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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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Miss Morgan invited me to come to it and asked me to make a little speech at this luncheon. I don't suppose there were a hundred people there, all told, and probably less - probably sixty or eighty people. After the luncheon we made a little procession out to the village square and General Petain made the people of the village a speech. Then we went up to the church and we laid a wreath on the grave of somebody who had been connected with the outfit - a woman from Brooklyn, whose name I forget. She had been involved in it with Amy Vanderbilt, Anne Morgan, Elsie French, had been a part of the original work. She had died just after the First World War and had chosen to be buried there in the churchyard outside of that little village church. It was a tiny village dominated by the chateau, with the church on the hill, a pictureseque little French village. The doorsteps were right on the sidewalk and everybody was out on their doorsteps. Children gathered around in the little square listening to the great Marshal of France.

Petain was a delightful man - sweet, good-looking. I think M. Verne said that day, “General Petain is one of the few men in France who is trusted.”





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