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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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she and two or three other women had done a very heroic job on the care and feeding of a considerable area of France. It was a volunteer operation. They had operated from an old chateau that was largely in ruins. That had been given to them as an operating post by the French government. After the war they made it into a center of Franco-American good relations and good will, a museum of Franco-American relationships. They made it sort of like the English Speaking Union. It had that kind of an implication, although it was between France and the USA.

A part of its function was to get together, as the English Speaking Union would in England, French and Americans of common interest. On this particular occasion when I happened to be in Paris and had seen Anne Morgan they were having on one Sunday a luncheon of the directors or friends of this outfit. General Petain was the President of it. Andre Tardieu was there. I had met him before, but had not seen him as much as I did that afternoon. M. Henry Verne, who was the Minister of Fine Arts in the government and was as such the head of the Louvre museum and all the other museums of France, was there. I found him a most interesting person.





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