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Presidents Making History Abroad: Visits to Cuba, China, and Europe


Woodrow Wilson was the first U.S. president in office to travel to Europe, according to the Miller Center. In December 1918, he sailed to France for the Paris Peace Conference after World War I ended. Wilson spent nearly seven months in Europe, attending the conference twice with First Lady Edith Wilson in 1918 and 1919. The Paris Peace Conference, also known as the Treaty of Versailles, resulted in the signing of a peace treaty between Germany and the Allied Forces, as well as the establishment of the League of Nations. Wilson’s historic trip to Europe marked a significant moment in U.S. presidential history and diplomacy, as he played a key role in shaping the post-war world order.

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