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Preface | ix | |
Introduction | 3 | |
1. | From Pastor's Son to Nobel Laureate: Biographical Sketch | 9 |
Childhood, 1856-1873 | 9 | |
College Years, 1873-1879 | 12 | |
Law and Graduate School, 1879-1886 | 14 | |
Academic Life and Family, 1886-1902 | 16 | |
President of Princeton, 1902-1910 | 19 | |
Governor of New Jersey, 1910-1912 | 23 | |
Wilson's First Term, 1912-1916 | 27 | |
Wilson's Second Administration, 1916-1920 | 29 | |
Retirement | 31 | |
Bibliographic Essay | 32 | |
Documents | ||
1.1 | An Imaginary Order | 34 |
1.2 | Letter from Joseph Ruggles Wilson to Wilson, March 27, 1877 | 34 |
1.3 | Wilson on Religion | 35 |
1.4 | Letter from Jesse Wilson to Wilson, May 20, 1874 | 36 |
1.5 | Life at Princeton | 36 |
1.6 | Excerpt, "Cabinet Government in the United States," 1879 | 37 |
1.7 | Critique of Congress, 1881 | 38 |
1.8 | Two of Wilson's Views on His Career | 41 |
1.9 | Letter from Wilson to Ellen Axson, September 18, 1883 | 42 |
1.10 | Letter from Wilson to Daniel Collamore Heath, March 30, 1886 | 44 |
1.11 | Excerpt, "The Study of Administration," 1887 | 45 |
1.12 | Excerpt, "Democracy" | 46 |
1.13 | Memorandum, "What Ought We To Do?" circa August 1, 1898 | 47 |
1.14 | Excerpt, Constitutional Government in the United States, 1908 | 48 |
1.15 | Report to the Princeton Board of Trustees, October 21, 1902 | 51 |
1.16 | Report to the Princeton Board of Trustees, June 10, 1907 | 54 |
1.17 | Speech, George Brinton McClellan Harvey, February 3, 1906 | 55 |
1.18 | Letter from Edith Bolling Galt to Annie Bolling, March 23, 1915 | 57 |
2. | Campaigns and Elections | 59 |
New Jersey Gubernatorial Election of 1910 | 59 | |
Presidential Election of 1912 | 63 | |
Congressional Elections of 1914 | 73 | |
Presidential Election of 1916 | 73 | |
Congressional Elections of 1918 | 76 | |
Presidential Election of 1920 | 78 | |
Bibliographic Essay | 79 | |
Documents | ||
2.1 | Acceptance Speech, Gubernatorial Nomination, September 15, 1910 | 81 |
2.2 | Response to George Lawrence Record, October 24, 1910 | 83 |
2.3 | Acceptance Speech, Democratic National Convention, August 7, 1912 | 86 |
2.4 | Excerpt, Speech, October 7, 1912 | 88 |
2.5 | 1912 Presidential Election | 90 |
2.6 | Letter from Wilson to Powell Evans, October 20, 1914; Letter from Wilson to Mary Allen Hulbert, November 4, 1914; House Diary, November 4, 1914 | 93 |
2.7 | Excerpts, 1916 Democratic Party National Platform | 94 |
2.8 | 1916 Presidential Election | 98 |
2.9 | Appeal to Voters, October 25, 1918 | 101 |
2.10 | Memorandum, March 25, 1920 | 102 |
3. | Administration Policies | 105 |
The New Freedom: First Phase | 106 | |
The New Freedom: Second Phase | 111 | |
Expanding the Role of Government, 1914-1916 | 114 | |
New Freedom Foreign Policy | 126 | |
Foreign Policy Lessons | 134 | |
Bibliographic Essay | 134 | |
Documents | ||
3.1 | Speech before Congress, April 8, 1913 | 138 |
3.2 | Speech before Congress, June 23, 1913 | 139 |
3.3 | Speech before Congress, January 20, 1914 | 141 |
3.4 | Letter from Wilson to Charles Allen Culberson, July 30, 1914 | 144 |
3.5 | Letter from Wilson to Carter Glass, May 12, 1914 | 144 |
3.6 | Statement on Signing the Land Bank Bill, July 17, 1916 | 145 |
3.7 | Wilson and Prohibition | 146 |
3.8 | Reply to National American Woman Suffrage Association, 1913 | 148 |
3.9 | Statement on Woman Suffrage, October 6, 1915 | 149 |
3.10 | Speech to the Senate, September 30, 1918 | 150 |
3.11 | A Cabinet Discussion about Segregation in the Government, April 11, 1913 | 153 |
3.12 | Excerpt, Meeting between Wilson and William Monroe Trotter, November 12, 1914 | 154 |
3.13 | Diary Entry, Josephus Daniels, April 14, 1920 | 156 |
