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Woodrow Wilson

US Presidents

 

United States Presidents

Woodrow Wilson,
1913 - 1921

Twenty-eighth President
Democrat
Vice President - 
Thomas R. Marshall
Born: December 28, 1856
Staunton, Virginia
Occupation: Teacher, Public Official
Married Ellen Louise Axson
Edith Bolling Galt
Died: February 3, 1924
Washington, D. C. 

Early Years:  Wilson was educated in private schools and later went to the College of New Jersey, now Princeton University.  He became a lawyer but was unsuccessful.  He then studied History and political science, earned a Ph.D. and became a teacher.  

His Presidency:  Wilson pushed many bills through Congress which affected tariff rates, income tax, banking, business, child labor and other domestic public policies.  He helped write the peace treaty after World War I and advocated establishing a League of Nations to help prevent wars in the future.  Wilson won the 1919 Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts in creating a lasting peace following World War I.

His Life:   Like Roosevelt before him, Woodrow Wilson regarded himself as the personal representative of the people. "No one but the President," he said, "seems to be expected ... to look out for the general interests of the country." He developed a program of progressive reform and asserted international leadership in building a new world order. In 1917 he proclaimed American entrance into World War I a crusade to make the world "safe for democracy."

Wilson had seen the frightfulness of war. He was born in Virginia in 1856, the son of a Presbyterian minister who during the Civil War was a pastor in Augusta, Georgia, and during Reconstruction a professor in the charred city of Columbia, South Carolina.

After graduation from Princeton (then the College of New Jersey) and the University of Virginia Law School, Wilson earned his doctorate at Johns Hopkins University and entered upon an academic career. In 1885 he married Ellen Louise Axson.

Wilson advanced rapidly as a conservative young professor of political science and became president of Princeton in 1902.

His growing national reputation led some conservative Democrats to consider him Presidential timber. First they persuaded him to run for Governor of New Jersey in 1910. In the campaign he asserted his independence of the conservatives and of the machine that had nominated him, endorsing a progressive platform, which he pursued as governor.

He was nominated for President at the 1912 Democratic Convention and campaigned on a program called the New Freedom, which stressed individualism and states' rights. In the three-way election he received only 42 percent of the popular vote but an overwhelming electoral vote.

Wilson maneuvered through Congress three major pieces of legislation. The first was a lower tariff, the Underwood Act; attached to the measure was a graduated Federal income tax. The passage of the Federal Reserve Act provided the Nation with the more elastic money supply it badly needed. In 1914 antitrust legislation established a Federal Trade Commission to prohibit unfair business practices.

Another burst of legislation followed in 1916. One new law prohibited child labor; another limited railroad workers to an eight-hour day. By virtue of this legislation and the slogan "he kept us out of war," Wilson narrowly won re-election.

But after the election Wilson concluded that America could not remain neutral in the World War. On April 2,1917, he asked Congress for a declaration of war on Germany.

Massive American effort slowly tipped the balance in favor of the Allies. Wilson went before Congress in January 1918, to enunciate American war aims--the Fourteen Points, the last of which would establish "A general association of nations...affording mutual guarantees of political independence and territorial integrity to great and small states alike."

After the Germans signed the Armistice in November 1918, Wilson went to Paris to try to build an enduring peace. He later presented to the Senate the Versailles Treaty, containing the Covenant of the League of Nations, and asked, "Dare we reject it and break the heart of the world?"

But the election of 1918 had shifted the balance in Congress to the Republicans. By seven votes the Versailles Treaty failed in the Senate.

The President, against the warnings of his doctors, had made a national tour to mobilize public sentiment for the treaty. Exhausted, he suffered a stroke and nearly died. Tenderly nursed by his second wife, Edith Bolling Galt, he lived until 1924.


Did you know?  Wilson enjoyed golf so much, he even played in the snow, using black balls.  

Quotations

"A man who thinks of himself as belonging to a particular national group in America has not yet become an American."

Woodrow Wilson - 

"The great curse of public life is that you are not allowed to say all the things you think."

Woodrow Wilson - 

"The wisest thing to do with a fool is to encourage him to hire a hall and discourse to his fellow citizens. Nothing chills nonsense like exposure to air."

Woodrow Wilson - 

"Sometimes people call me an idealist. Well, that is the way I know I am an American . . . America is the only idealist nation in the world."

Woodrow Wilson - 

"I have always been among those who believed that the greatest freedom of speech was the greatest safety, because if a man is a fool, the best thing to do is to encourage him to advertise the fact by speaking." 

Woodrow Wilson - (Speech, 1919)

"If you want to make enemies, try to change something."

Woodrow Wilson - 

"The man who is swimming against the stream knows the strength of it."

Woodrow Wilson - 

"I am all kinds of a democrat, so far as I can discover—but the root of the whole business is this, that I believe in the patriotism and energy and initiative of the average man."

Woodrow Wilson - 

"No one who has read official documents needs to be told how easy it is to conceal the essential truth under the apparently candid and all-disclosing phrases of a voluminous and particularizing report . . ."

Woodrow Wilson - 

"Business underlies everything in our national life, including our spiritual life. Witness the fact that in the Lord's Prayer the first petition is for daily bread. No one can worship God or love his neighbor on an empty stomach." 

Woodrow Wilson - (Speech, 1912)

"The Americans who went to Europe to die are a unique breed. Never before have men crossed the seas to a foreign land to fight for a cause which they did not pretend was peculiarly their own, which they knew was the cause of humanity and mankind. These Americans gave the greatest of all gifts, the gift of life and the gift of spirit."


Woodrow Wilson - 

"I am not one of those that have the least anxiety about the triumph of the principles I have stood for: I have seen fools resist Providence before, and I have seen their destruction, as will come upon these again, utter destruction and contempt. That we shall prevail is as sure as that God reigns." 

Woodrow Wilson - (His last public words, November, 1923)

 

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