This meticulously edited collection presents to you the life and works of President Woodrow Wilson.Content:Essays:The New FreedomWhen A Man Comes To HimselfThe Study of Administrat
This meticulously edited collection presents to you the life and works of President Woodrow Wilson.Content:Essays:The New FreedomWhen A Man Comes To HimselfThe Study of AdministrationLeaders of MenThe New DemocracyInaugural Addresses:First Inaugural AddressSecond Inaugural AddressState of the Union Addresses:First State of the Union addressSecond State of the Union addressThird State of the Union addressFourth State of the Union addressFifth State of the Union addressSixth State of the Union addressSeventh State of the Union addressEighth State of the Union addressSpeeches & Addresses:First Address to CongressAddress on the Banking SystemAddress at GettysburgAddress on Mexican AffairsUnderstanding AmericaAddress before the Southern Commercial CongressTrusts and MonopoliesPanama Canal TollsThe Tampico IncidentIn the Firmament of MemoryMemorial Day Address at ArlingtonClosing a ChapterAnnapolis Commencement AddressThe Meaning of LibertyAmerican NeutralityAppeal for Additional RevenueThe Opinion of the WorldThe Power of Christian Young MenA MessageAddress before the United States Chamber of CommerceTo Naturalized CitizensAddress at MilwaukeeThe Submarine QuestionAmerican PrinciplesThe Demands of Railway EmployeesSpeech of AcceptanceLincoln's BeginningsThe Triumph of Women's SuffrageThe Terms of PeaceMeeting Germany's ChallengeRequest for AuthorityThe Call to WarTo the CountryThe German PlotReply to the PopeLabor must be FreeThe Call for War with Austria-HungaryGovernment Administration of RailwaysThe Conditions of PeaceForce to the UtmostPresidential Decisions:The State of War: The President's Proclamation of April 6, 1917. (8a)Formal U.S. Declaration of War with Germany, 6 April 1917 (8b)