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WILSON, Thomas Woodrow “Woody” Thomas Woodrow “Woody” Wilson, 90, husband of Joanna Dziadek passed away on Tuesday (April 10, 2007). Woody lived in Hartford and Farmington f… ...
Because Thomas Woodrow Wilson disbelieved in racial equality. Says Princeton President Christopher Eisgruber: "Wilson's racist opinions and policies make him an inappropriate namesake." ...
On Election Day, Wilson won only 42 percent of the popular vote, but he became the 28th president. By 1916, Republicans were no longer fractured when the Democratic convention was held in St. Louis.
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 ...
Woodrow Wilson's stiff, posed image comes to mind as you pass the house: serious expression, carefully parted hair, professorial glasses, angles in his face from a line of Scottish ancestors. "League ...
President Woodrow Wilson suffered a stroke on Oct. 2, 1919, leaving him barely able to work. First Lady Edith Wilson moved quickly to shield her husband’s condition from the press and public.
Vice President Thomas Riley Marshall, who served under President Woodrow Wilson, wrote that he once got tourists to notice him by standing at the door of his vice-presidential Senate office and ...
Dedicating a plain white brick house in Staunton, Va., where Thomas Woodrow Wilson was born, he turned a simple dedicating address into a statement of his credo. It was an impressive ceremony.
Decades earlier, in 1836, Woodrow Wilson’s maternal grandfather, the Reverend Thomas Woodrow, and his family boarded a ship in Liverpool bound for New York City.
President Woodrow Wilson suffered a stroke on Oct. 2, 1919, leaving him barely able to work. First Lady Edith Wilson moved quickly to shield her husband's condition from the press and public.
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