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American Heritage MagazineApril/May 1986    Volume 37, Issue 3
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Cover Story


The only one of our Presidents who retired to Washington after leaving office was Woodrow Wilson, and for all his celebrated professorial background he certainly did it in style. Ten of his friends chipped in ten thousand dollars each to cover most of the cost of a house of twenty-two rooms on S Street, just off Embassy Row. S Street was quiet and sedate then and it remains so. But once, on Armistice Day 1923, twenty thousand people came to cheer Wilson. They filled the street for five blocks. I have seen the photographs. He came out finally, tentatively, for his last public appearance. He stood in the doorway while they cheered and sang, a pallid, frail old figure wrapped up in a heavy coat, Edith Boiling Wilson at his side, the vibrant, assertive second wife, who, many said, secretly ran the country after his stroke.

I think of her when I pass by. I wonder if, in fact, she was the first woman to be President. And I think about the crowds on that long-gone November day, in that incredibly different world of 1923. What was in their minds, I wonder, as they looked at their former commander in chief? What did they feel for that old man? Are some still alive who were there and remember? Probably so.

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Feature Stories 
 
APPENDICITIS AT 100
Dr. Reginald Fitz identified the disease and prescribed an operation that would save tens of millions of lives.
by Stewart M. Brooks and Natalie A. Brooks
THE CALUMET TRAGEDY
When miners of copper country went on strike, the owners brought thugs from the slums of New York to northern Michigan. The struggle led to an event that killed a city.
by Michael F. Wendland
THE MAN WHO KNEW MOZART
Lorenzo Da Ponte, New York bookseller and Pennsylvania grocer, happened to have written the words for Don Giovanni and The Marriage of Figaro.
by Dick Adler
WHAT WINSLOW HOMER DID ON HIS VACATION
On sojourns away from the studio where he labored in oils, Homer took along his watercolors and produced his freshest and most expressive work.
THE GREAT FOREIGN POLICY FIGHT
For forty years, George Kennan and Paul Nitze, architects of our foreign policy under nine Presidents, have squared off over Russia, the atom bomb, arms control—everything except their respect and affection for each other.
by Gregg Herken
“I’M FINE, JUST HURTING INSIDE”
Robert Benchley, a woebegone chronicler of his own inadequacies, was the humorist’s humorist.
by Neil A. Grauer
ORDEAL BY TOUCH
Up until the last century, in some parts of the country, a murderer’s guilt could legally be determined by what happened when he or she touched the victim’s corpse.
by Lawrence B. Custer
 
 
 
Departments 
 
LETTER FROM THE EDITOR
I wish I’d been there.
MATTERS OF FACT
Ordinary people.
by Geoffrey C. Ward
THE BUSINESS OF AMERICA
Beasts in the jungle.
by Peter Baida
POSTSCRIPTS TO HISTORY
In praise of jalopies.
 
 
 
 
 

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