LOCEC4_170404_060
Existing comment:
First Publication in America of the Paris Peace Treaty

Recognizing the importance of the Treaty of Versailles, the New York American published the draft in full. The final document, signed on June 28, 1919, ended the state of war between the Allied and Associated Powers and Germany. Some argued that the treaty was excessively harsh toward Germany and others that it was too weak to guarantee a lasting peace. Aspects of the treaty's first twenty-six articles, which established the League of Nations, concerned many U.S. senators. Wilson refused to consider any changes to the wording, and the Senate refused to ratify the treaty. The U.S. signed separate treaties with Germany, Austria, and Hungary and never joined the League of Nations, despite President Woodrow Wilson's efforts to establish and promote the League.
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