Health and Medical History of President
Woodrow WilsonHealth and Medical History of President
Woodrow WilsonUNDER CONSTRUCTION |
[Secretary of the Treasury] McAdoo says the President [Wilson] is in a state of collapse -- that his mind is clear but that he is so weak that his doctors would not permit him to discuss or think about any of these matters. ... He says that he would like to help, but he is in a delicate situation, being the son-in-law of the President.Taft was no fan of Woodrow Wilson, but it is interesting that even an ex-President in the opposing political party did not (could not?) act on behalf of the people. The White House maid, too, thought Wilson's mind was clear, but agonized at the twisted smiles that he would give her -- only half of his face worked. The Secret Service would seat him in his car so the public could not see the paralyzed side. 7d The stroke was first disclosed to the public four months later, by Dr. Hugh Young who had consulted on Wilson's inability to urinate 12.
There is a story told of Wilson that he asked a caller if he knew the hardest job a President faced every day. "No," was the response, "because I have never been President." "I'll tell you then," replied Wilson, "it is in keeping your temper."
a p.x b p.48 c p.49 d pp.49-50 e p.60 f p.283 g pp.60-85. Unfortunately, Smith does not provide specific sources for specific statements. Thus, it should not always be presumed that dates, places, and events are precisely correct.
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a p.65 b p.5 c pp.56-77 d p.75 e p.64
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a p.218
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a p.260 per Dr. Benbow
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a p.143 b p.135 c p.149 d p.157 e pp.156-157 f pp.147-148 g pp.148-149, 223 h p.223
Comment: This book stayed on the New York Times best-seller list for 26 weeks, prompting Jacqueline Kennedy to require all staff at the White House to sign a pledge agreeing not to write about their experiences (NY Times, page B8, Nov. 12, 1997). Parks's mother, a maid at the White House from 1909-1939, had actually been encouraged by Eleanor Roosevelt to write and publish a memoir (p260).
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a pp.96-100 b p.100 c p.110
Comment: Grayson was Wilson's physician during his entire tenure as President. No presidential physician before or since Grayson has had as close a relationship with the Chief Executive. It is remarkable that, in his book, Grayson devotes only one paragraph to Wilson's stroke (page 100).
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a pp.3-76
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a pp.85-90
Comment: At one time Post worked for the CIA, profiling foreign leaders.
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a p.927
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a p.323
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a p.316
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a p.126 b pp.22, 81
Comment: Stoddard was editor and owner of the New York Evening Mail from 1900 to 1925.
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a p.433
Comment: Maps -- in great detail -- the ancestors and descendants of American presidents through Ronald Reagan. They would have had an exhausting time with President Obama's family tree! MORE
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