson
...
George W. Bush

First Ladies Make News These women served our country alongside their husbands.
Abigail Adams
Lucy Hayes Edith Roosevelt Edith Wilson ... Laura Bush
President George W. Bush had a regulation T-ball field built on the South Lawn of the White House.
The first game, between the Satchel Paige Memphis Red Sox and the Capitol City Rockies, took place on May 6, 2001.
In 1886, Grover Cleveland became the first, and only, president to be married in the White House. The residence of the U.S. president was called the "President's Palace," the "President's House," and the "Executive Mansion," before Theodore Roosevelt made "White House" the official name in 1901. John Adams was the first president to live in the White House.

83. Woodrow Wilson House - Washington's Only Presidential Museum
president wilson's home from 1921 until his death in 1924 is Washington's only presidential museum.
http://www.woodrowwilsonhouse.org/
The Campaign to Save an American Treasure: Woodrow Wilson House
Plan Your Visit
to
Washington's
Only
Presidential
Museum
A
National Trust
Historic Site

2340 S Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. Voice: 202-387-4062 Fax: 202-483-1466 Open Tues.-Sun. except Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Federal Holidays About President Wilson Special Exhibit - Jean Hugo, an Artist Observes WWI Kalorama House and Embassy Tour Preview the Tour ... National Trust Home Page

84. The American President Woodrow Wilson
Fact file and comprehensive biographical sketch based on PBS series. Also includes gallery and quotations.
http://www.americanpresident.org/kotrain/courses/WW/WW_In_Brief.htm

85. The Presidents Of The United States
A collection of biographies and photographs from the official White House web site.Category Kids and Teens School Time United States presidents...... of Andrew Jackson, Jackson, Andrew 182937, Portrait of woodrow wilson, wilson,woodrow 1913-21. presidents by Date . The president biographies presented here
http://www.whitehouse.gov/history/presidents/
Tours Tour in Person Tour On-Line Spotty's Tour
Presidents
... Kids Quiz
White House Art Eisenhower Executive Office Building Facts Life in the White House ... State of the Union
Resources Historical Association Presidential Libraries
Military Air Force One Camp David Marine One Home ... Presidents by Name
Alphabetical Order:
Adams to Jackson Alphabetical Order:
Jefferson to Wilson Adams, John
Jefferson, Thomas

Adams, John

Johnson, Andrew
... Presidents by Date The President biographies presented here are from the book The Presidents of the United States of America written by Frank Freidel and Hugh S. Sidey (contributing author), published by the White House Historical Association with the cooperation of the National Geographic Society Life in the White House President's Radio Address President Visits Soldiers at Army and Navy Medical Centers ... More News President Bush said, "Every nation represented here refuses to live in a future of fear, at the mercy of terrorists and tyrants. And every nation here today shares the same resolve: We will be relentless in our pursuit of victory." More Videos What happened on this day in 1945 during Franklin Roosevelt's administration?

86. Woodrow Wilson Birthplace
Staunton Virginia hosts this landmark of the 28th United States president. Includes historical facts, links and visitors information.
http://www.woodrowwilson.org

Visitor Info
Research Events Contact ... President's Shop
Welcome
Online Tour

Fact Sheets

Exhibits

Links
...
Job Opportunities

The Woodrow Wilson Birthplace
One of the few original Presidential birthplaces open to the public, Woodrow Wilson's first home offers an authentic picture of family life in the pre-Civil War Shenandoah Valley.
From its kitchens to the children's room, the servants' room to the dining room, the home comes to life through period furnishings, the Wilsons' household belongings, and guided interpretation. A charming 1933 boxwood garden, a restoration project of the Garden Club of Virginia , complements the National Historic Landmark. The Woodrow Wilson Museum The Museum galleries guide you through Wilson's public life, from his Princeton study to his historic Great War peace efforts. Serving from 1913 to 1921 as the 28th President of the United States, Woodrow Wilson is considered one of the greatest Presidents and the nation's first international leader. The Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library The United States of America has had forty-three Presidents lead the Nation over the past 226 years. Yet just 12 Presidential Libraries exist to document the record of these national leaders, help us understand the past, navigate the present, and prepare for the future.

