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Woodrow Wilson Book

Woodrow Wilson
Woodrow Wilson, Wilson's visionary temperament and quick-paced leadership made him a uniquely articulate champion of the most essential American values. His policies, perhaps more so than any other president in this century, have shaped the world today. In this comprehen, Woodrow Wilson has a rating of 4 stars
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Woodrow Wilson, Wilson's visionary temperament and quick-paced leadership made him a uniquely articulate champion of the most essential American values. His policies, perhaps more so than any other president in this century, have shaped the world today. In this comprehen, Woodrow Wilson
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  • Woodrow Wilson
  • Written by author Kendrick A. Clements
  • Published by Dee, Ivan R. Publisher, August 1999
  • Wilson's visionary temperament and quick-paced leadership made him a uniquely articulate champion of the most essential American values. His policies, perhaps more so than any other president in this century, have shaped the world today. In this comprehen
  • Clements and Cheezum (respectively a professor of history and a doctoral student at the U. of South Carolina, Columbia) present an analytical portrait of Wilson and his presidency. Similarly to other volumes in the series there are six chapters covering b
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Prefaceix
Introduction3
1.From Pastor's Son to Nobel Laureate: Biographical Sketch9
Childhood, 1856-18739
College Years, 1873-187912
Law and Graduate School, 1879-188614
Academic Life and Family, 1886-190216
President of Princeton, 1902-191019
Governor of New Jersey, 1910-191223
Wilson's First Term, 1912-191627
Wilson's Second Administration, 1916-192029
Retirement31
Bibliographic Essay32
Documents
1.1An Imaginary Order34
1.2Letter from Joseph Ruggles Wilson to Wilson, March 27, 187734
1.3Wilson on Religion35
1.4Letter from Jesse Wilson to Wilson, May 20, 187436
1.5Life at Princeton36
1.6Excerpt, "Cabinet Government in the United States," 187937
1.7Critique of Congress, 188138
1.8Two of Wilson's Views on His Career41
1.9Letter from Wilson to Ellen Axson, September 18, 188342
1.10Letter from Wilson to Daniel Collamore Heath, March 30, 188644
1.11Excerpt, "The Study of Administration," 188745
1.12Excerpt, "Democracy"46
1.13Memorandum, "What Ought We To Do?" circa August 1, 189847
1.14Excerpt, Constitutional Government in the United States, 190848
1.15Report to the Princeton Board of Trustees, October 21, 190251
1.16Report to the Princeton Board of Trustees, June 10, 190754
1.17Speech, George Brinton McClellan Harvey, February 3, 190655
1.18Letter from Edith Bolling Galt to Annie Bolling, March 23, 191557
2.Campaigns and Elections59
New Jersey Gubernatorial Election of 191059
Presidential Election of 191263
Congressional Elections of 191473
Presidential Election of 191673
Congressional Elections of 191876
Presidential Election of 192078
Bibliographic Essay79
Documents
2.1Acceptance Speech, Gubernatorial Nomination, September 15, 191081
2.2Response to George Lawrence Record, October 24, 191083
2.3Acceptance Speech, Democratic National Convention, August 7, 191286
2.4Excerpt, Speech, October 7, 191288
2.51912 Presidential Election90
2.6Letter from Wilson to Powell Evans, October 20, 1914; Letter from Wilson to Mary Allen Hulbert, November 4, 1914; House Diary, November 4, 191493
2.7Excerpts, 1916 Democratic Party National Platform94
2.81916 Presidential Election98
2.9Appeal to Voters, October 25, 1918101
2.10Memorandum, March 25, 1920102
3.Administration Policies105
The New Freedom: First Phase106
The New Freedom: Second Phase111
Expanding the Role of Government, 1914-1916114
New Freedom Foreign Policy126
Foreign Policy Lessons134
Bibliographic Essay134
Documents
3.1Speech before Congress, April 8, 1913138
3.2Speech before Congress, June 23, 1913139
3.3Speech before Congress, January 20, 1914141
3.4Letter from Wilson to Charles Allen Culberson, July 30, 1914144
3.5Letter from Wilson to Carter Glass, May 12, 1914144
3.6Statement on Signing the Land Bank Bill, July 17, 1916145
3.7Wilson and Prohibition146
3.8Reply to National American Woman Suffrage Association, 1913148
3.9Statement on Woman Suffrage, October 6, 1915149
