EDMONTON - Cecil Elmore Wilson, age 82, passed away Thursday, November 9, at his home. He was the son of the late Lenus and Lorene Shirley Wilson. He was retired from Metcalfe County Farm Supply and worked for many years at National Brush Lumber Company in Glasgow. He was also a retired farmer.…
James Wilson reached the apex of his career in the Constitutional convention. He was part of the Committee of detail, which was established by the US Constitutional Convention on July 24th, 1787. This was to put down a draft text reflecting the agreements made by the Convention up to that, including the Virginia plan’s 15 resolutions. James Wilson was also the only member of the Pennsylvania state convention of 1787 to ratify the constitution who had served in the Philadelphia Convention. His colleagues selected him to be one out of six delegates who reported the final document for acceptance. James’s influence was most likely second of Madison, and only Gouverneur Morris gave more speeches than…
Roosevelt’s New Nationalism was inspired by Herbert Croly’s The Promise of American Life (1910), and it stated that the government should control the bad trusts, leaving the good trusts alone and free to operate.…
Woodrow Wilson spoke out against a newer form of economic domination known as the indirect control of a colonized area. Repressed ethnic and national groups around the world heard Wilson’s call for "national self-determination" as the herald's trumpet for a new era as the 14 Points list the foundation for world peace. Despite their introduction after World War I in 1918, the 14 points are still relevant today as these ideas establish peaceful ideologies in other countries worldwide to maintain their people. Woodrow Wilson made the Democratic Party a “party of reform” by creating the modern presidency and approving the most complicated economic program with federal oversight ever created up to that moment. This economic program included banking reform under the auspices of the Federal Reserve, tariff reduction, federal…
Wilson starts writing to a pastor that he feels the two of them are friends and he also tells the pastor that he grew up in the same religion as him. Wilson also notes that they are both Americans, more specifically Southerners. Wilson the goes on to mention the key difference between them. The pastor takes the Christian Holy Scripture literally and rejects the conclusion of Science. While Wilson is an atheist who takes a scientific approach and believes that people evolved from Apes. Though they have different beliefs, both Wilson and the pastor like everyone else in the world strive for the same imperatives of security, freedom of speech, personal dignity, and a cause to believe in. Wilson then proposes that no matter their beliefs they both need to spend time to help the environment. Scientist predicts that by the end of this century half of the plants and animals will become extinct. Wilson needs the pastor’s help because Religion and Science are the two most powerful forces in today’s world. Wilson says that almost none of the Religions have worried about Nature. Some Religions believe in the book of Revelation that a second coming of Christ will be soon and therefore they don’t have to worry about the Nature because they will all be taken to heaven. Charles Darwin even started out as a minister who referred to the bible with everything. But early on his voyage to Brazil he said, “It is not possible to give an adequate idea of the higher feelings of wonder, admiration, and devotion which fill and elevate the mind.” Wilson is familiar and heartened by the Christians way of talking about Creation. Wilson then says that even though their belief on Creation is different they can come together because they share a common purpose to help protect and save the environment and Nature.…
The end of Woodrow Wilson’s first term was met with great approval by the American people for avoiding war in Europe. His first term demonstrated a fair and balanced foreign policy. By the end of his term, Wilson knew in the back of his head, that the United States would not be able to evade war in Europe. Several attempts were made by the United States to make peace with foreign nations who were causing problems. As the turbulence developed in Europe, Wilson began making plans to prepare America for war. Although steps during Woodrow Wilson’s presidency could have been made to maintain neutrality, Wilson was more or less forced into the Great War in 1917 by Germany being oblivious and indifferent towards his warnings.…
The United States did not plan to become involved in World War I. Woodrow Wilson tried his best to stay out of conflict and remain neutral. Woodrow felt that neutrality was the best thing for them. When the war began Woodrow remained in isolation. It soon became inevitable for them to be involved in the war. With no choice, the United States had to make use of their small army and train more people who were drafted into the war. The sinking of a ship carrying Americans caused Woodrow to become furious.…
August Wilson, whose real name is Frederick August Kittel, was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on April 27, 1945. He died on October 2nd, 2005. His mother, Daisy Wilson was African American; while his father, Frederick Kittel was a German Immigrant. When he was just 4 years old, his mother taught him how to read. He was eager to learn more and to get his library card a year later. When his parents got divorced, it forced his mother and his siblings to move to a white suburb in Oakland. He bounced around at so many schools when he was young, until he dropped out at the age of 15 and began educating himself at the Carnegie Library in Pittsburgh.…
In 1918, the first world war comes to an end as Woodrow Wilson, the 28th president of the United States, announces his 14 points that will reform the government and the way it treats other countries. Wilson establishes that the United States will stay peaceful and help other countries to a high extent, which makes them a dependable ally. With his 14 points, Wilson is creating an even playing ground for the United States in order to stay neutral, with no potential conflicts. Wilson’s points work to drastically adjust the relationships between the powers of the world from cold to warm and peaceful, as he depends upon peace with countries helping each other in times of despair. He hopes for the points to become concreted within the…
A hundred years ago next week, in the small Balkan city of Sarajevo, Serbian nationalists murdered the heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary and his wife. People were shocked but not particularly worried. Sadly, there had been many political assassinations in previous years—the king of Italy, two Spanish prime ministers, the Russian czar, President William McKinley. None had led to a major crisis. Yet just as a pebble can start a landslide, this killing set off a series of events that, in five weeks, led Europe into a general war. The U.S. under President Woodrow Wilson intended to stay out of the conflict, which, in the eyes of many Americans, had nothing to do with them. But in 1917, German submarine attacks on U.S. shipping and attempts…
I am writing this letter on behalf of Thomas Woodrow Wilson, a young man I had the privilege of teaching for four years as an undergraduate. As a teacher of Advanced Placement United States History at Princeton University (formally known as the College of New Jersey) for the past few decades, many gifted students have entered my classroom, but Woodrow’s potential really stood out to me. I base this not solely on his scholarly accomplishments, as Woodrow was not always a stellar student, but rather on his leadership abilities, self-sufficiency and determination to reform the institutions around him. Even as an undergraduate, Woodrow organized a student club to discuss public affairs. He also joined the American Whig Society on campus, actively leading debates on points of government and how they could be improved.…
President Wilson's Fourteen Points were a decent attempt at peace and repayment after World War I. Although it was cleat that there were many obvious problems with his plan. Many things, including Allied bias, American ambition, and Western European dominance, caused these problems. While trying to fix many problems in Europe, the Fourteen Points mainly concentrated on the things that were important to the Allied powers. France was bent on revenge, Great Britain was looking to further its power over the seas, and America was focused on becoming an even more powerful trade nation.…
Who was the 28th president of the United States? Woodrow Wilson was an early twentieth century president that had a large amount of power. Not only did he have great power in the United States, but he made decisions on his own beliefs and feelings. This set him aside from many other presidents. Thomas was legitimately concerned by the mistreatment of humans. Wilson took his role as president with a maximum respect to serve the public the best he could.…
In the depressed poem “Exposure”, Wilfred Owen through warlike phrases, diction, and imagery describes that death can mutate an individual's natural response to any situation permanently.…
Liberal and attractive Woodrow Wilson’s program was designed based on the achievement of US leadership in the postwar world. The President was able to synthesize innovative ideas and proclaim their goal of foreign policy efforts of the country, giving his initiative a character of "divine revelation". By the end of the First World War USA became a major world power, and then President Wilson tried to use the new opportunities for fundamental changes in the world order. The results were contradictory (Esposito 153).…