This post was published in the Wilson Times Nov. 2,
2019
Woodrow Wilson, who was
completing his second term 100 years ago, was one of the most popular of all
presidents, despite his having only minimal experience in government before
ascending to the White House. Scott Berg’s 818-page biography, “Wilson,” (2013)
reveals an extraordinary man: scholar, theologian, peacemaker, lawyer, university
president and reformer. Born in Staunton, Va., the son of a Presbyterian minister,
Wilson was a man in a hurry from an early age. He was a champion debater at a
time when skill at debate, rhetoric, public speaking and logic were highly
prized. He studied at Davidson, Princeton, the University of Virginia and Johns
Hopkins, earning a Ph.D.
Wilson was also a man
divided between two centuries. Born in 1856 in a state that would secede from
the United States before he was six, Wilson’s perspective was influenced by
Confederate veterans. His morals were both Victorian and segregationist, but he
enthusiastically looked toward the future in a world about to experience its
greatest changes in centuries.
Leaving a position he loved
as president of Princeton, Wilson ran for governor of New Jersey and won. Two
years later, in 1912, he won a landslide victory to become president of the
United States in one of he oddest elections in history. The electorate was divided
into four camps, with former president Teddy Roosevelt running a third-party
campaign against Republican incumbent William Howard Taft. Socialist Eugene
Debs was also on the ballot. Wilson, the Democratic nominee selected by party
bosses, had Democratic voters to himself.
Two years later in 1914, war
sparked by miscalculations, poor communications and lingering ethnic hatred,
broke out in Europe. Industrialized war had created unimaginable slaughter. Despite
the loss of American lives in German U-Boat attacks, Wilson refused to join the
war on the side of the western democracies.
In 1916, Wilson ran for
re-election on the slogan “He kept us out of war,” but two years into his
second term, he asked Congress to declare war on Germany and its allies.
Wilson’s ability to sway an audience made it possible for him to persuade an
isolationist nation to join the “War to End All Wars.”
Wilson was a great believer
in the power of language. He wrote history books, and he wrote his own speeches
through most of his varied careers. He was also a believer in the power of
ideas, and he put great thought into the ideas that motivated his speeches.
He saw opportunity in the
armistice ending the Great War (as it was known) and the formal peace treaty
that would finalize the war’s end. He developed his Fourteen Points that he
considered essential to any peace treaty. He then broke precedent by going to
the peace conference in Paris himself to wrangle Britain, France and Italy into
a peace treaty that would reshape the maps of Europe, Asia and Africa. Two key
points were the right of people to self-determination and establishment of a
League of Nations that would arbitrate international disagreements and avoid
future wars.
Wilson put all of his energy
into this treaty, but his absence from Washington gave isolationists under
Henry Cabot Lodge a chance to build opposition to ratification of the treaty.
Berg begins his biography
with a description of President Wilson waiting to board a steamship to France
to negotiate the peace. Wilson was, Berg writes, by far the most popular person
in the world, the man who would end war and give freedom of self-determination
to all peoples. Wilson set out on a grueling transcontinental trip, giving
several speeches a day, in order to win ratification of the treaty. Before his
trip ended, he was a broken man, having suffered a stroke that left him
paralyzed on one side and a shadow of the man he had been.
Wilson’s second wife (his
first wife, to whom he was deeply devoted, had died in 1914), Edith Gault, and
a few others guarded the secret about how seriously incapacitated the president
was. He remained popular even after his presidency; admiring crowds would stand
outside his Washington townhouse hoping for a glimpse of the great man.
It’s not an exaggeration to
say that Wilson gave his life (or at least his health) for his vision of a
world without armed conflict. His presidency based on scholarship and
principles offers a contrast and possibly an alternative to today’s winning-is-everything
politics.
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