Abstract
All too often, histories of the Great War identify two key events—the United States’ declaration of war against the German Empire on April 6, 1917 and the subsequent arrival of the first U.S. troops in Europe that June—as the start of U.S. participation in the conflict. American involvement in the Great War, such narratives go on to suggest, was relatively short-lived; commencing in the spring of 1917, it culminated just two years later, with Woodrow Wilson’s attendance at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference and the return of American soldiers to the United States.
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