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H. W. Brands - Woodrow Wilson: The 28th President, 1913-1921

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H. W. Brands Woodrow Wilson: The 28th President, 1913-1921
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A comprehensive account of the rise and fall of one of the major shapers of American foreign policy
On the eve of his inauguration as President, Woodrow Wilson commented, It would be the irony of fate if my administration had to deal chiefly with foreign affairs. As America was drawn into the Great War in Europe, Wilson used his scholarship, his principles, and the political savvy of his advisers to overcome his ignorance of world affairs and lead the country out of isolationism. The product of his effortshis vision of the United States as a nation uniquely suited for moral leadership by virtue of its democratic traditionis a view of foreign policy that is still in place today.
Acclaimed historian and Pulitzer Prize finalist H. W. Brands offers a clear, well-informed, and timely account of Wilsons unusual route to the White House, his campaign against corporate interests, his struggles with rivals at home and allies abroad, and his decline in popularity and health following the rejection by Congress of his League of Nations. Wilson emerges as a fascinating man of great oratorical power, depth of thought, and purity of intention.

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Table of Contents The Devil We Knew Americans and the Cold War TR - photo 1
Table of Contents

The Devil We Knew: Americans and the Cold War

TR: The Last Romantic

What America Owes the World:
The Struggle for the Soul of Foreign Policy

The First American: The Life and Times of Benjamin Franklin

The Age of Gold:
The California Gold Rush and the New American Dream
H. W. Brands is a distinguished professor of history and holder of the Melbern G. Glasscock Chair at Texas A&M University. His previous books include the Pulitzer Prize finalist The First American: The Life and Times of Benjamin Franklin, The Age of Gold, and TR , a biography of Theodore Roosevelt. He lives in Austin, Texas.
Unless otherwise indicated, all references below are to The Papers of Woodrow Wilson, edited by Arthur S. Link et al., which are organized by date. Letters are from Wilson, unless otherwise noted. Full bibliographic information regarding works cited in short form is in the bibliography.
1. TO SEE THE BENCHES SMILE
Baccalaureate address, June 12, 1904.
Letter to Mary Peck, July 30, 1911.
August Heckscher, Woodrow Wilson , 33.
Draft letter to John W. Leckie, c. July 4, 1875.
Diary entries for June 15 and 17, 1876.
Letter to the Princetonian, Jan. 25, 1877, Papers .
Princetonian editorial, June 7, 1877, Papers .
Diary entry for Nov. 6, 1876.
Diary entry for June 16, 1876.
Diary entry for Nov. 10, 1876.
William Earl Chatham, Nassau Literary Magazine , Oct. 1878, Papers .
John Bright, Virginia University Magazine , Mar. 1880, Papers .
Mr. Gladstone: A Character Sketch, Virginia University Magazine, Apr. 1880, Papers.
Cabinet Government in the United States, International Review, Aug. 1879, Papers.
Letter to Charles A. Talcott, Dec. 31, 1879.
Ibid.
Letter from Joseph R. Wilson, Aug. 14, 1882.
Letter to Robert Bridges, May 24, 1881.
Letter to Robert Bridges, Apr. 29, 1883.
Letter to Robert Bridges, Nov. 19, 1884.
Heckscher, Woodrow Wilson , 76.
Letter to Robert Bridges, Nov. 7, 1879.
Heckscher, Woodrow Wilson , 166.
Arthur S. Link, Wilson, 1:142.
Letter to John M. Harlan, June 23, 1910.
Acceptance speech, Sept. 15, 1910.
News report, Sept. 17, 1910, Papers.
Statement by James Smith, Jr., Dec. 9, 1910.
Note to letter from James E. Martine, July 28, 1911.
Address, Sept. 19, 1912.
Address, Sept. 20, 1912.
Address, Sept. 23, 1912.
Note to address, Oct. 31, 1912.
Inaugural address, Mar. 4, 1913.
