The woman behind the New Deal : the life of Frances Perkins, FDR's Secretary of Labor and his moral conscience
Summary
Frances Perkins is no longer a household name, yet she was one of the most influential women of the twentieth century. Frances Perkins was named Secretary of Labor by Franklin Roosevelt in 1933. As the first female cabinet secretary, at the height of the Great Depression, she spearheaded the fight t... Full description
- Childhood and youth
- Becoming Frances Perkins
- The young activist hits New York
- The Triangle Shirtwaist fire
- Finding allies in Tammany Hall
- Teddy Roosevelt and Frances Perkins
- A good match
- Married life
- Motherhood
- The indomitable Al Smith
- FDR and Al Smith
- With the Roosevelts in Albany
- FDR becomes president
- Frances becomes Secretary of Labor
- The pioneer
- Skeletons in the Labor Department closet
- Jump-starting the economy
- At home with Mary Harriman
- Blue Eagle: a first try at "civilizing capitalism"
- Refugees and regulations
- Rebuilding the house of labor
- Labor shakes off its slumber
- The union movement revitalizes and splits apart
- Social Security
- Family problems
- Court-packing, wages, and hours
- Impeachment
- War clouds and refugees
- Frances and Franklin
- Madness, misalliances, and a nude bisexual water sprite
- The war comes
- Last days of the Roosevelt administration
- Harry Truman
- The Truman administration
- Communism
- End of the Truman era
- Many transitions
- Last days.