Later years of Woodrow Wilson
- In full:
- Thomas Woodrow Wilson
- Died:
- February 3, 1924, Washington, D.C. (aged 67)
- Also Known As:
- Thomas Woodrow Wilson
- Political Affiliation:
- Democratic Party
- Awards And Honors:
- Hall of Fame (1950)
- Nobel Prize (1919)
- Hall of Fame for Great Americans (1950)
- Nobel Peace Prize (1919)
- Notable Family Members:
- spouse Ellen Wilson
- spouse Edith Wilson
- son of Joseph Ruggles Wilson
- son of Janet Woodrow
- married to Edith Wilson (married 1915)
- married to Ellen Wilson (1885–1914 [her death])
- father of Margaret Woodrow Wilson (b. 1886–d. 1944)
- father of Jessie Woodrow Wilson Sayre (b. 1887–d. 1933)
- father of Eleanor Wilson McAdoo (b. 1889–d. 1967)
- brother of Joseph Ruggles Wilson, Jr.
- brother of Marion Wilson Kennedy
- brother of Annie Wilson Howe
- Subjects Of Study:
- history of United States
- Education:
- Davidson College
- Princeton University (B.A., 1879)
- University of Virginia (graduated 1881)
- Johns Hopkins University (Ph.D., 1886)
- Taught At:
- Wesleyan University
- Princeton University
- Bryn Mawr College
- Published Works:
- "On Being Human" (1916)
- "Constitutional Government in the United States" (1908)
- "A History of the American People" (1902)
- "When a Man Comes to Himself" (1901)
- "Division and Reunion, 1829–1889" (1893)
- "The State: Elements of Historical and Practical Politics" (1889)
- "Congressional Government: A Study in American Politics" (1885)
Wilson lived in Washington for almost three years after leaving office in March 1921. Though an invalid, he never wavered in his conviction that the United States should and would eventually join the League of Nations, and he took a keen interest in politics. In one of his last public appearances he rode in the funeral procession of his younger and supposedly healthy successor, Harding. Wilson died in his sleep at his Washington home. His remains were interred in the newly begun National Cathedral; he is the only president buried in the capital city. His historical reputation at first suffered from his failure to carry the day in his last years and the ascendancy of the Republicans, and it declined further during the 1930s with the “revisionist” revulsion against World War I. But during World War II Wilson’s reputation soared, as he came to be regarded as a wrongly unheeded prophet whose policies would have prevented world calamity. The United Nations and collective security pacts are viewed as fulfillment of Wilson’s internationalist vision.
John Milton CooperCabinet of President Woodrow Wilson
The table provides a list of cabinet members in the administration of President Woodrow Wilson.
March 4, 1913–March 3, 1917 (Term 1) | |
---|---|
*Department of Commerce and Labor reorganized into separate departments. | |
State | William Jennings Bryan |
Robert Lansing (from June 23, 1915) | |
Treasury | William Gibbs McAdoo |
War | Lindley Miller Garrison |
Newton Diehl Baker (from March 9, 1916) | |
Navy | Josephus Daniels |
Attorney General | James McReynolds |
Thomas Watt Gregory (from September 3, 1914) | |
Interior | Franklin Knight Lane |
Agriculture | David Franklin Houston |
Commerce* | William Cox Redfield |
Labor* | William Bauchop Wilson |
March 4, 1917–March 3, 1921 (Term 2) | |
State | Robert Lansing |
Bainbridge Colby (from March 23, 1920) | |
Treasury | William Gibbs McAdoo |
Carter Glass (from December 16, 1918) | |
David Franklin Houston (from February 2, 1920) | |
War | Newton Diehl Baker |
Navy | Josephus Daniels |
Attorney General | Thomas Watt Gregory |
A. Mitchell Palmer (from March 5, 1919) | |
Interior | Franklin Knight Lane |
John Barton Payne (from March 13, 1920) | |
Agriculture | David Franklin Houston |
Edwin Thomas Meredith (from February 2, 1920) | |
Commerce | William Cox Redfield |
Joshua Willis Alexander (from December 16, 1919) | |
Labor | William Bauchop Wilson |