On this day, Woodrow Wilson, who had collapsed during a speech given in Pueblo Colorado as part of his grueling transcontinental speaking tour in support of the Versailles Treaty suffered a debilitating severe stroke. This may have in fact simply been a followup stroke to one that had occurred in Pueblo, as his symptoms on the train ride back to Washington D. C. strongly suggest that in fact is what had occurred.
Somewhat ironically, Wilson was a hypochondriac, but one whose health fears turned out to be somewhat correct. The stroke wasn't Wilson's first. He'd first suffered a stroke in 1896. That stroke was "mild" and his doctor didn't regard the matter as a serious one even though he did not regain the use of his right hand for four months. In 1906 he suffered a second serious stroke that nearly left him blind in his left eye. Prescribed rest by his physicians, he returned to work after a trip to Europe. He was afflicted again in 1913. In 1915 he was finally diagnosed with high blood pressure and was at that time likely warned that his condition was serious.
In 1914 Woodrow Wilson's first wife, Ellen, died of Bright's Disease in the White House. Woodrow Wilson remarried the following year to Edith Galt, with that wedding occurring in December (they'd met in May). She was fifteen years younger than he was.
Woodrow Wilson with Edith Wilson in the President's first official photograph following his stroke on this day. This photograph was taken in June, 1920, and what it portrays is quite accurate. Edith is overlooking his shoulder and guiding his actions.
Following the stroke Edith Wilson and Woodrow Wilson's doctors at first kept his condition secret from his cabinet and himself, although Wilson had experience with strokes and was likely aware of his situation soon enough. Quite soon the President's inner cabinet conspired to keep it a secret from anyone but themselves and Edith took over routine details of the Presidency making her the nation's first, if unofficial, female chief executive. Edith also acted to control access and communications with the President. She would later assert that she never made any decisions on her own, although she certainly influenced decision making, and termed her role of that of "steward".
In spite of the secrecy, some news of the President's general condition was leaking out and it was generally not good. Therefore, while the public never knew how grave the President's condition was, it had reason to suspect he wasn't doing well, even as early as this very day.
The Casper Herald, a morning newspaper, which reported that the President had not rested well the night prior on its front page.
Woodrow Wilson never did recover from his stroke fully and in the current age he likely would have been removed from office under that special constitutional provision allow for that to occur in certain emergencies. That provision did not exist at the time. The nation proved to be lucky that Edith Wilson was a capable steward, whatever that may have meant, as a less capable one would have caused a disaster and a Constitutional Crisis. Nonetheless there's good reason to believe that a better result would have been for Wilson to have resigned and Vice President Thomas Marshall to have taken over. Marshall already had experience running the government due to Wilson's absence from the country during the Paris Peace Treaty sessions and he would have been more likely at that point to have brought the country into the Versailles Treaty, which Wilson's stroke doomed.
Edith Wilson lived until December 1961, long outliving her husband who would die three years following his stroke. Marshall died in 1925 at age 71.
The news on October 2 was dominated by the results of the second game of the fixed World Series and race riots, both the ones in Arkansas that had started yesterday and the ones in Omaha which were now over.
In terms of race riots, the papers were tending to take a position to blacks in a way that's not only biased, but shocking. Blacks had to feel that they were under siege everywhere in the U.S. in 1919, and indeed they were.
In the second game of the World Series the fix brought about the insider anticipated results.
A problem was setting in, however, in that Cicotte was the only conspirator who had been paid to date. In the second game, the players in the conspiracy carried on with the plot, but the White Sox pitcher Lefty Williams actually pitched a fairly good game. The game was not a runaway. Partial payment came after the game, but full payment was yet to come.
Of course, as always, other things were going on elsewhere.
Of course, as always, other things were going on elsewhere.
Great Falls, Va., site of historic mill built by George Washington. October 2, 1919
Rheims France, October 2, 1919.
Coal and Oil, San Juan, Puerto Rico. October 2, 1919.
Life Magazine, in its issue that came out on this day, ran a cartoon that's hardly intelligible to us a century later:
"Sensations of the young man who thought "quite informal" meant a dinner coat"
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