Woodrow Wilson's Right Hand The Life of Colonel Edward M. House Godfrey Hodgson

Format:
Paperback
Publication date:
01 Aug 2008
ISBN:
9780300137552
Dimensions:
372 pages: 234 x 156 x 24mm
Illustrations:
30 b&w illustrations + 4 colour images

The importance of Colonel Edward M. House in twentieth-century American foreign policy is enormous: from 1913 to 1919 he served not only as intimate friend and chief political adviser to President Woodrow Wilson but also as national security adviser and senior diplomat. Yet the relationship between House and the President ended in a quarrel at the Paris peace conference of 1919 - largely because of Mrs. Wilson's hostility to House - and House has received little sympathetic historical attention since. This extensively researched book reintroduces House and clearly establishes his contributions as one of the greatest American diplomats.A 'kingmaker' in Texas politics, House joined Wilson's campaign in 1912 and soon was travelling through Europe as the President's secret agent. He visited Europe repeatedly during World War I and played a major part in drafting Wilson's Fourteen Points and the Covenant of the League of Nations. He tried to stop the war before it began, and to end it by negotiation after it had started. His greatest achievement was to lock both sides into an armistice based on American ideals.

Godfrey Hodgson is associate fellow, Rothermere American Institute, Oxford University. He has written biographies of Henry L. Stimson and Daniel Patrick Moynihan as well as the pioneering article about the American foreign policy establishment.

"'Noteworthy.' Lloyd E. Ambrosius, Journal of American History"