87. Encyclopedia Americana: Woodrow Wilson
Encyclopedia Americana biographic entry for wilson as governor and as president.
http://gi.grolier.com/presidents/ea/bios/28pwils.html

Inaugural Address
Quick Facts The Presidents EA Contents WOODROW WILSON
Biography

Woodrow (Thomas) Wilson, 28th PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES of the United States: b. Staunton, Va., Dec. 28, 1856; d. Washington, D.C., Feb. 3, 1924. He was the son of Joseph Ruggles Wilson, who was the pastor of the Presbyterian Church in Staunton, Va. The elder Wilson accepted a call to Augusta, Ga., in 1857. "My earliest recollection," Woodrow Wilson said long afterward, "is of standing at my father's gateway in Augusta, Georgia, when I was four years old, and hearing someone pass and say that Mr. LINCOLN was elected and there was to be war." Joseph Ruggles Wilson, a strong southern sympathizer even though he had grown up in Ohio, was a chaplain in the Confederate Army. His son saw only the backwash of war, but he never forgot its terror or the lessons that it taught. Early Life The Wilsons moved to Columbia, S.C., in 1870, when Dr. Wilson accepted a professorship at the Columbia Theological Seminary. Columbia was still partly a burned ruin, and Radical Republicans ruled in the state capitol. But life was remarkably normal for the growing boy. He learned much from his brilliant father, continued his schooling, and joined the church in 1873. The following autumn he entered Davidson College in North Carolina. Because of illness Wilson stayed with his family in Wilmington, N.C., to which they had just moved, during 1874 and part of 1875. In September 1875 he entered the College of New Jersey, now Princeton University. He was a conscientious if not brilliant student (he stood midway in his class), and he read widely in the classics and fell in love with history. An ardent debater, he also wrote for college magazines.

88. Encyclopedia Americana: Thomas R. Marshall
Encyclopedia Americana He was born in North Manchester, Indiana, on March 14, 1854. He was chosen as the vice president with woodrow wilson. Reelected in 1916, he served with wilson until 1921.
http://gi.grolier.com/presidents/ea/vp/vpmarsh.html

The Vice-Presidents
The Presidents EA Contents THOMAS R. MARSHALL
Biography

Thomas Riley Marshall, (1854-1925), the 28th VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES . He was born in North Manchester, Ind., on March 14, 1854. He graduated from Wabash College in 1873, studied law, and was admitted to the Indiana bar in 1875, practicing his profession at Columbia City. In 1908 he was elected governor of Indiana; his administration was progressive. Several laws Marshall sponsored, including an employers' liability law and a child labor law, were enacted, but he failed to have a new state constitution adopted. At the Democratic National Convention in Baltimore in 1912, Marshall was the favorite-son candidate of Indiana for the presidency. When Woodrow WILSON was nominated for that office, Marshall was chosen for the vice presidency. Reelected in 1916, he served with Wilson until 1921. As presiding officer of the SENATE , he enjoyed much popularity, becoming known for his humorous remarks. In 1917, during a Senate debate on the country's needs, he said, "What this country needs is a good five-cent cigar." While Wilson attended the peace conference after World War I, Marshall presided over cabinet meetings, the first vice president to do so. During Wilson's serious illness, beginning in late 1919, Marshall considered the possibility of declaring himself acting president. But he decided not to do so, partly because he feared that his action would divide the country. He died in Washington, D.C., on June 1, 1925.

89. Woodrow Wilson And The Fourteen Points
Information and links on the American president, the Fourteen Points, and the League of Nations.
http://www.angelfire.com/in3/wilson/wepbae.html

90. About President Wilson
Short biography and timeline from the woodrow wilson House.
http://www.woodrowwilsonhouse.org/aboutfr.htm
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91. Internet Public Library: POTUS
woodrow wilson from The American president From the PBS series The American president,this biography covers his early life, his presidency, and his legacy.
http://ipl.si.umich.edu/div/potus/wwilson.html
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Woodrow Wilson
28th President of the United States
(March 4, 1913 to March 3, 1921) Nickname: "Schoolmaster in Politics" Born: December 28, 1856, in Staunton, Virginia
Died: February 3, 1924, in Washington, D.C. Father: Joseph Ruggles Wilson
Mother: Jessie Janet Woodrow Wilson
Married: Ellen Louise Axson (1860-1914) , on June 24, 1885; Edith Bolling Galt (1872-1961) , on December 18 , 1915
Children: Margaret Woodrow Wilson (1886-1944); Jessie Woodrow Wilson (1887-1933); Eleanor Randolph Wilson (1889-1967)

92. Welcome To Woodrow Wilson House
and directions to wilson's last residence.......
http://www.ibiblio.org/lia/president/pressites/wilson/WilsonH-brochure.html
This web service provides information on the National Trust for Historic Preservation and its projects at the Woodrow Wilson House Museum in Washington, D.C. If you have any questions about this service, please contact PRESIDENT at PRESIDENT@unc.edu
For information about the Wilson House, itself, email to wilsondc@worldweb.net. W oodrow W ilson H ouse The life and times of President Woodrow Wilson are captured in this National Historic Landmark. Scholar, educator, governor, statesman and the only former president to make his home in the nation's capitol, Wilson retired to the Embassy Row section of Washington in 1921. In leading the United States through World War I, as welll as working tirelessly to establish the League of Nations, Wilson expanded America's role in international af fairs and placed the country in a position of world leadership. The red brick Georgian Revival town house is rich in the legacy of Wilson's remarkable career. The house at 2340 S Street, N.W., was designed in 1915 by architect Waddy B. Wood and was purchased by the President in 1920 as a surprise for his second wife, Edith Bolling Wilson. Following a Scottish tradition, Wilson presented his wife with a small p iece of sod from the garden and the key to the front door. Here the Wilsons entertained prominent visitors, including David Lloyd George and Georges Clemenceau, read books from their extensive library, enjoyed movies and often went for rides through Rock Creek Park and into the Virginia coutryside.

