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  1. William Edgar Borah was an outspoken Republican United States Senator, one of the best-known figures in Idaho's history. A progressive who served from 1907 until his death in 1940, Borah is often considered an isolationist, for he led the Irreconcilables, senators who would not accept the Treaty of Versailles, Senate ratification of which would have made the U. S. part of the League of Nations.

  2. University Group 31. William Edgar Borah Outlawry of War Foundation. Records, 1931-1987 9 c.f. The bulk of the records of the Borah Foundation were deposited in the University of Idaho Library in 1977, with additional material being received at intervals prior to 1986. Before processing began, the chairman of the 1986/87 committee was contacted ...

  3. William E. Borah, the chief prosecutor in the Haywood trial, was born at the close of the Civil War, the son of a stern, puritanical Illinois farmer. In college at the University of Kansas, Borah befriended William Allen White, later to become the famed editor of the Emporia Gazette, who described his college buddy as a "hardworking, substantial, serious student who smiled easily but rarely ...

  4. One curious exception, however, appears to have been Senator William Edgar Borah of Idaho, chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations between 1924 and 1933, who repeatedly gave voice to his belief that the post- war treaties, and among them the Treaty of Trianon, should be revisited.

  5. William Edgar Borah (Jasper Township, Wayne County, Illinois, 1865. június 29. – Washington, 1940. január 19.) az Amerikai Egyesült Államok republikánus szenátora ( Idaho állam, 1907–1940). 1924 és 1933 között a Szenátus Külügyi Bizottságának elnöke volt.

  6. 29 de jun. de 2020 · We spoke with an expert about the senator's vast contributions to the state's history.

    • 4 min
    • 699
    • KTVB
  7. William Edgar Borah. (1865–1940). U.S. public official. During his more than three decades in the United States Senate, William E. Borah became one of the nation’s foremost statesmen. Born on June 29, 1865, in Fairfield, Ill., he moved to Boise, Idaho, in 1891. After practicing law and serving as state prosecutor, he was elected to the ...