The following quotes from the exchange between Wilson and McCombs are taken from William F. McCombs, Making Woodrow Wilson President , edited by Louis Jay Lang (New York: Fairview, 1921), 2079.
Various diary entries for 1876, for example.
Edward M. House, The Intimate Papers of Colonel House , 1:116.
Ibid., 1:114.
Letter to Edward M. House, Jan. 11, 1915.
Link, Wilson, 2:94.
Ibid., 152.
Remarks at press conference, Apr. 7, 1913.
Address to joint session of Congress, Apr. 8, 1913.
Ibid.
Link, Wilson , 2:154.
Statement, May 26, 1913.
Address to joint session, June 23, 1913.
Link, Wilson , 2:434.
Letter to Oscar W. Underwood, Oct. 17, 1914.
2. THE IRONY OF FATE
Ray Stannard Baker, ed., Woodrow Wilson , 4:55.
Statement, Mar. 12, 1913.
Report by William B. Hale, July 9, 1913.
Letter to John Lind, Aug. 4, 1913.
Letter to Mary A. Hulbert, Aug. 24, 1913.
Letter to Mary A. Hulbert, Nov. 2, 1913.
Link, Wilson , 2:391.
Interview, Apr. 27, 1914.
Address to Congress, Apr. 20, 1914.
Letter to William C. Adamson, July 20, 1914.
Link, Wilson, 3:481.
Remarks at press conference, July 27, 1914.
Statement, Aug. 18, 1914.
Letter from William Jennings Bryan, Aug. 10, 1914.
Letter from Robert Lansing, Sept. 6, 1915.
Link, Wilson, 3:17374.
Ibid., 320.
Foreign Relations of the United States, 1915, supplement, 9899.
Letter from Edward M. House, May 9, 1915.
Address, May 10, 1915.
Link, Wilson, 3:382.
Remarks at press conference, May 11, 1915.
Foreign Relations of the United States , 1915, supplement, 43738.
Ibid., 48182.
Letter to William Jennings Bryan, June 5, 1915.
Diary entry of Edward M. House, June 24, 1915.
Letter to William Jennings Bryan, June 9, 1915.
Letter to Edith Bolling Galt, Sept. 21, 1915.
Heckscher, Woodrow Wilson , 335.
Ibid., 340.
Diary entry of Edward M. House, Nov. 6, 1914.
Diary entry of Edward M. House, Nov. 14, 1914.
Heckscher, Woodrow Wilson, 34748.
Letter to Edith Boiling Galt, May 11, 1915.
Letter to Edith Bolling Galt, July 20, 1915.
Letter from Edith Bolling Galt, June 9, 1915.
Link, Wilson , 4:229.
Address to Congress, Apr. 19, 1916.
Foreign Relations of the United States, 1916, supplement, 25760.
Letter from Robert Lansing, May 6, 1916.
Heckscher, Woodrow Wilson, 412.
3. MORE PRECIOUS THAN PEACE
Note to letter from Edward M. House, Feb. 15, 1916.
Diary entry of Edward M. House, Mar. 6, 1916.
Address to Senate, Jan. 22, 1917.
Ibid.
Link, Wilson , 5:268-70.
Diary entry of Edward M. House, Feb. 1, 1917.
Address to Congress, Feb. 3, 1917.
Memorandum by Robert Lansing, Mar. 20, 1917.
Diary entry of Josephus Daniels, Mar. 20, 1917.
Ibid.
Address to Congress, Apr. 2, 1917.
Baker, Woodrow Wilson , 5:77.
Ibid., 7:80.
David M. Kennedy, Over Here , 112.
Ibid., 80.
H. C. Peterson and Gilbert C. Fite, Opponents of War, 19171918 (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1957), 22.
H. W. Brands, TR: The Last Romantic (New York: Basic Books, 1997), 781.
Ibid., 781-82.
Statement, May 18, 1917.
Ray Stannard Baker and William E. Dodds, eds., The Public Papers of Woodrow Wilson, 5:39.
Address to Congress, Apr. 2, 1917.
Kennedy, Over Here, 173.
Address to Congress, Jan. 8, 1918.
Ibid.
Address, Apr. 6, 1918.
Letter to Edward M. House, July 8, 1918.
Letter from Newton D. Baker, Nov. 27, 1918.
Address, Sept. 27, 1918.
Ibid.
Ibid.
Ibid.
Letter from Edward M. House, Oct. 30, 1918.
Ibid.
Statement, Nov. 11, 1918.
Address to Congress, Nov. 11,1918.
4. WHAT WE DREAMED AT OUR BIRTH
Thomas J. Knock, To End All Wars, 169.
Ibid., 160.
Memorandum of conversation by Thomas W. Lamont, Oct. 4, 1918.
Knock, To End All Wars, 179.
Memorandum of conversation by Thomas W. Lamont, Oct. 4, 1918.
Statement, Oct. 19, 1918.
Knock, To End All Wars, 180.
Brands, TR, 809.
Memorandum by Frank I. Cobb, Nov. 4, 1918.
Knock, To End All Wars, 194-95.
Ibid., 195.
Address, Dec. 28, 1918.
Address to peace conference, Feb. 14, 1919.
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