Prologue
The Defining Moment
To Woodrow Wilson, it seemed the cheering would
never end. The president had sailed to Europe
three weeks after the Armistice that had halted
the savage killing of the First World War. Now
his task was to complete a peace treaty that
would bring forth a League of Nations that he
believed would prevent a great war from ever
happening again.
As the steamship George Washington reached the
French seacoast of Brittany just before dawn on
December 13, 1918, Wilson could see lights on
the horizon as a flotilla of American warships
sailed out to greet him. Nine battleships came
abreast of the warship and the five destroyers
that had accompanied the George Washington
across the Atlantic. Each fired a twenty-one-gun
salute to the president of the United States as
Wilson's ship sailed toward the harbor at Brest.
There was more to come. Two French cruisers and
nine French destroyers came up from the south,
firing their own salutes. By the time Wilson
entered the harbor, shore batteries from the ten
forts on both sides of the cliffs began firing
salutes. The military bands on the top of the
cliffs blazed forth with renditions of "The
Star-Spangled Banner" and "La Marseillaise."
Once the president and his wife were onshore,
the mayor of Brest offered Wilson a parchment
scroll, festooned with red, white, and blue
ribbons, which contained the greetings of the
city council. The Americans then climbed into
open automobiles that took them up the cliff and
on to the railroad station where French
President Raymond Poincar was waiting to escort
them to Paris.
Along the route American soldiers were standing
at attention. As the train approached the French
capital people swarmed the tracks waiting to
welcome the American president. The next day,
the largest number of Parisians ever to welcome
a foreign leader packed the streets and
boulevards. Under a clear autumn sky, from the
church of the Madeleine to the Bois de Boulogne,
they thronged the sidewalks and rooftops.
Thirty-six thousand French soldiers formed lines
to hold back the crowds.
Flowers floated down on Mrs. Wilson when the
entourage passed under a banner stretched across
the Champs-lyses that proclaimed "Honor to
Wilson the Just." For the first time in living
memory, a carriage passed under the Arc de
Triomphe. "No one ever had such cheers," the
American journalist William Bolitho wrote, "I,
who heard them in the streets of Paris, can
never forget them in my life. I saw [Marshall]
Foch pass, [Premier] Clemenceau pass, [British
Prime Minister] Lloyd George, generals,
returning troops, banners, but Wilson heard from
this carriage something different, inhuman - or
superhuman. Oh, the immovably shining, smiling
man!"
For the rest of the month of December, similar
scenes were repeated in England, including a
trip north to Carlisle near the Scottish border
where Wilson's mother was born and his
grandfather had been a preacher before
immigrating to America. Then back to Paris and
on December 31 by the Italian royal train to
Rome, where he was met with near hysterical
demonstrations. Airplanes roared overhead as he
rode with the king and queen through streets
covered with golden sand from the Mediterranean,
an ancient tradition of honoring heroes come to
Rome. Leaving the capital to journey north to
Turin and Milan, he blew kisses to the crowd.
Wilson thought he was on the verge of realizing
his dream of bringing perpetual peace to a
worn-out continent, a Europe whose statesmen
believed that maintaining a balance of power
among nations was the only way to contain
conflict.
Only two months earlier, Wilson had suffered a
serious setback. In November 1918, his
Democratic Party lost both the House and the
Senate to the Republicans. Now the opposition
asked what right did he have to go to Europe as
a representative of the American people. His
greatest antagonist, former president Theodore
Roosevelt, had declared: "Our allies and our
enemies and Mr. Wilson himself should all
understand that Mr. Wilson has no authority
whatever to speak for the American people at
this time. His leadership has been emphatically
repudiated by them ... and all his utterances
every which way have ceased to have any shadow
of right to be accepted as expressive of the
will of the American people."
It was Roosevelt who had split the Republican
Party by running against President William
Howard Taft in the presidential election of
1912, and by so doing may well have handed
Wilson the presidency. Now Roosevelt, having
repaired his relations with the Republicans,
was, at sixty, their likely candidate for
president in 1920. During the campaign, Wilson
had written that Roosevelt appealed to people's
imagination; by contrast, "I do not. He is a
real, vivid person ... I am a vague, conjectural
personality, more made up of opinions and
academic prepossessions than of human traits and
red corpuscles."
