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  • The social center : a means of common understanding. An address delivered by the Hon. Woodrow Wilson, Governor of New Jersey, before the First National Conference on Civic and Social Center Development, at Madison, Wis., October 25, 1911
The social center : a means of common understanding. An address delivered by the Hon. Woodrow Wilson, Governor of New Jersey, before the First National Conference on Civic and Social Center Development, at Madison, Wis., October 25, 1911

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The social center : a means of common understanding. An address delivered by the Hon. Woodrow Wilson, Governor of New Jersey, before the First National Conference on Civic and Social Center Development, at Madison, Wis., October 25, 1911

by Woodrow Wilson

EN·~23 minutes·15 chapters

Chapters

15 total

Ready for Use—The Means of Concerting Common Life

1:05

Spontaneous Development

2:00

Common Center Essential to Community Life

2:21

Means to the Unity of Communities

1:28

Worth Any Effort to Promote

1:03

Common Feeling Essential to Free Government

2:00

Means to Liberal Education

1:22

Conference Always Modifies and Improves Thought

0:54

Will Make Easier Solution of Great Problems

0:45

Adjustment Necessary to Liberty

1:32

Description

In a time when many small towns lacked a dedicated gathering place, a leading public figure addressed a national meeting to champion the idea of turning the local schoolhouse into the heart of community life. He argues that these buildings, idle after school hours, can serve as venues for everything from concerts and lectures to neighborhood debates, giving residents a common space to meet and converse.

The speech outlines how opening schoolrooms in the evenings creates a spontaneous, self‑directed civic culture. By simply lighting the halls and inviting anyone to use them, townspeople discover new ways to educate themselves, discuss local issues, and build personal connections that strengthen collective action.

Beyond the practical logistics, the address emphasizes that such centers nurture a shared understanding among neighbors, turning ordinary spaces into engines of democratic participation. Listeners are left with a clear vision of how a modest building can become the catalyst for a more engaged, healthier community.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~23 minutes (22K characters)

Series

Bulletin of the University of Wisconsin, serial no. 470; General series, no. 306

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Original publisher

Madison: The University of Wisconsin, 1911.

Credits

Bob Taylor, Charlene Taylor and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.

Release date

2023-12-02

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Woodrow Wilson

Woodrow Wilson

1856–1924

A former professor and university president, he brought an academic cast of mind to politics and became one of the most influential—and most debated—figures of the early 20th century. His presidency reshaped the federal government at home and the United States' role in the world abroad.

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