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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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him to say nothing, I don't know. My guess is that Frank Walker said to him, “Don't try to make a speech, Henry. Just accept and shake hands all around.” I think that's what he did. I think it was Frank Walker who told him not to, but there were many people around who told him not to say anything. I'm not sure I didn't say that myself. Everybody knew he mustn't speak. We had just barely nominated him, a skin of the teeth kind of thing.

Up until that time I had always thought that Jim Farley thought very well of Henry Wallace. How well he thought of him intellectually, I don't know, but I think he was fond of him. He had a personal liking for him and a personal affection. Whether that was just my illusion, or not, I don't know, but Jim always spoke warmly of him and to him. Whether he had previously learned not to like him, or not, I don't know. My memory is that before the convention, and we had had two terms together then, Farley liked Wallace and had a friendly and pleasant attitude toward him. Certainly I had never seen any evidence of anything else. I would have said that he liked him better than he liked certain other members of the Cabinet. However, that changed after the convention.





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