News

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.
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 ...
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.
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.
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.
Learn more about Woodrow Wilson Middle School here - See an overview of the school, get student population data, enrollment information, test scores and more.
Woodrow Wilson: The Light Withdrawn, by Christopher Cox (Simon & Schuster, 640 pp., $30.99) In Woodrow Wilson: The Light Withdrawn, Christopher Cox describes uber-progressive Woodrow Wilson as ...
On November 10, 1923, President Woodrow Wilson stood in his dressing gown in his dark-paneled library, swallowed his anxiety and prepared to execute “an exceedingly difficult stunt” — the ...
That was in the fall of 1915 when as Edith Boiling Galt, handsome, middle-aged widow of a Washington jeweler, she consented to marry 58-year-old Thomas Woodrow Wilson, 28th President of the U. S.
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.
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.