Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library

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Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library
Location Staunton, Virginia, USA
Named for Woodrow Wilson
Management Woodrow Wilson Birthplace Foundation
Woodrow Wilson Birthplace
Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library is located in Virginia
Location: Staunton, Virginia
Coordinates: 38°9′1″N 79°4′9″W / 38.15028°N 79.06917°W / 38.15028; -79.06917Coordinates: 38°9′1″N 79°4′9″W / 38.15028°N 79.06917°W / 38.15028; -79.06917
Built: 1846
Architect: Unknown
Architectural style: Greek Revival
Governing body: Private
NRHP Reference#: 66000926[1]
Significant dates
Added to NRHP: October 15, 1966
Designated NHL: July 19, 1964[2]

The Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library houses Woodrow Wilson materials from during and immediately after his lifetime, as well as memoirs of those who worked with him, and governmental volumes concerning World War I.[3] The library is located at the Woodrow Wilson Birthplace, at 18–24 North Coalter Street in Staunton, Virginia.[4] The library is home to the Woodrow Wilson presidential car, a Pierce Arrow limousine.[5]

The Woodrow Wilson Birthplace is referred to as The Manse, which is the name of a Presbyterian minister's home. The Manse was constructed in 1846 by the Staunton First Presbyterian Church. It has twelve rooms with twelve fireplaces, and cost about $4,000 (equal to $97,452 today). The Wilson family moved into the house in 1855.[6] At that time the family only consisted of his two parents, Jessie Woodrow Wilson and Joseph Ruggles Wilson, and their two daughters Marion and Annie, who were about four and two years old, respectively.[6] Thomas Woodrow Wilson was born in what is now called the "birth room" on December 28, 1856. The Wilsons left The Manse in early 1858 when Joseph Wilson accepted a call from a congregation in Augusta, Georgia.

After the Wilsons moved out of the Manse it remained a Presybterian minister's home well into the 1920s. It was only after Woodrow Wilson's death that his widow, Edith Wilson, returned to Staunton with plans of creating a memorial. The house was restored to its 1850s look over the next 80 years, which included removing bathrooms, changing light fixtures, and stripping paint. Recently The Manse was restored to its original red brick, having been painted white for almost a century.

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