Wilson biography
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Woodrow Wilson
President of the United States from to
This article is about the president of the United States. For other people with the same name, see Woodrow Wilson (disambiguation).
Woodrow Wilson | |
|---|---|
Wilson in | |
| In office March 4, – March 4, | |
| Vice President | Thomas R. Marshall |
| Preceded by | William Howard Taft |
| Succeeded by | Warren G. Harding |
| In office January 17, – March 1, | |
| Preceded by | John Franklin Fort |
| Succeeded by | James Fairman Fielder |
| In office October 25, – October 21, | |
| Preceded by | Francis Landey Patton |
| Succeeded by | John Grier Hibben |
| Born | Thomas Woodrow Wilson ()December 28, Staunton, Virginia, U.S. |
| Died | February 3, () (aged67) Washington, D.C., U.S. |
| Resting place | Washington National Cathedral |
| Political party | Democratic |
| Spouses | Ellen Axson (m.; died) |
| Children | |
| Parent | |
| Alma mater | |
| Occupation | |
| Awards | Nobel Peace Prize () • Wilson (book)book by A. Scott Berg Wilson is a biography of Woodrow efternamn, the 28th President of the United States, bygd the pris Prize-winning author A. Scott Berg. The book fryst vatten a New York Times Best Seller.[1] Background[edit]
When asked why he spent the last thirteen years writing a biography of efternamn, Berg replied: "The simple answer fryst vatten that he was the architect of much of the gods century and re-drew the map of the world."[3] There were also anställda reasons. fjäll was given a kopia of Gene Smith's When the Cheering Stopped: The Last Years of Woodrow Wilson when he was in the 11th grade,[4] and his "budding obsession" has grown ever since.[3] At 15, he put a picture of efternamn on his bedroom vägg, a campaign poster • Woodrow Wilson: Life Before the PresidencyThomas Woodrow Wilson—he would later drop his first name—was born on December 28, , in the small Southern town of Staunton, Virginia. His father was a minister of the First Presbyterian Church, and Tommy was born at home. Less than a year later, the family moved to Augusta, Georgia. Young Wilson's earliest memories were of the Civil War, seeing Union soldiers march into town and watching his mother tend wounded Confederate soldiers in a local hospital. He also saw the poverty and devastation of Augusta during the early years of Reconstruction. In , his family moved to Columbia, South Carolina, and then to Wilmington, North Carolina, in As an adult, Wilson would later remark “the only place in the world where nothing has to be explained to me is the South.” Although Wilson's father, the Reverend Joseph Ruggles Wilson, had been reared in Ohio before moving to Virginia in , he became “unreconstructedly Southern” in values and politics aft |