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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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from the great South would occupy all the important posts, so forth and so on. Then we would have good government in the USA. At last we would see what good government was like. That's how it went. I never claimed any originality for that. It was just what I had heard from Pat Harrison.

It worked. They were very pleased with it. They gave it a fine hand and thought it was a good speech. I still occasionally see Mrs. Randolph Mead and she says, “Oh, I always remember that beautiful speech you made in Danville.” It was a feeble, female imitation of Pat Harrison, which I really composed on the spur of the moment. I realized that we weren't going to get away in Danville with the kind of stuff we'd gotten away with in Baltimore.

After that we went further south. We went to Raleigh, North Carolina. The most terrible bigotry I found was in Atlanta and in Danville. The most expressive bigotry were the common people in Baltimore and Maryland who were so common that they didn't mind showing their bigotry. The better bred ones might have been just as bigoted in their hearts, but they wouldn't let you observe it. They knew bigotry wasn't a proper quality for sophisticated people to have. Danville was full of bigotry. You heard nothing else there. Everybody who was well-disposed towards you





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