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President Woodrow Wilson made the saying famous, but he was not the first one who used it. The British futurist writer and social commentator H.G. Wells invented the phrase. He predicted that WWI ...
Woodrow Wilson, the 28th U.S. President, poses for a portrait in this undated photo. (AP) In his Nov. 11 op-ed, “On this World War I anniversary, let’s not celebrate Woodrow Wilson,” Michael ...
On this date 100 years ago, Woodrow Wilson issued a Thanksgiving proclamation to a grateful nation. “This year we have special and moving cause to be grateful and to rejoice,” the 28 th U.S ...
Executive Director Robert Enholm leads a tour of World War I objects in President Woodrow Wilson's Washington, D.C., home. President Wilson retired in 1921 after leaving the White House. Mr.
On the Nov. 11 100th anniversary of the Allied victory in World War I, I’m celebrating the heroism of American warriors in Europe. Perhaps 116,000 of them died in that struggle. Their commander ...
Keywords World War I, peace treaty, Woodrow Wilson, Treaty of Versailles, Clemenceau, Lloyd George, peacemakers, harsh terms, international relations, League of Nations Email us at footage@avgeeks ...
Woodrow Wilson and Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Wars on Civil Liberties. Without question these two books are revisionist efforts that reflect profound reservations about Wilson and Roosevelt that stem ...
Thomas Woodrow Wilson was born in Staunton on December 28, 1856, and soon after his family moved to Augusta, Georgia. President of Princeton University, governor of New Jersey, 1919 Nobel Peace ...
What has caused the reevaluation of Wilson’s legacy? Well, turns out, even by the standard of the early 1900s, he was an unapologetic, virulent racist. This isn’t a recent discovery, he never ...
Professor Margaret MacMillan discussed Woodrow Wilson's beliefs and role in regards to the end of World War I.