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

Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
Photo Gallery
Transcript

Part:         Session:         Page of 915

I did those things that you do to break down prejudices and to make the candidate known - all that kind of thing.

Also Henry knew that I had had the final talk with the President in which the decision had been made, and that I was the one who had said, “This is it.” I had been at Wallace's headquarters and had done everything I could.

As Wallace left and Wickard took his place, I remember thinking that there was an understanding between them that if by any chance the Roosevelt-Wallace outfit was not elected, Wickard would retire. I had thought of Wickard as quite a friend of Henry Wallace's. I had thought that he was probably a longtime, old friend. Now, I realize he wasn't and that he hadn't known Wallace too well until he came to Washington. I had supposed, though I don't know why, that Wickard was a friend of Wallace's, that they had been associated in farm situations, farm problems, farm conferences of one kind or another. Of course, I have so little notion of what they do with farms and what they do with agriculture anyhow that I don't know how you would hold a conference or what you would have a conference about. But I assumed that before either of them came to Washington they had been involved in agricultural problems and





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