THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES RESOURCES

     created by Peggy Beck Haines

SEE ALSO ONLINE RESOURCES.   Enter your CHCLC username and password.)
 Select Gale, History Resource Center- U.S. There are 41 sources to examine. Be sure to also click on the highlighted tabs (Periodicals, Primary Sources, and Maps & Multimedia) for additional resources. - U.S. You can also research individual biographies (including Henry Cabot Lodge, William H. King, Frank B. Kellogg, Gilbert Hitchcock, Robert La Follette, Hiram Johnson, William Borah, James Alexander Reed, Charles Linza McNary, Atlee Pomerene, William Jennings Bryan) through the Biography Resources Center. 
 

 In Gale, you can also search in the Opposing Viewpoints Resource Center. In the Congressional Power source, scroll to The Versailles Era. Click on the Magazines & Newspapers tab and the SRC (Student Resource Center) for additional resources.

GERMAN VIEW OF THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES

                The German Delegates' Protest Against Proposed "Peace" Terms

                A German View of the Treaty of Versailles

                Germany and the Treaty of Versailles

KEY FIGURES IN THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES

                 George A. Sanderson, Secretary of the Senate, 1919-1925

                Henry Cabot Lodge, Senate Leader, Presidential Foe

                Senator Lawrences Sherman's Role in the Defeat of the Treaty of Versailles
                Speech by William Borah

                Thomas R. Marshall, 29th Vice-President (1913-1921)

                Thomas Woodrow Wilson, President 1913-1921

                William H. King and the Question of League Membership

HISTORY/OVERVIEW OF THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES

                AMERICA'S WARS, 1898-1945 (SCROLL DOWN TO TEXT.)

            Interpretation of President Wilson's Fourteen Points

            The Treaty of Versailles, 28th June 1919

            Versailles Revisited (28 page analytical paper)

SENATE FIGHT: THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES (SEE ALSO KEY FIGURES.)

                1878-1920: A Bitter Rejection

                1878-1920: Woodrow Wilson Addresses the Senate

            The League of Nations Fight

            The Senate and the League of Nations

            The Senate and Ratification 1919-1921

            Woodrow Wilson and the U.S. Ratification of the Treaty of Versailles (lesson plan that includes brief biographies and primary sources)

            World War II Plus 55: The Last Week- The Road to War- Chapter 8- August 30, 1939

TEXT OF THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES

                    THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES

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