93. World Book Not Found - DiscoverySchool.com
Biographical sketch based on World Book Encylopedia. Read about the president's entire life, or use navigation links to focus on a single era.
http://school.discovery.com/homeworkhelp/presidents/wilson.html
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94. Trenches On The Web - Bio: President Thomas Woodrow Wilson
by the summer of 1914 president wilson was spending As some of the injuries done ushave become at ease against organized wrong. woodrow wilson, 2nd Inaugural.
http://www.worldwar1.com/biocwil.htm

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President Thomas Woodrow Wilson
Paul Dean (pthomas.geo@yahoo.com)
See also: The Genealogy of President Thomas Woodrow Wilson
Who knows - you might be related!
Woodrow Wilson's Administration
By Paul Dean "Show me a hero and I'll write you a tragedy"
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Often it is difficult to determine whether a man is significant because of his own deeds or because he happened to be in the right place at the right time. Woodrow Wilson certainly presided over the nation at a memorable time, but his actions were significant and his policies still influence the United States today. His life is more a thought of what could have been, then what came to pass. Still, despite the inconsistencies, errors, and hesitations, Wilson's style and principles were unique. This enables his legacy to shine beyond the shadow of tragedy. From Princeton to President Wilson's rise to power was extraordinary. Few have risen from relative obscurity to world prominence so quickly. In 1909 he was the president of a small, struggling university, in 1918 he was the world's one hope for lasting peace. In 1909 Wilson's progressive programs and innovations as president of Princeton University attracted the attention of the Democratic political machine. They helped elect him Governor of New Jersey, but learned to regret it. Instead of following orders Wilson ended up cleaning house and riding the state house of much deep-seeded corruption. Presidential aspirations cut his tenure as Governor short. His writing, oratory skills, and progressive accomplishments gave him enough visibility to attract Democrats looking for a national leader. A speaking tour designed to test the waters was a rousing success and Governor Wilson stepped into national politics.

95. U.S. Senate: Art & History Home > Historical Minutes > 1878-1920 > Woodrow Wilso
government. On April 12, 1907, Columbia students turned out to hear PrincetonPresident woodrow wilson discuss the United States Senate.
http://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/minute/Woodrow_Wilsons_Changing_View
Home Historical Minutes
April 12, 1907
Woodrow Wilson's Changing Views of the Senate In 1906, the president of Columbia University invited the president of Princeton University to deliver a series of lectures on American government. On April 12, 1907, Columbia students turned out to hear Princeton President Woodrow Wilson discuss the United States Senate. In the twenty years since he had prepared his doctoral dissertation on Congress without ever visiting Congress, Wilson had gained considerable first-hand experience with the Senate. In 1907, he viewed the body with a spirit of cordiality and toleration. "There is no better cure for thinking disparagingly of the Senate than a conference with men who belong to it, to find out how various, how precise, how comprehensive their information about the affairs of the nation is; and to find, what is even more important, how fair, how discreet, how regardful of public interest they are." Wilson noted sympathetically the "unmistakable condescension with which the older members of the Senate regard the President of the United States." Senior senators treat him "at most as an ephemeral phenomenon," because they have served longer than presidents and their "experience of affairs is much mellower than the President's can be; [they look] at policies with steadier vision than the President's; the continuity of the government lies in the keeping of the Senate more than in the keeping of the executive, even in respect to matters which are of the especial prerogative of the presidential office. A member of longstanding in the Senate feels that he is the professional, the President an amateur."

