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Also Known As | Thomas Woodrow Wilson |
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Born | December 28, 1856 • Staunton • Virginia |
Died | February 3, 1924 (aged 67) • Washington, D.C. • United States |
Title / Office | presidency of the United States of America (1913-1921), United States • governor (1911-1913), New Jersey |
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 |
Role In | Fourteen Points • Paris Peace Conference • Selective Service Acts • Sussex Incident • Treaty of Versailles • Underwood-Simmons Tariff Act • United States occupation of Veracruz • World War I • Zimmermann Telegram • Clayton Antitrust Act |
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) |