Of the other two men who had run in the 1912
campaign against Wilson, William Howard Taft was
now happily teaching at the Yale Law School,
relieved that he had not been re-elected
president; by running a second time for an
office he had never truly enjoyed, he had
achieved his goal of preventing Roosevelt, once
his closest friend, from regaining the White
House.
As for the Socialist candidate, Eugene V. Debs,
he was still fervently committed to an ideology
Wilson both feared and despised. Debs had
opposed Wilson's war. Now he was awaiting the
verdict of the United States Supreme Court on
his appeal to overturn a conviction for
violating the Espionage and Sedition Acts.
As the royal train bore him through the Italian
Alps toward France, Wilson and his wife sat
alone in the royal coach. He was in high
spirits, for those who had opposed him were far
away and he was being hailed as the savior of
Europe. About nine in the evening, January 6,
1919, the train stopped at Modena for a short
time. Wilson remained in his seat while
newspaper correspondents strolled along the
platform to stretch their legs. They could
easily see him through the window as a messenger
brought him a telegram.
When he first glanced at the piece of paper,
Wilson was clearly surprised at what he was
reading. One of the correspondents saw what he
thought was a look of pity - then, finally, a
smile of triumph. A few moments later, the
newspaperman learned that the telegram had
informed the president that Theodore Roosevelt
was dead.
TR's funeral took place in early January. He had
been very sick since the day the Armistice was
signed on November 11, 1918, in and out of
hospitals, and finally home to Sagamore Hill for
Christmas Eve. It was difficult for him to walk,
racked as he was with what the doctors believed
was inflammatory rheumatism, and doubtless
complicated by parasites he may have picked up
on his trip to explore the River of Doubt in the
Brazilian jungles five years earlier. Dying in
his sleep at four in the morning on January 6,
of an embolism, Roosevelt was to be buried at
Youngs' Cemetery at Oyster Bay, Long Island, a
site not far from Sagamore Hill. The service's
only ceremony was the Episcopal Church's Burial
of the Dead.
It was snowing that morning. The airplanes that
had been flying for the past two days in tribute
to the former president and his son, Quentin, a
pilot who had died over France during the World
War, could no longer keep up their vigil.
Roosevelt's wife, Edith, stayed in the house, as
was then customary, and read through the funeral
service, while some five hundred villagers and
dignitaries attended the service at Christ
Church.
William Howard Taft, when he heard of
Roosevelt's death, telegrammed Mrs. Roosevelt,
saying that the world had lost "the most
commanding personality in our public life since
Lincoln." By now, Taft and Roosevelt had been
reconciled. Later, he wrote to TR's sister
Corinne to say how glad he was "that Theodore
and I came together after that long painful
interval. Had he died in a hostile state of mind
toward me, I would have mourned the fact all my
life. I loved him always and cherish his
memory."
Arriving at Oyster Bay, Taft found that the
arrangements for receiving him at the funeral
services had been botched. He was at first put
in a pew with the family servants. When
Roosevelt's son Archie saw what had happened, he
came up and said, "You're a dear personal friend
and you must come up farther." He seated Taft
just behind Vice President Thomas Marshall, who
was there representing Woodrow Wilson, and just
in front of the Senate committee headed by TR's
closest political ally and Wilson's great enemy,
Senator Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts.
As the coffin was borne out of the church, the
snow had stopped falling, although the sky was
still gray and heavy. Taft and the other
mourners made their way to the cemetery, which
was about a mile and a half from the church, and
then climbed the hill to where the open grave
was waiting. The simple burial service came to
an end. Others moved away from the graveside.
Taft, however, remained longer than anyone,
weeping.
Eugene V. Debs, the Socialist candidate for the
presidency in 1912, was waiting in early 1919 to
be spirited off to prison. Debs, who saw the
tradition of American liberty as the cornerstone
of American socialism, seemed to welcome the
prospect of going to jail for his beliefs.
America at that time was in the grip of a Red
Scare that Wilson's Attorney General, A.
Mitchell Palmer, had inflicted on those whom the
government suspected of Bolshevik sympathies
and/or being too critical of the war effort.
Wilson ordered Palmer "not to let this country
see Red," and in the opening months of 1918,
more than two thousand radical unionists were
arrested, and two hundred convictions had been
secured under the new espionage law.
