The letter was addressed to President Woodrow Wilson, who arrived in D.C. in 1913 to find something he hadn’t seen anywhere — a diverse federal workforce, where Black and White professionals ...
It has—and under even more dramatic circumstances. In 1919, President Woodrow Wilson suffered a catastrophic stroke, a debilitating event meticulously concealed from the American public.
Washington DC feels very distant from our quiet corner of England, but one late US president has a special connection to the border city of Carlisle. Woodrow Wilson - whose mother Janet 'Jessie ...
Trump’s actions echo President Woodrow Wilson’s then-unprecedented segregation of federal offices in 1913. Then, there was no official law, no executive order, just guiding policy — policy ...
Donald Trump signed an executive order ending what he called quote “radical and wasteful” diversity, equity and inclusion programs in federal agencies. The purge echoing the racist actions of ...
Ulysses S. Grant, our 18th president, entered the earthly stage as Hiram Ulysses Grant. When his name was mistakenly entered on the West Point register as Ulysses Simpson Grant, he eagerly ...