3.10Speech to the Senate, September 30, 1918150
3.11A Cabinet Discussion about Segregation in the Government, April 11, 1913153
3.12Excerpt, Meeting between Wilson and William Monroe Trotter, November 12, 1914154
3.13Diary Entry, Josephus Daniels, April 14, 1920156
3.14Diary Entry, Josephus Daniels, March 12, 1913157
3.15Twenty-One Demands158
3.16Statement on Latin America, March 12, 1913161
3.17Wilson on the Veracruz Occupation, November 24, 1914162
3.18Speech, October 27, 1913163
3.19Wilson and the Caribbean165
4.Crises and Flashpoints169
Beginning of World War I170
Submarine Warfare and the Lusitania171
The United States Enters the War178
Mobilization180
The Fourteen Points182
The Peace Conference183
Treaty Fight in the United States189
Wilson's Health193
Bibliographic Essay195
Documents
4.1Press Conference, August 3, 1914198
4.2Speech, January 8, 1915199
4.3Draft of a Note to Germany about Submarine Warfare, February 6, 1915199
4.4Letter from William Jennings Bryan to Wilson, May 12, 1915201
4.5The House-Grey Memorandum202
4.6American Protest against German Submarine Attack on the Sussex, April 16, 1916204
4.7Address to the Senate, January 22, 1917204
4.8Request for Declaration of War, April 2, 1917208
4.9The Fourteen Points, January 8, 1918211
4.10Message from German Government to Wilson, October 6, 1918215
4.11Excerpts, League of Nations Covenant215
4.12Press Release on Allied Intervention in Russia, August 3, 1918219
4.13House and the Treaty of Versailles, November 24 and 27, 1919220
4.14Round Robin Resolution, March 3, 1919222
4.15Speech to the Senate, July 10, 1919224
4.16Wilson's Stroke226
4.17Tumulty and Succession229
5.Institutional Relations233
Relationship with His Cabinet234
Relationship with the Military241
Relationship with Congress245
Relationship with the Supreme Court249
Relationship with the Media255
Bibliographic Essay259
Documents
5.1Relations with the Cabinet262
5.2Cabinet Meetings262
5.3Lindley Garrison's Resignation, January 14, 1916269
5.4Franklin Lane on the Wilson Administration271
5.5David Houston on Wilson272
5.6Wilson and Edward M. House274
5.7Civilian Control of the Military276
5.8Wilson and the Military during World War I277
5.9Presidential Leadership in Congress277
5.10Working with Congress279
5.11Wilson on Capitol Hill282
5.12The Overman Act, May 20, 1918284
5.13Justice James McReynolds's Opinion in Federal Trade Commission v. Gratz (1920)286
5.14Justice Louis Brandeis's Dissent in Hitchman Coal & Coke Company v. Mitchell (1917)287
5.15Justice John Hessin Clarke's Opinion in Abrams v. United States (1919)289
6.After the White House: Wilson in Retirement293
An Inauguration Journey293
The Wilson/Colby Law Firm297
Politics Public and Private298
The Document301
The Road away from Revolution302
Wilson's Last Days304
Legacy309
Bibliographic Essay311
Documents
6.1Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech312
6.2Wilson's Vision for Reelection, 1924314
6.3"The Document"317
6.4Draft of a History of the United States, 1922324
6.5"The Road away from Revolution," August 1923327
6.6Speech, November 10, 1923331
Appendix ANotable Figures of the Wilson Presidency333
Appendix BKey Events in Wilson's Life347
Appendix CWilson's Cabinet, 1913-1921358
Works Cited359
Index365


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Woodrow Wilson, Wilson's visionary temperament and quick-paced leadership made him a uniquely articulate champion of the most essential American values. His policies, perhaps more so than any other president in this century, have shaped the world today. In this comprehen, Woodrow Wilson

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Woodrow Wilson, Wilson's visionary temperament and quick-paced leadership made him a uniquely articulate champion of the most essential American values. His policies, perhaps more so than any other president in this century, have shaped the world today. In this comprehen, Woodrow Wilson

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Woodrow Wilson, Wilson's visionary temperament and quick-paced leadership made him a uniquely articulate champion of the most essential American values. His policies, perhaps more so than any other president in this century, have shaped the world today. In this comprehen, Woodrow Wilson

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