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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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far back as that. He was a City Club man and a friend of all those people at the City Club. To this day I don't know how I happened to become acquainted with Albert de Rhoode. He was a young lawyer and he was willing to do some hack work on legal problems that the Committee of Safety ran into in the investigations and things. I continued my acquaintanceship with him and he was helpful about lots of things, and very well posted on affairs.

If he hadn't had so much tragedy in his life, I think he would have been one of the distinguished lawyers of New York. In the first place, polio struck his family. They lived over on Staten Island. He had a very nice wife and four or five children. Polio struck the family and all of the children had it. Two died, one became a total cripple, and one survived. Then his wife got it. His sister, who was the maiden aunt who could be relied on, went to the First World War as a nurse and came back a basket case - quadruple amputations. She was the only member of his family and he was responsible for her. Of course, I don't say that the War Department didn't look after her. She had everything that a veteran's hospital could do, but he was her contact with life. All these things struck him within a few years.





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