Chapter One
Edith and Woodrow Wilson Fools for Love
I am absolutely dependent on intimate love for the right and free and
most effective use of my powers and I know by experience ... what it
costs my work to do without it. -Woodrow Wilson to Edith Galt, August
16, 1915
The dear face opposite me was drawn and lined; and as I sat there
watching the dawn break slowly I felt that life would never be the same;
that something had broken inside me; and from that hour on I would have
to wear a mask-not only to the public but to the one I loved best in the
world; for he must never know how ill he was, and I must carry on.
-Edith Wilson,
My Memoir
On January 1, 1900, two thousand washingtonians braved the bitter cold
and falling snow and patiently waited for the White House doors to open
for the traditional New Year's reception. They came by trolley and in
elegant carriages to mark the dawn of a new century and with it, as the
presence of dozens of diplomats in the queue signaled, America's
emergence as one of the world's most powerful nations.
The day also marked the hundredth anniversary of the death of George
Washington, but America was now an altogether different country than the
fledgling republic bequeathed by Virginia's "First Gentleman." In the
past twenty years, seven million Americans had abandoned roots and rural
traditions and joined the great urban migration. "America fever" was
sweeping the muddy villages and mining towns of Central and Eastern
Europe. An entire Italian family could buy steerage tickets from Naples
for as little as $15. Half a million immigrants were expected to arrive
in New York that year. The combination of the rich land, a fearless,
mobile population and breathtaking new technology-from the combine to
alternating-current electricity-was allowing America to challenge the
rest of the world.
Inside the White House resided a Victorian man and his withdrawn, sickly
wife. William and Ida McKinley, good-natured, well liked and
unchallenging, had little interest in the new age. While the country had
stretched and grown, the White House had not. It had been built as the
home of the president of a small republic. The presidential offices were
a rabbit warren of jumbled rooms, alongside the First Family's private
quarters. A handful of men in formal morning attire, black cutaway
coats, gray-and-black-striped trousers and silk ties jockeyed for space
in the overcrowded, ill-lit offices. Down the hall in the presidential
bedroom, Ida spent much of her time crocheting. She neither had, nor
wished for, her own staff or an office of her own. But the American
people felt close to their president, who was still accessible to
citizens. When he was in residence in the White House, hundreds of them
arrived every weekday, expecting to meet him.
It would take another year and an assassin's bullet to bring to power
the first twentieth-century president, Theodore Roosevelt. Roosevelt was
not content for the United States to be the world's economic giant; his
sights were set on global military and diplomatic might. Colorful and
ebullient, he and his coolly confident second wife, Edith, were the
first modern presidential couple. They and their six children filled the
mansion with the boisterousness associated with the family. Roosevelt
decreed that henceforth the Executive Mansion would be called the White
House, a name he considered less stuffy and more in line with the
democratic image he intended to convey. Edith, meanwhile, began to
institutionalize the office of first lady. She persuaded Congress to
finance the mansion's modernization, adding the West Wing and-for the
first time-allocating space for the first lady's offices. She hired the
first full-time White House social secretary. Edith ran the White House
with the ease and detachment of a born chatelaine, though she treated
the public and political aspects of the role with aristocratic
disinterest. Nevertheless, in both style and substance, Edith and
Theodore Roosevelt virtually initiated the ascendancy of an imperial
presidency. Though Edith did not personally make use of the first lady's
own pulpit, she helped lay the foundation for her successors. Another
Roosevelt would take it into territory Edith never could have imagined.
Helen Herron Taft, the wife of President William Howard Taft, who
succeeded Roosevelt, achieved a number of breakthroughs as first lady
between 1909 and 1913. She was the first woman to be allowed a seat
within the bar of the Supreme Court, the first to publish her memoirs
and the first to be buried at Arlington National Cemetery. But her
historic role is overshadowed by the second Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, Edith
Bolling Galt Wilson, with whom this narrative of marriage and power
truly begins.
