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Notable New     Yorkers
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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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on our going to her factory. Whether we went that afternoon, or whether we went the next day, I'm not sure. Anyway, we went to her factory. I remember being surprised at finding when we got out there that there was a great mob of photographers. The press photographer wasn't anything like as common in those days as he is today. They weren't everywhere. You just didn't have them. We hadn't been snapped very much. But there were quantities of press photographers out there, which of course was the natural response of a business who had a great deal of advertising and publicity to do.

We also met her husband, who proved to also be in the business. He was the general manager. That is, he was the fellow who was in charge of getting the work done and turned out. He seemed like the kind of a man I would have expected to meet in any well-conducted garment factory in New York. He knew his business. He knew how to run a factory. He knew how to get the patterns and get the cutting done. He knew how to program the work so that the work flowed smoothly and so forth.

They employed, of course, a great many more women than men, as you would in a garment factory. It was a large factory. This was only one of hers. I think she had two, if not three, similar factories in different parts of Kansas City. According to her, they were good factories. They





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