Title Page | Collection Summary | Biographical/Organizational Note | Scope and Content | Arrangement
Biographical Note
Date | Event |
---|---|
1870, Apr. 17 | Born, Lansing, Mich. |
1889 | B.S., Michigan State College, East Lansing, Mich. |
1892-1897 | Reporter and editor of Chicago Record |
1896 | Married Jessie I. Beal |
1897-1898 | Managing editor, McClure's Syndicate |
1899-1905 | Associate editor, McClure's Magazine |
1900 | Published Our New Prosperity. New York: Doubleday & McClure |
1906-1915 | Editor, American Magazine |
1907 | Published Adventures in Contentment. New York: Doubleday. First in a series of books published under the pseudonym David Grayson |
1908 | Published Following the Color Line. New York: Doubleday |
1918 | Special Commissioner for Department of State in Great Britain, France, and Italy |
1919 | Director of Press Bureau, American Commission to Negotiate Peace, Paris, France Published What Wilson Did at Paris. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Page |
1922 | Published Woodrow Wilson and World Settlement. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Page |
1925-1927 | Published with William E. Dood The Public Papers of Woodrow Wilson. New York: Harper and Brothers. 6 vols. |
1927-1939 | Published Woodrow Wilson: Life and Letters. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Page. 8 vols. |
1928 | Democratic Party presidential elector for Massachusetts |
1940 | Awarded Pulitzer Prize for biography |
1941 | Published Native American: The Book of My Youth. New York: C. Scribner's Sons |
1943-1944 | Technical adviser during production of the motion picture "Woodrow Wilson" |
1945 | Published American Chronicle. New York: C. Scribner's Sons |
1946, July 12 | Died, Amherst, Mass. |