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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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I discovered then, as people came in to see me, something interesting that showed a kind of loyalty that there was in that department. The evening before when they had heard on the radio the confirmation of this news, and that the Cabinet was meeting, that the members of the Cabinet were flying from here, there and everywhere to come to the White House, a great many of the people - the higher, second and third string people had come down to the Department of Labor and had hung around the department all through the evening on the theory that they might be needed. At any rate, they were going to be where their post was, which I thought was extraordinarily interesting. They had telephoned around and found out that I was at the White House and that the White House meeting showed no sign of adjourning. They went to their post, however, on the theory that that's where you should be when trouble struck.

As I say, a great many people came in to see me. There was nothing I could do particularly. The next thing in order was to hear the President's message and the Congress would then proceed to declare war. We would proceed that afternoon to organize ourselves into some kind of a committee inside the department to revamp or reorient our program of our operation. But for the time being the thing to do was to reassure people that they could do it, that they had the strength, and that the United States would find the strength it needed.





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