96. First World War.com - Summary Timeline - 1917
website. January 10, Allies state peace objectives in response toUS president woodrow wilson's December 1916 peace note. January
http://www.firstworldwar.com/timeline/1917.htm
Summary Timeline: 1917
Updated - Sunday, 28 July, 2002 The First World War spanned four years and involved many nation states. This section lists the events of the year 1917, the fourth year of the war . This year saw the adoption by the German high command of the disastrous policy of unrestricted submarine warfare - disastrous in that it brought about America's entry into the war within the space of a couple of months, and ultimately led to her downfall the following year. Meanwhile the British launched a major offensive at Passchendaele in autumn 1917: as at the Somme the previous year it proved a highly costly failure. 1917 also saw Russia's exit from the war amid two revolutions, the first in February and a second in October. For a day by day account click here for the On This Day section of the website. January 10 Allies state peace objectives in response to US President Woodrow Wilson's December 1916 peace note January 31 Germany announces unrestricted submarine warfare February 1 Germany resumes unrestricted submarine warfare February 3 US severs diplomatic ties with Germany February 23 - April 5 German forces begin withdrawal to strong positions on the Hindenburg Line February 24 Zimmerman Telegram is passed to the US by Britain, detailing alleged German proposal of an alliance with Mexico against the US

97. The United States Presidential History Links Page
The Legacy of woodrow wilson American War Aims in World bolster his historical analysisof wilson's policies and the Great Depression, and the us News Media
http://we.got.net/docent/soquel/prez.htm
Search: All Products Books Popular Music Classical Music Video Electronics Software Kitchen Keywords: ***Recommended Reading - Long General List***** Life of George Washington, Vols 1-5 (The Complete Works of Washington Irving) John Adams: A Life - The book not only presents the life, character and achievements of John Adams in a lucid style but depicts a very absorbing picture of the United States and Europe during Adams' life time Thomas Jefferson and the New Nation : A Biography - Merrill Peterson's book is a great work of prose. It is a masterpiece of American biography. He looks at Jefferson's record with great care, and he makes every page a joy to read. The Life of James Monroe by George Morgan Diary of John Quincy Adams by John Quincy Adams Andrew Jackson - An excellent course supplement as well as fascinating reading for biography and history buffs. "The best biography of Andrew Jackson available." Library Journal Autobiography of Martin Van Buren - John C. Fitzpatrick (Editor)

98. Famous ClipArt US Presidents Woodrow Wilson
woodrow wilson (18561924), an american educator and statesman, twenty-eighth presidentof the United States, born at Staunton, Virginia, on December 28, 1856.
http://wondersmith.com/clipart/presidents/Woodrow_Wilson.htm

99. President Woodrow Wilson
by the summer of 1914 president wilson was spending As some of the injuries done ushave become at ease against organized wrong. woodrow wilson, 2nd Inaugural
http://www.angelfire.com/mi3/ww1/president.html
President Woodrow Wilson
President Wilson had great:
  • Determination
  • Ideals
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President Woodrow Wilson
Wilson's Cabinet
Wilson's cabinet was relatively weak and understandably inexperienced. The Democrats had not been in power since 1897, and the only member of any national prominence was three time Democratic Presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan. Wilson reluctantly agreed to choose Bryan as Secretary of State to appease a segment of the Democratic party. Bryan and Wilson saw eye to eye on most issues until war was imminent with the Central Powers. Josephus Daniels, Secretary of the Navy, was another important selection. He was most notable for who he choose as his under secretary, a young politician from New York named Franklin D. Roosevelt. Perhaps the most influential of all the president's advisors was a Texas gentleman nicknamed "Colonel" House. He noticed Wilson while he was governor of New Jersey and was invaluable throughout Wilson's administration although he never held an official post. The New Freedom
"Action is Character."

100. Wilson, Woodrow
in full THOMAS woodrow wilson (b. Dec. 28, 1856, Staunton, Va., USd. Feb. 3,1924, Washington, DC), 28th president of the United States (191321), an
http://search.eb.com/nobel/micro/641_30.html
Wilson, Woodrow,
Wilson in full THOMAS WOODROW WILSON (b. Dec. 28, 1856, Staunton, Va., U.S.d. Feb. 3, 1924, Washington, D.C.), 28th president of the United States (1913-21), an American statesman remembered for his high-minded and sometimes inflexible idealism, who led his country into World War I and became the leading advocate of the League of Nations at the Paris Peace Conference. He suffered a nervous collapse and stroke of paralysis while vainly seeking American public support for the Treaty of Versailles (September-October 1919).
Early life, education, and governorship.
Wilson's doctoral dissertation, Congressional Government, developed his attack upon the congressional committees. In the same year he married Ellen Louise Axson of Savannah, Ga., and began a teaching career at Bryn Mawr College as associate professor of history and political economy. In 1888 he became a professor at Wesleyan University in Connecticut; two years later he joined the Princeton faculty as professor of jurisprudence and political economy, in which capacity he served until 1902, when he was chosen president of the university. At Princeton, Wilson achieved a national reputation by his addresses and articles on political questions of the day, and in September 1910 he was offered the Democratic nomination for the governorship of New Jersey. The offer came at a moment when prospects for the success of his policies at Princeton seemed most discouraging, and he readily accepted. Conducting a dynamic and fearless campaign, he won the support of progressive elements throughout the state and was elected.

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