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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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much more out in the bigger places, and to make speeches in special spots.

This woman's caravan was a very wonderful campaign device. I don't know who invented it, but Agenes Leach, Caroline O'Day, Nancy Cook, Marion Dickerman and a lot of other people operated it. Mrs. Roosevelt was interested in it and I think she went out with it sometimes. They went all over the state. They called it the caravan. They had about three cars, all decorated. The cars would be full of women - nice, decent, respectable-looking women. They would go into small towne. They made a direct appeal to the small town and the small village which often doesn't get any campaigning. They would hand out literature, dodgers, and flyers. They would make speeches in the public square if there was one. If now, they'd get the permission of the mayor to speak on the street corner. Sometimes they got meetings in halls, or whatever they could get.

They went from door to door. They'd call on a hundred people in the course of a day. They always made contact with whatever there was in the way of a local Democratic committee. They would try to get some women of the families of these local Democratic people. There were women's committees at that time. They'd form committees





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