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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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situations in the mind of the President, and that he gradually broke down the President's trust and confidence in him, Woodring.

The only evidence that I have on the whole matter is what Woodring told me, and the fact that Johnson certainly appeared to be well-satisfied with the idea that Woodring was leaving the government. But there was something else there that I can't recall too clearly. I think that Johnson thought that he was going to succeed Woodring when Woodring was being jockeyed out of position. He felt sure he was. He went off in a terrific huff when he learned that Henry Stimson was going to be appointed Secretary of War. Nothing that could be said by the President, or Jim Farley, or anybody else, about the wisdom of bipartisanship in times like these, or about the superior intellectual, moral and leadership qualities of Henry Stimson, had any mollifying effect upon Johnson. He was very, very sore and angry. He said something to me one day that indicated that he believed that he had been badly used and badly treated.

I had struck up a kind of a friendship with Woodring that was not very intellectual, but pleasant. He had a very, very nice wife whom I liked very much. I always sort of like Woodring for some reason. He had





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