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Excellent Content Woodrow Wilson Autograph Lette Excellent Content Woodrow Wilson Autograph Letter S

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Autographs Start Price:1.00 USD Estimated At:2,800.00 - 3,500.00 USD
Excellent Content Woodrow Wilson Autograph Lette Excellent Content Woodrow Wilson Autograph Letter S
<B>Excellent Content Woodrow Wilson Autograph Letter Signed to the Editor of the</B></I> <B>IAtlantic Monthly</B></I> <B>Discussing His Writings on American History Which Might Be Used in the Magazine.</B></I> Wilson, Woodrow. President. Autograph Letter Signed, 3 full pages large 8vo, Princeton, March 27, 1893 to Horace E. Scudder, editor of the <I>Atlantic Monthly,</B></I> mentioning his teaching and his writings on American history for which he became famous long before he entered politics. Wilson writes: <I>"...It is a disappointment to me that there is no chance for Axson at Williams, but your letter made the disappointment as easy to bear a possible: particularly in its intimation which I will interpret as a promise that you will come over to Princeton the next time you come this way. The Wednesdays and Thursdays of April I am to be engaged with a class in Constitutional Law at the new York Law School; but the rest of the time, including the summer months, I am to be at home, and we (Mrs. Wilson and I) cannot think of your coming without being impatient to have you come at once. Yes, our people do have some 'miscellaneous lectures' and, although I fear their programmes are full for this year, I could want no better news than that you are in the field and may be had another year. I will spread the information in the proper quarters. I will review Rhodes with you with pleasure, provided, you don't want the copy too soon. I am very tired just now, and could not write freshly if I were obliged to write under pressure. I have the volumes, but have not yet had time to read them. How many words would you want - from 2300 to 3000, three to four pages? Meantime, I again come to you unbidden with a piece of an entirely different kind. It goes to you either today or tomorrow by express. It is on 'Political Sovereignty' you might call it 'Popular Sovereignty.' if you choose -- and I would rather get the constituency of the Atlantic to peruse it than the readers of any technical journal I know of, -- if you can in conscience indulge me by publishing it. So you did not write the 'Two Programmes!' Well, it would have been better done if you had..."</B></I> This extremely lengthy letter is in very fine condition, with dark writing. Wilson was currently professor of jurisprudence and political economy at Princeton, and although only 37 had already written a number of books on American history, his biography of Washington being published this same year along with <I>"An Old Maser and Other Essays."</B></I> He was already at work on his monumental <I>"A History of the American People,"</B></I> published in 1902. Scudder himself had written a number of books on American history including a biography of Washington and a set of works on AMerican history for classroom use. He also authored many Children's books, and was a trustee of Williams College where Axson, undoubtedly a younger brother or nephew of Wilson's first wife, Ellen Axson Wilson, wanted to go. Holograph letters of Wilson are very scarce, especially of this length and superlative content.