Home
Search transcripts:    Advanced Search
Notable New     Yorkers
Select     Notable New Yorker

Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
Photo Gallery
Transcript

Part:         Session:         Page of 915

to serve on the Social Security committees, WPA advisory committees, and things of that sort.

So the President turned to me to find somebody to be on this Board, saying, “You find somebody.”

Well, I started to shop around. By this time the Labor Relations Board of the NRA, the old board as we called it had been making some rulings that were pretty strong in the eyes of some employers. There had been a lot of denunciation in the newspapers - “Why are they handing this all over to labor? What are they doing?” After Hugh Johnson disappeared from the NRA scene and the Labor Board of the NRA was operating by itself sort of, Don Richberg, who was NRA administrator let them have their own way, and they had drawn a lot of publicity and people knew what they were doing and thinking. There was a lot of protest that they weren't handling things the right way. Organizing strikes had begun. The Labor Board ruled that organizational strikes were all right. The automobile workers had organized in a kind of fantastic and crazy way. The Board had handled things for them, so the public thought, and had thrown the advantage to the workers. When I say the public, I mean the critical public, the anti-labor public.





© 2006 Columbia University Libraries | Oral History Research Office | Rights and Permissions | Help