Edith Wilson became first lady during a period when the inherent
inequality between men and women-society's patriarchal nature-was
beginning to be questioned. Since the 1890s American women made up
one-third of college students and more than one-third of professional
workers. Edith, however, seemed content with the crumbs of education
reserved for a Victorian woman. She wanted no part of the generation of
college-educated women who were forming local suffrage associations and
going door-to-door to enlist support. She would have found repellent
Theodore Dreiser's Sister Carrie, which sparked a national scandal. So
great was the uproar caused by this story of a country girl who uses sex
to climb out of poverty that the publisher was forced to withdraw the
book after selling only 456 copies. Another book, What a Young Husband
Ought to Know, fared better. The book advised men that "the sexual
impulse in the male ... marches like a mighty conqueror, arousing and
marshaling the mightiest human forces [leading to] the attainment of the
world's greatest and grandest achievement in art, in letters, in
inventions, in philosophy, in philanthropy, and in every effort that is
to secure the universal blessing of mankind." The book went on to assure
readers that with patience and self-control, husbands could teach their
wives to accept sex as a necessary hardship on the road to motherhood.
Edith willingly accepted the role her nineteenth-century southern
upbringing assigned to her. She embraced the Victorian feminine ideal of
the virtuous, compliant and passive child/woman. She proudly proclaimed
both her disapproval of women she called "devils in the workhouse" and
her adherence to women's subservience to men. She called Woodrow Wilson
"My Lord and Master" and he called her "Little Girl"-not for her the
nascent female solidarity movement. Yet no presidential wife ever
wielded more real power than she did, the first lady who said she wished
only to be a good wife.
The Wilsons' story is perhaps the most poignant in the chronicles of
presidential marriages, and among the most controversial. In rapid
succession it encompassed death, bereavement, unexpected bliss and
sudden physical decline. It is also the story of an astonishing White
House cover-up in which the first lady was the main perpetrator. At a
time when American women still could not vote, rarely held jobs beyond
that of a domestic or a grade-school teacher, a woman ran the White
House and the executive branch. Woodrow and Edith embody the White
House's greatest love story, one that had the most tragic outcome for
the nation and the world.
No cement barriers or electric fences imprisoned the White House's
residents in the early years of the century. At first glance, it was
just a very large house in the heart of a medium-sized city. Until the
1860s, Washington had remained a winter outpost where politicians
converged to debate a handful of subjects not controlled by the states.
Humidity drove residents away for the summer. New York was the country's
financial capital, Boston its cultural mecca. But the Civil War had
changed Washington, as it became the hub of wartime operations.
"Slowly," historian Henry Adams wrote, "a certain society had built
itself up about the Government. Houses had been opened and there was
much dining; much calling; much leaving of cards."
In the waning years of this era, Woodrow Wilson, a man past his middle
age, and Edith Bolling Galt, a woman well into hers, fell in love and
carried on an ardent affair in the White House.
The fifty-nine-year-old president was widowed in 1914, during the second
year of his first term. Ellen Axson Wilson's sudden death coincided
almost exactly with the outbreak of World War I, and the convergence of
the two events shattered Wilson's well-ordered world. His famously stern
demeanor masked a passionate and emotionally needy man. It is hard to
imagine an isolation greater than the one that fell over him, suddenly
alone in that house. Wilson had always preferred the company of women to
that of politicians. His daughter Nell recalled, "Father enjoyed the
society of women, especially if they were what he called 'charming and
conversable.'" His first wife and daughters had been the core of his
existence. "My heart has somehow been stricken dumb ...," Wilson wrote
at the time of Ellen's death. "She was beyond comparison the deepest,
truest, noblest lover I ever knew." The following year he would marry
again.
In March 1915, Edith Galt recalled later, "I turned a corner and met my
fate." Invited to tea at the White House by a cousin of the president,
she stepped off an elevator and ran into Wilson. Edith would later
revealingly recall the encounter primarily in sartorial terms. How
fortunate, she wrote, that she had "worn a smart black tailored suit
which Worth had made for me in Paris and a tricot hat which I thought
completed a very good looking ensemble."
Wilson was immediately smitten. Invitations to dinner and hand-delivered
letters from the White House to her town house soon crossed Washington
almost daily. So did shipments of Edith's favorite flower, orchids. "The
orchids carried a certain significance," White House chief usher Irwin
Hoover recalled, "and when she appeared it would always be with just one
of them, worn high on the left shoulder."
