Eleanor Randolph Wilson McAdoo (October 16, 1889 – April 5, 1967) was an American writer and the youngest daughter of American president Woodrow Wilson...
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Secretary of the Treasury from 1913 to 1918. He married Wilson's daughter, Eleanor, in 1914. McAdoo presided over the establishment of the Federal Reserve...
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Wilson. She was the middle sister of Margaret Woodrow Wilson and Eleanor Wilson McAdoo. She was educated privately in Princeton, New Jersey at Miss Fine's...
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Woodrow Wilson and Ellen Axson Wilson, Eleanor Wilson McAdoo, ed., McGraw-Hill, New York, 1962 "Edith Bolling Galt Wilson". The White House. Retrieved 2021-09-14...
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Derrick McAdoo (born 1965), American football player Eleanor Wilson McAdoo (1889–1967), daughter of Woodrow Wilson and second wife of William Gibbs McAdoo Harriette...
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neuroscientist Eleanor Marx (1855–1898), British writer and daughter of Karl Marx Eleanor Matsuura, British actress Eleanor Wilson McAdoo (1889–1967), American...
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Woodrow Wilson. Wilson's daughter, Eleanor Wilson McAdoo, served as an informal counselor. Journalist Ray Stannard Baker, an authority on Wilson, served...
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Philippines. In 1914, their third child Eleanor married William Gibbs McAdoo, U.S. Secretary of the Treasury under Woodrow Wilson and later a U.S. Senator from...
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James Wilson (February 20, 1787 – October 17, 1850) was an Irish-American journalist and politician. Wilson, who began his career working for the Philadelphia...
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Sedition Act of 1918 (category Presidency of Woodrow Wilson)
prevent mobs from doing what the government was not able to. President Wilson and his Attorney General Thomas Watt Gregory viewed the bill as a political...
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Francis Bowes Sayre Jr. (category Family of Woodrow Wilson)
eldest grandchild of Woodrow Wilson, the 28th president of the United States. He was a vocal opponent of segregation, poverty, McCarthyism, and the Vietnam...
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Espionage Act of 1917 (category Presidency of Woodrow Wilson)
penalties than the 1911 law, including the death penalty. President Woodrow Wilson, in his December 7, 1915 State of the Union address, asked Congress for...
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Thomas Woodrow Wilson Square (Polish: Plac Thomasa Woodrowa Wilsona), also simply known as Wilson Square (Polish: Plac Wilsona), is an urban square and...
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The second inauguration of Woodrow Wilson as president of the United States was held privately on Sunday, March 4, 1917, at the President's Room inside...
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(1923–2018), American television star Eleanor Wilson McAdoo (1889-1967), third daughter of Woodrow Wilson Elder Roma Wilson (1910–2018), American gospel harmonica...
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The Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library and Museum is a complex located in Staunton, Virginia. It contains the President's birthplace, known as the Manse...
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The first inauguration of Woodrow Wilson as the 28th president of the United States was held on Tuesday, March 4, 1913, at the East Portico of the United...
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Big Four (World War I) (category Woodrow Wilson)
of the United Kingdom, Vittorio Emanuele Orlando of Italy, and Woodrow Wilson of the United States. Georges Benjamin Clemenceau (French pronunciation:...
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Committee on Public Information (category Presidency of Woodrow Wilson)
an independent agency of the government of the United States under the Wilson administration created to influence public opinion to support the US in...
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were a group of volunteers authorized by United States President Woodrow Wilson to give four-minute speeches on topics given to them by the Committee on...
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United States full rights over any future canal built through Nicaragua. The Wilson administration changed the treaty by adding a provision similar in language...
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The Inquiry was a study group established in September 1917 by Woodrow Wilson to prepare materials for the peace negotiations following World War I. The...
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Holbrooke George F. Kennan Arthur Krock George McGovern H. Alexander Smith Adlai Stevenson Paul Volcker Woodrow Wilson Bernstein, Fred (28 April 1977). "Princeton...
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William Gibbs McAdoo and Governor Martin H. Glynn, he faced a formidable opponent in Tammany Hall's James W. Gerard. He also was without Wilson's support,...
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Woodrow Wilson included: Tasker H. Bliss Edward M. House, a diplomat, politician and presidential foreign policy advisor to President Wilson. Robert Lansing...
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The collection's Wilson-McAdoo Collection focuses on Woodrow Wilson and family, and in particular his daughter, Eleanor Wilson McAdoo. The Darwin / Evolution...
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The Woodrow Wilson Family Home is located in Columbia, South Carolina and was one of the childhood homes of the 28th President Woodrow Wilson. He lived...
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disputes during World War I. The board was appointed by President Woodrow Wilson. It was composed of twelve members, including five representatives each...
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The Institute for Citizens & Scholars (formerly known as the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation) is a nonpartisan, non-profit institution based...
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Federal Employees' Compensation Act (redirect from Workingmen's Compensation Act (Kern-McGillicuddy Act))
to broad-coverage health insurance.[citation needed] President Woodrow Wilson signed H.R. 15316 into law on September 7, 1916.[citation needed] The Federal...
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