In defending himself in his address to the jury
in September 1918, Debs invoked the memory of
George Washington, Tom Paine, and John Adams,
"the rebels of their day," and recalled the
memory of America's abolitionists. In contesting
the specific charges against him, Debs not only
defended his right to free speech under the
Constitution but also bitterly cited Wilson's
1912 campaign speeches supporting that right.
All was in vain. The jury found him guilty as
charged.
Two days later at the sentencing, Debs rose and
made a statement to the court. His words have
remained as the clearest declaration of his
humanist principles. After recognizing his
"kinship with all living beings," he famously
said, "while there is a lower class, I am in it,
while there is a criminal element, I am of it,
and where there is a soul in prison, I am not
free."
The judge sentenced Debs to ten years'
imprisonment.
The year 1912 constitutes a defining moment in
American history. Of the four men who sought the
presidency that year - Wilson, Roosevelt, Taft,
and Debs - not one of them had definitively
decided to run after the congressional elections
of 1910.
Wilson, who had just been elected governor of
New Jersey, had long hoped that someday the
White House would be his, but all his experience
had been as a college professor, and later a
president of Princeton. He had been a noted
theorist of congressional government, never a
practitioner.
Debs had run for president on the Socialist
ticket twice before. His firm commitment to
social and economic justice targeted him once
again as the favorite of Socialist voters, but
he himself was weary of campaigning, often too
sick to do anything but speak. His thrilling
oratory, however, made him invaluable in the
struggle against the excesses of industrial
capitalism.
Taft, the reluctant incumbent, might well have
abandoned the field of battle in 1912 and taught
happily at Yale Law School while hoping for an
appointment to the Supreme Court. Roosevelt,
though lusting after the power of the
presidency, still expected to support Taft. TR,
after all, had shown himself to be a consummate
politician during his two terms in office and
appreciated the potency of the party
organization. If Taft could have approached his
former mentor directly, confessed his anxieties
about dealing with a Congress so dominated by
right-wing Republicans that he was finding it
impossible to fulfill the reformist policies of
TR, he might then have urged Roosevelt to run
for a third term. This would have prevented
Roosevelt from challenging him for the
presidency that Taft had so often loathed.
Had the charismatic Roosevelt received the
Republican nomination, he almost surely would
have won. He, far more than Taft, was in tune
with the progressive spirit of the time. The
Republican Party, in his hands, would likely
have become a party of domestic reform and
internationalist realism in foreign affairs.
With his heroic virtues and condemnation of
materialism, Roosevelt represents the road not
taken by American conservatism.
The vote polled in 1912 by Debs, who garnered
the largest share of the popular total ever won
by a Socialist candidate, revealed the depth of
the reformist forces sweeping the land. Never
again would the Socialists show such strength.
The Democrats during Wilson's first term quickly
picked up many of the social remedies Debs -
and a radicalized Roosevelt - had championed.
Like Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson embraced
change, both men recognizing that their own
careers could not flourish if they were to hold
back the tide of reform. Neither leader believed
that repose was essential to the happiness of
mankind. The issues at stake were vital if
America was to transform itself into a society
that would deal effectively with the problems of
the new century without sacrificing the
democratic values that the Founders had
envisaged. With the recent influx of new
immigrants, many of them were condemned to work
in squalid sweatshops and live in the
deteriorating conditions of the urban poor.
Journalists, social workers, ministers, and
middle-class Americans were outraged at the
widespread corruption of political bossism in
the nation's cities.
The threats to the environment by the expansion
of industry and population seemed to require a
national commitment to conserving the nation's
natural resources to avoid further destruction
of wildlife and grasslands. The issue of woman
suffrage, the safeguarding of the right of black
Americans to vote, and the need to end child
labor and to regulate factory hours and
conditions went to the very heart of the promise
of American democracy.
Above all, there was the question of how to curb
the excesses of big business, symbolized by the
great trusts, which had accompanied the rise of
industrial capitalism. For Roosevelt, calling
for a "New Nationalism," the role of government
was to regulate big business, which was surely
here to stay. For Wilson's "New Freedom," the
government's task was to restore competition in
a world dominated by technology and mass markets
that crushed small business.
Continues...
Excerpted from 1912
by James Chace
Copyright © 2004 by James Chace.
Excerpted by permission.
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Copyright © 2004
James Chace
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