Robin von Seldeneck, President/CEO of the Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library ... who will have to do the fighting and dying.” After the war, Wilson advocated for the creation of the League ...
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 ...
In mid-November, they were agitating for the former university president’s name to be removed from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs over his legacy of white supremacy.
Here's where presidents have lived after they left the White House. President Woodrow Wilson stayed in Washington, DC, after his presidency, moving into 2340 South S Street in 1921. Woodrow Wilson ...
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 ...
In 1919, President Woodrow Wilson suffered a catastrophic ... That question became acute when, four days after Wilson’s catastrophic stroke, his cabinet convened to deliberate the nation ...
Woodrow Wilson ... of the strong. In Wilson's imagined future, the league of Nations - a global covenant among nations - would peaceably settle future conflicts. To President Wilson, the tens ...
President Woodrow Wilson meets with foreign leaders at the end of World War I. These talks led to the Treaty of Versailles. This is narrated by former President Herbert Hoover.
Woodrow Wilson's record on race relations ... 1917-1918. Courtesy: NARA As president, Wilson confronted a new generation of African American leaders, men like William Monroe Trotter, W.E.B ...
A Southerner and a Democrat, Woodrow Wilson rode the Progressive Movement into the White House in 1912. For his second term campaign in 1916, he promised to keep the USA neutral and not to enter WWI.