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Woodrow Wilson House
Woodrow
Wilson, the 28th President of the United States, lived in
the house at the corner of Telfair and Seventh streets for
nearly 13 years as a child from 1860 to 1870. The home which
is currently under restoration by Historic Augusta, served
as the manse of the First Presbyterian Church where Wilson's
father was pastor from 1858 to 1870.
The historical marker located in front reads as follows:
"Woodrow Wilson, later to become 28th President of the United
States, lived in this Manse of the First Presbyterian Church
of which his father, Dr. Joseph R. Wilson, was pastor from
1858 to 1870. Wilson was born in Staunton, Va., in 1856 and
he later attended the University of Virginia Law School, graduating
in 1881 having previously graduated from Princeton University.
He practiced law in Atlanta and in 1885 was married in the
Manse of the Savannah Independent Presbyterian church to Ellen
Louise Axson of Rome, GA. He later studied political science
at Johns Hopkins and taught at Bryn Mawr, Johns Hopkins and
Wesleyan University in Middletown, Conn. He was called to
Princeton as professor of jurisprudence and political economy
in 1890 and became President of Princeton in 1902. He was
elected Governor of New Jersey in 1910 and President of the
United States in 1912, being re-elected in 1916. He led this
country to victory in the First World War and personally attended
the Paris Peace Conference where he fathered the ill-starred
League of Nations. He became ill in 1919 and died in 1924.
During his boyhood here his playmate and next door neighbor
was Joseph Rucker Lamar, Associate Justice of the Supreme
Court of Georgia, 1902-1905 and of the Supreme Court of the
United States from 1910, till his death in 1916."
Provided by: Augusta
Metropolitan Convention & Vistors Bureau
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