Two hundred and fifty surviving letters chronicle their love affair in
remarkable detail. They form an indispensable window into the passionate
courtship and the simultaneous entry of the United States into world
affairs. "My dear Mrs. Galt," Wilson wrote on April 28, 1915, "I have
ordered a copy of Hamerton's Round My House.... I hope it will give you
pleasure-you have given me so much! If it rains this evening would it be
any pleasure for you to come around and have a little reading-and if it
does not rain, are you game for another ride?"
On the surface, they seemed almost bizarrely unsuited. At forty-two, she
was tall and buxom. Wilson was ramrod straight and thin as a rake. His
face was long, his features sharply chiseled and lined. Her face was
smooth, her cheeks full. Where she was impulsive, he was logical and
loved elaborate argument. Where he was rational and careful, she was
jealous, self-indulgent, intuitive, judgmental and seemingly fearless.
He was a scholar who loved the company of books and, at the same time, a
deeply moral man who believed America must be an example to other
nations. Edith was interested primarily in travel and fashion. A
substantial portion of her memoirs is devoted to descriptions of what
she wore to which historic event. Politics, she thought, was a bore.
But deeper ties pulled Woodrow and Edith together. Both were Virginians,
Edith the granddaughter of a slaveowner, the child of once prosperous
gentry. Both were enthralled by the romance and the mythology of the Old
South. As a little boy, Wilson had seen Robert E. Lee
pass through Atlanta after the surrender. Though he had no southern
ancestry, Wilson once said that the South was the one place on earth
where nothing had to be explained to him. Edith shared this powerful
connection to land and place and spoke with a soft southern lilt that
Woodrow admired. Left financially independent by her first husband, she
combined traditional southern charm with the surface worldliness of a
well-traveled woman. With neither a husband nor children to look after,
Edith was a free spirit, with the seductive air of a much younger woman.
Events in Europe intensified the courtship. Wilson was under tremendous
pressure during those early months of 1915. The Kaiser's army had
launched gas warfare against the French and British. Germany warned
American travelers that if they sailed on British ships, they did so "at
their own risk." In his letters to Ethel, Wilson shared his innermost
thoughts. "Here stands your friend, a longing man, in the midst of a
world's affairs-a world that knows nothing of the heart he has shown
you.... Will you come to him sometime without reserve and make his
strength complete?"
On May 4, 1915, Wilson took Edith onto the south portico of the White
House and, drawing his chair close to hers in the chilly air, told her
he loved her and asked for her hand in marriage. Feigning shock, as her
nineteenth-century upbringing prescribed for such a sudden proposal,
Edith turned him down. "You cannot love me," she wrote him that same
night, "for you really don't know me, and it is less than a year since
your wife died."
But she kept the courtship going, adding, "I am a woman-and the thought
that you have need of me is sweet!" Still, she seemed to shun her
suitor's more explicit physical advances. She told him that her first
marriage had been "incomplete." Her reserve only enhanced his zeal. "For
God's sakes," he wrote her, "try to find out whether you really love me
or not."
The presidency was a powerful courtship tool for Wilson. He made Edith
feel that she shared the burden of the office. During the very week
Woodrow first proposed marriage, on May 7, 1915, German submarines
torpedoed the great British liner Lusitania, killing 1,200 civilians,
including 128 Americans. "I need you," the president wrote two days
later, "as a boy needs his sweetheart and a strong man his helpmate and
heart's comrade.... Do you think that it is an accident that we found
one another at this time of my special need and that it meant nothing
that we recognized one another so immediately and so joyously? ... I
hope you will think of me tonight. I shall be working on my speech of
tomorrow evening and on our note to Germany. Every sentence of both
would be freighted with greater force and meaning if I could feel that
your mind and heart were keeping me company." That night, in what some
historians have called "a state of ecstasy," the president gave one of
his most powerful speeches.
On May 10, Edith wrote Woodrow that his "wonderful love can quicken that
which has lain dead so long within me." As American neutrality hung in
the balance, the president personally typed a letter of protest to the
German government. The same day he wrote his beloved. "And, oh, I have
needed you tonight, my sweet Edith! What a touch of your hand and a look
into your eyes would have meant to me of strength and steadfastness as I
made the final decision as to what I should say to Germany."
(Continues...)
Excerpted from "Hidden Power"
by Kati Marton.
Copyright (C) 2002 by Kati Marton.
Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.