Frances Perkins

Born: April 10, 1882, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
Died: May 14, 1965, New York

Frances Perkins was an American social reformer, who became the first female member of the Cabinet when United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt named her secretary of labour in 1933.
Perkins was born in Boston, Massachusetts, and educated at Mount Holyoke College, the University of Pennsylvania, and Columbia University. In her various positions, Perkins defended the interests of working people, and advocated social security, unemployment compensation, minimum wage and maximum hours, and child welfare legislation. She was a member of the New York State Industrial Board from 1923 to 1926 and its chairperson from 1926 to 1929. In 1929 Roosevelt, the then governor of New York, appointed her state industrial commissioner. As secretary of labour, Perkins became one of the most important executors of Roosevelt’s New Deal programme. She resigned the position in June 1945, two months after Roosevelt’s death, and in the following year was appointed a member of the U.S. Civil Service Commission, on which she served until 1953. Her writings include A Plan for Maternity Care (1918) and The Roosevelt I Knew (1946).

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