3.14 | Diary Entry, Josephus Daniels, March 12, 1913 | 157 |
3.15 | Twenty-One Demands | 158 |
3.16 | Statement on Latin America, March 12, 1913 | 161 |
3.17 | Wilson on the Veracruz Occupation, November 24, 1914 | 162 |
3.18 | Speech, October 27, 1913 | 163 |
3.19 | Wilson and the Caribbean | 165 |
4. | Crises and Flashpoints | 169 |
Beginning of World War I | 170 | |
Submarine Warfare and the Lusitania | 171 | |
The United States Enters the War | 178 | |
Mobilization | 180 | |
The Fourteen Points | 182 | |
The Peace Conference | 183 | |
Treaty Fight in the United States | 189 | |
Wilson's Health | 193 | |
Bibliographic Essay | 195 | |
Documents | ||
4.1 | Press Conference, August 3, 1914 | 198 |
4.2 | Speech, January 8, 1915 | 199 |
4.3 | Draft of a Note to Germany about Submarine Warfare, February 6, 1915 | 199 |
4.4 | Letter from William Jennings Bryan to Wilson, May 12, 1915 | 201 |
4.5 | The House-Grey Memorandum | 202 |
4.6 | American Protest against German Submarine Attack on the Sussex, April 16, 1916 | 204 |
4.7 | Address to the Senate, January 22, 1917 | 204 |
4.8 | Request for Declaration of War, April 2, 1917 | 208 |
4.9 | The Fourteen Points, January 8, 1918 | 211 |
4.10 | Message from German Government to Wilson, October 6, 1918 | 215 |
4.11 | Excerpts, League of Nations Covenant | 215 |
4.12 | Press Release on Allied Intervention in Russia, August 3, 1918 | 219 |
4.13 | House and the Treaty of Versailles, November 24 and 27, 1919 | 220 |
4.14 | Round Robin Resolution, March 3, 1919 | 222 |
4.15 | Speech to the Senate, July 10, 1919 | 224 |
4.16 | Wilson's Stroke | 226 |
4.17 | Tumulty and Succession | 229 |
5. | Institutional Relations | 233 |
Relationship with His Cabinet | 234 | |
Relationship with the Military | 241 | |
Relationship with Congress | 245 | |
Relationship with the Supreme Court | 249 | |
Relationship with the Media | 255 | |
Bibliographic Essay | 259 | |
Documents | ||
5.1 | Relations with the Cabinet | 262 |
5.2 | Cabinet Meetings | 262 |
5.3 | Lindley Garrison's Resignation, January 14, 1916 | 269 |
5.4 | Franklin Lane on the Wilson Administration | 271 |
5.5 | David Houston on Wilson | 272 |
5.6 | Wilson and Edward M. House | 274 |
5.7 | Civilian Control of the Military | 276 |
5.8 | Wilson and the Military during World War I | 277 |
5.9 | Presidential Leadership in Congress | 277 |
5.10 | Working with Congress | 279 |
5.11 | Wilson on Capitol Hill | 282 |
5.12 | The Overman Act, May 20, 1918 | 284 |
5.13 | Justice James McReynolds's Opinion in Federal Trade Commission v. Gratz (1920) | 286 |
5.14 | Justice Louis Brandeis's Dissent in Hitchman Coal & Coke Company v. Mitchell (1917) | 287 |
5.15 | Justice John Hessin Clarke's Opinion in Abrams v. United States (1919) | 289 |
6. | After the White House: Wilson in Retirement | 293 |
An Inauguration Journey | 293 | |
The Wilson/Colby Law Firm | 297 | |
Politics Public and Private | 298 | |
The Document | 301 | |
The Road away from Revolution | 302 | |
Wilson's Last Days | 304 | |
Legacy | 309 | |
Bibliographic Essay | 311 | |
Documents | ||
6.1 | Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech | 312 |
6.2 | Wilson's Vision for Reelection, 1924 | 314 |
6.3 | "The Document" | 317 |
6.4 | Draft of a History of the United States, 1922 | 324 |
6.5 | "The Road away from Revolution," August 1923 | 327 |
6.6 | Speech, November 10, 1923 | 331 |
Appendix A | Notable Figures of the Wilson Presidency | 333 |
Appendix B | Key Events in Wilson's Life | 347 |
Appendix C | Wilson's Cabinet, 1913-1921 | 358 |
Works Cited | 359 | |
Index | 365 |
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Add 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 to your collection on WonderClub |